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PETER DOMBROVSKIS 1945 - 1996
Peter Dombrovskis was born in Wiesbaden, Germany
in 1945 of Latvian parents. He emigrated to Australia in 1950
with his mother Adele and started taking photographs in the
1960's. He was strongly influenced by Lithuanian-Australian
pioneer, conservationist and photographer Olegas Truchanas, who
became a father figure to him. He was equally influenced by
landscape photographers of mid-century America such as Ansel
Adams, Edward and Brett Weston and Eliot Porter.
In February 2003, Peter Dombrovskis was inducted into the
International Photography Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City, United
States of America. Peter is the first Australian to be accorded
this honour, and one of only 58 people to be inducted over the
200 or so years of the history of photography. Peter's work is
also represented in the collections of the National Library,
National Gallery of Australia, Australian Heritage Commission,
National Gallery of Victoria, Queen Victoria Museum and Art
Gallery, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, the Royal Tasmanian
Botanical Gardens, the Wilderness Gallery and many private
collections.
Some of Peter's photographs have been instrumental in the
conservation of various Tasmanian wild places including the
prevention of the damming of the Franklin River. Peter's works
have been published over 35 years in the form of books,
calendars. cards and posters, and his wife Liz continues to
publish through their company West Wind Press Pty Ltd.
On 28th March 1996, Peter died while photographing in the
Western Arthur Range in southwest Tasmania. He is survived by
his second wife, five children and two step-children.
All Peter's photographs were taken with a large format Linhof
Master Technika 5 x 4 inch flatbed field camera. He used
three lenses; a 90mm Nikkor F4.5, a 150mm Schneider Symar-S
(standard lens), and a 300mm Nikkor MF9. He sometimes used a
polarizing filter. |