This work forms part of Polixeni Papapetrou’s series The Ghillies, which depicts figures sheathed in camouflage (ghillie suits) standing in a desolate landscape. Although their identities are concealed by their costumes, the models are Papapetrou’s children, Olympia and Solomon, who have been featuring in the artist’s works since 2002. The photographs were taken in various desert, rural and coastal landscapes around south-eastern Australia. In ‘Study for Dune man’, the ghillie suit matches the palette of the landscape, suggesting the possibility of camouflage, but the figure is floating in the landscape and seems to hover between states of concealment and disclosure.
(2016)
Also known as Giclee prints or bubble-jet prints, pigment ink-jet prints are generated by computer printers from digital or scanned files using dye-based or pigment-based inks. A series of nozzles spray tiny droplets of ink onto the paper surface in a precise pattern that corresponds to the digital image file. In dye-based prints the ink soaks into the paper, whereas in pigment-based prints the ink rests and dries on top of the paper surface.
Whilst the term is broad, pigment ink-jet prints have come to be associated with prints produced on fine art papers. They are the most versatile and archival method of printing available to photographers today. A wide variety of material on which an image can be printed with such inks are available, including various textures and finishes such as matte photo paper, watercolour paper, cotton canvas or pre-coated canvas.