adelaide by night light - a photographic exhibition - by john paull
TRANSCRIPT
Adelaideby Night Light
Photographs by John [email protected]
Noarlunga Jetty, Adelaide, South Australia
Noarlunga Jetty, Adelaide
Riverbank Promenade, River Torrens, Adelaide
Festival Theatre, Adelaide
Adelaide Oval Stadium
Adelaide Casino
Adelaide Convention Centre
University of South Australia, North Terrace, Adelaide
University of Adelaide, North Terrace
Window reflections, North Terrace, Adelaide
Scots Church, Uniting Church, North Terrace, Adelaide
South Australia State Library, North Terrace, Adelaide
War Memorial (The Great War 1914-1918), North Terrace, Adelaide
Adelaide Railway Station, concourse
Adelaide Arcade, Rundle Mall
Art mural, corner Rundle Street & Frome Street, Adelaide
Rundle Lantern, car park facade
Rundle Lantern, car park, Rundle Street, Adelaide
Rundle Lantern, car park
Apple store, Rundle Mall, Adelaide
St Francis Xavier’s Catholic Cathedral, Adelaide
St Francis Xavier’s Catholic Cathedral, Adelaide
St Francis Xavier’s Catholic Cathedral, Adelaide
Adelaide Magistrates Court
Supreme Court of South Australia, Adelaide
The Stag Hotel, East Terrace, Adelaide
Adelaide Fruit and Produce Exchange building, East Terrace, Adelaide
SA Aquatic & Leisure Centre, Marion, Adelaide
Channel 7 TV Station
Tram stop, Adelaide Entertainment Centre
Adelaide Entertainment Centre
Adelaide Entertainment Centre
Adelaide Adelaide is a city of light - the day-light can be intense and the skies are often a brilliant cloudless blue - for a visit remember to pack your sun glasses.
This exhibition takes an alternative view - and presents images of Adelaide by night-light.
Adelaide is the driest city in Australia, it has dozens of wonderful beaches of golden sand, and expansive great deserts to the north.
Adelaide was designed by Anglo-Malay Captain William Light (1786-1839) as a garden city with the CBD a grid of wide roads and five large public squares, all surrounded by 700 hectares of parkland.
Adelaide is Australia's most liveable city (State of Australian Cities Report, 2012) and the world’s fifth most liveable city (Global Liveability Survey, 2012).
Adelaide was settled by the South Australian Corporation as what has been called a “paradise of dissent” (Douglas Pike, 1957). Adelaide was founded on 28th December 1836 (after Sydney, Hobart, Brisbane, Perth and Melbourne) to manifest a Utopian vision of George Fife Angas (1789-1879). Adelaide has been described as “the city of churches” and from the outset it offered a refuge from the religious persecution and intolerance in Europe. Such early immigrants included German-speaking Lutherans from Silesia, Prussia (now Poland).
The city is named after Queen Adelaide (1792-1849).
Adelaide is the capital city of South Australia.
The population is 1.23 million (2011 census).
CC-BY-3.0 John Paull ([email protected])