Behind the picture
By all accounts this election has been really boring and as a photographer I wanted to do something different to get people interested again. I wanted to shoot it in a different way than the way we always cover elections in newspapers.

If I can borrow a phrase from this election campaign, I wanted to be seen to be “moving forward” with technology and doing something new and fresh. So when I got the call up to shoot the final week of the election last week with Prime Minister Julia Gillard I decided to shoot everything on the iPhone.
A simple no frills camera (weighing no more than a can of coke) with a fixed lens, and using the Hipstamatic app bought for $2.49.
Continue reading "An inside view of the last days of the Gillard campaign" »
The full set of these pictures probably got passed over a little over the weekend because of (a) it being the weekend and (b) Mark Latham.

You may have seen a few of them but there were a total of 10 photos from the meeting between Prime Minister Julia Gillard and her predecessor Kevin Rudd. It makes for an excruciatingly awkward compilation of shots with neither Gillard nor Rudd looking at all like they want to be there in a single frame.
The rest of the photos follow over the jump. They don’t need captions - they’ve just been given numbers for easy reference in the comments. Enjoy - and let us know if you have a particular favourite.
Continue reading "When Julia met Kevin: the full set of photos" »
Latest 2 of 67 comments
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Milos says:
Mate, don’t you realize that it was all stage managed by dear Labor team? Please tell me that you only pretend not realizing that! Otherwise I think you may have some serious perception problems… Read more »
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Milos says:
Photo 4 is a screamer. Sums up the whole sad story of power and greed. What a circus. Wonder how many Australians are going to fall for all the sweet bull… talk and no action Labor is so (in)famous for. Of course Victorians love her, after all the rest of… Read more »
The turmoil of the opposition leadership spill made Parliament House an eventful place to be for a press photographer. But it has become harder than ever to satisfy the appetite of the news-hungry populace, as the increased bureaucracy is madder than ever.

The feuding within the Liberal Party highlighted the antiquated and ridiculous rules that dictate where photographers and TV cameramen can go and what they can shoot at any given time.
In an attempt to deliver a professional product to our millions of readers and viewers, we were forced to break all the rules, and it has got us into all sorts of trouble.
Continue reading "Shooting Turnbull’s end: how you almost missed it" »
Latest 2 of 29 comments
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Keith Williams says:
You refer to the stairwell pictures but no link to them…Come on… Keith Read more »
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Onlooker says:
I, for one, am grateful to Gary and all the other shooters who allow us insights into the way our parliament and democracy is run. All those condemning you should have a cold shower and a real good think about the implications of the “respectful” approach they advocate. By the… Read more »

This is a digitally enhanced photo of Sydney woman Deborah Luckie. She’s 50 years old.
A picture of her as she appears in real life is down the page.
If you were to see a photo of Deborah in a magazine, the photo above is how she could, potentially, appear after digital retouching. After a week of hype over model Sarah Murdoch appearing “untouched” on a magazine cover and the launch of a national body image initiative, the treated photo was commissioned to illustrate how removed from reality faces and bodies in the media can be.
Latest 2 of 99 comments
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letitia says:
yes we sure do we work hard to get experience and then we are told we are over qualified and too good to be employed what a joke! Read more »
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Mary says:
Wow! Digital retouching is amazing! It makes her look 20 years younger. I would have thought that she had a facelift if I didn’t read the article. I’ve heard that there is digital retouching in video as well. I don’t know how I feel about my profile not looking the… Read more »
The call from the picture editor on The Australian came early on a Tuesday. Not unusual, but the pictorial brief was to photograph inside the Freemasons’ Grand Lodge in the centre of Sydney, drawing back the veil of secrecy around the organisation which features in Dan Brown’s new book, The Lost Symbol.

I’m not a fan of Dan Brown, nor do I profess to be Freemansony. I knew very little about the subject when I walked into the lift at the Freemasons United Grand Lodge..
I knew that with Freemasons there were handshakes, secret passwords, aprons and something to do with architecture.
Continue reading "Light and shade as Masons let us into their world" »
Latest 2 of 11 comments
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Servaas says:
Well, the bottom guys could probably be anything including agnostics. They are mostly well-meaning guys looking to join a society as they have, like all of us the need to ‘belong’. That is the many in the lower degrees who would call me a liar for writing this and the… Read more »
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Luke says:
Grand Architect is whoever one considers a “higher being” Read more »
On 28th July 2009, I flew out of Sydney bound for Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan. It was to be the start of a fascinating trip into the Afghan war zone.

