Thursday 9th of May 2024

a livid vivid...

vivid gus

Vivid festival has ended as a spectacular success with a record-breaking attendance in Sydney, but behind the scenes the relationship between the popular event and photojournalism festival Reportage has soured amid accusations of censorship and breaches of contract.

On the evening of the festival's opening, a number of photographs were pulled from two outdoor large screen exhibits by Destination NSW due to the subject matter being "too distressing or offensive", Destination NSW CEO Sandra Chipchase described to Guardian Australia at the time.

The photographs were viewable, unrestricted, at various indoor exhibitions, however several high-profile photojournalists withdrew their work in protest at what they and the organisers of Reportage saw as censorship from the centrepiece display.

Much of the dispute centres on one clause of the agreement between Destination NSW and Reportage, which states that Reportage's exhibition must not bring the Vivid organisers or the state government "into disrepute" or "conflict with the brand" of the festival and its organisers.

"i.e. the Event elements must be family friendly, not of a violent nature and do not incite violence," the clause continues.

Acclaimed photojournalist James Nachtwey – whose famous, haunting image of a Rwandan genocide survivor bearing scars of a machete attack was on of the images pulled from the outdoor screen – told Guardian Australia this kind of photojournalism "discourages violence".

He said the photographers were selected for their integrity and commitment to human values, a free press and an informed citizenship.

"Too many of our colleagues have lost their lives because they believed it too," Nachtwey added.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/14/vivid-festival-censorship-reportage

Image at top: Blurred Vivid — a picture by Gus Leonisky

once upon a time...

New South Wales finance minister Greg Pearce has avoided the sack after being accused of travel expense rorts and being drunk in State Parliament.

Premier Barry O'Farrell has instead sent Mr Pearce on a month's personal leave to deal with issues of stress and exhaustion.

A report by the head of the Premier's department, Chris Eccles, found Mr Pearce breached ministerial travel guidelines by using a government contracted travel agency to book a private trip to Canberra, benefitting by $200 in the process.

Mr O'Farrell described it as a minor breach.

Mr Pearce faced the media for the first time since the scandals broke and admitted his behaviour had been exacerbated by alcohol.

A doctor for Mr Pearce said he does not have an alcohol dependency problem.

Mr Pearce described the last two weeks as the worst of his professional life.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-06-14/greg-pearce-keeps-his-job-after-alcohol-and-expenses-scandals/4754280

Once upon a time a decent bloke would have resigned for having dropped a pin...