Robert Besanko (born 1951) is a self-taught Australian photographic artist who lives and works in Melbourne. He started producing work in the early 1970s using Orthochromatic Kodalith paper and extensive work in the darkroom to produce his images. [1] [2]
Folios of his work appeared in issue 3 of Light Vision (January–February 1978), and the March 1978 issue of Creative Camera , dedicated to Australian photographers.
In 1979, Besanko became one of the first artists to receive a residency at the newly established Australia Council Greene Street Studio in New York. [3] In 1981 the Centre Pompidou in Paris exhibited Robert Besanko et la photographie australienne aujourd'hui; [4] it subsequently acquired 12 of his Kodalith photographs from the exhibition.
In the mid-1970s Kodalith paper was discontinued and Besanko stopped producing prints when it became unavailable. In the late 1990s he started looking at producing digital prints but it was not until the collaboration with the printer Tim Handfield and then Les Walkling [5] that he produced work that was exhibited. The large-scale digital prints he produced with them were exhibited alongside his original Kodalith prints at the Australian Centre for Photography in 2013. [6]
A discussion on the nature of collaboratively producing digital prints with Robert Besanko.