I embedded with the American 10th Mountain Division in Logar province, in the East part of the country. I was then shipped out to “The Tip of The Spear” as they called it, to the district of Kherwar.
The unit I joined was part of the Coalition’s blocking force against Taliban forces who are trying to use the area as an alternative entry point to the Wardack province and into Kabul.
Continue reading "Heart of darkness: inside the Afghan war zone" »
Latest 2 of 22 comments
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Budd says:
You really found a way to make this whole procses easier. Read more »
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Brett says:
After the McCrystall debacle can you blame the risk adverse Australian commanders. Read more »
These two young people and their dogs were camped out on the pavement of the busiest street of central Paris opposite the Town Hall.

They were lying on the footpath around dusk time completely oblivious of the throng of people going past them.
They were surrounded by all their paraphernalia – backpacks, sleeping bags and so forth - and two of their three dogs were frolicking around.
Continue reading "It was like they were the only two people in Paris" »
Latest 2 of 20 comments
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Josh says:
Bon Photograph!!!! I really think you make a photographer!!!! Read more »
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Martin says:
Love the shot. The life separation is amazing! The couple and the dogs both separated from a totally different world. I feel drawn in and thank you for sharing this moment. A moment that says that there is more… and yes give up the day job and keep telling the… Read more »

My mates would say to me “Are you serious? You’re being sent to watch every ball of The Ashes, and you call that work?” It sounds like a dream job ... and believe me it is. But a lot goes in to photographing cricket, particularly an Ashes.
I was lucky enough to be given the assignment of covering the last two Ashes series for News Limited. The 2005 tour of England and then the return battle in the Australian summer of 06/07. In 2005 we set off at the beginning of June and wouldn’t return until mid September. It was a monster of a tour, including the one-dayers it was almost a 15 week trip. And sadly, England won.

The first thing you need to be a cricket photographer is stamina. There is no other sport like it. 540 balls a day, the best part of eight hours of action, five days in a row, countless training sessions, and the series last for months on end.
Continue reading "Shooting the Ashes: 540 balls a day, and you can’t miss one" »
Latest 2 of 9 comments
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Dan says:
Great story Phil. Admired your work for some time now, it was nice to get an insight! Would love to transfer from music to sports photography - unfortunately my crappy office job can’t pay me enough for a $10k 600mm Dan http://www.dbedford.com - Sydney Events Photographer Read more »
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regina p says:
at the end of a spectacularly crappy day, it was so lovely to read you story and look at your pictures. i love cricket and that picture of mcgrath and warnie just made me sigh. thanks X Read more »
One of the most exciting periods in politics for a long time began on Friday the 19th of June when little-known Treasury official Godwin Grech turned up for a Senate inquiry into the Ozcar affair. His sensational testimony led to him being chased through Parliament House. He was followed into a lift and to his car by a horde of media.
It was the start of a frenzied week in politics, when the news from Parliament House was interesting again, and Question Time became the best show in town. It swung wildly from Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull calling for Kevin Rudd to resign to the Liberal leader being under all the pressure.

The first photo is of Treasury official Godwin Grech under pressure and showing it in the Senate inquiry. When he was giving his evidence there was a crackling in the air – you knew it would be an all-in when he left the room.

I was one of the first into the lift and a bunch of others piled in. Others were much closer to his face, but by reaching up and shoot downwards I was able to capture the swarm of media around him.
Continue reading "Utegate photos: capturing a political crisis on camera" »
Latest 2 of 17 comments
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Andrew says:
My favourite photographic historic moment is when the photographers killed Diana Princess of Wales, I agree with Charlie on this one, the baggage is the photographers who think they can treat people in this way just because they are in the public eye. Give them a break. Read more »
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Formersnag says:
Why has nobody considered the most likely utegate explanation? Namely that it was written by labour apparatchik’s and then leaked to the media so that it would blow up in Malcolm’s face as it did. Read more »

Are we becoming so jaded by Photographic forgeries that we now question every image?
“Amazing picture is the real deal-no porkies” this was the headline on the page 5 picture story in last Tuesday’s Sydney Daily Telegraph.
The news content in this story about a giant feral pig shot some years back in Western Australia was that it was indeed a genuine picture and not forged. It had been written off as an internet hoax and even the WA ‘s own Department of Environment and Conservation had dismissed it as a forgery.
How have we reached this point where it is now news when a picture is in fact genuine and does it matter?
Continue reading "Stop the presses: this photograph is real" »
Latest 2 of 14 comments
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GH says:
The shark piccie is about 5 years old and it is a digital enhanced image Read more »
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Robbie says:
Quick call MediaWatch! Read more »
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