Robert Rankin is an Australian landscape photographer and filmmaker.[1][2] Rankin's published photography, filmmaking, and guidebooks raise awareness of the importance of wilderness conservation[3] and promote interest in bushwalking[4] throughout Australia. Rankin also participated and organised in orienteering events.
Rankin joined the university's bushwalking club (UQBWC) in 1970, where he developed a knowledge of the mountainous regions of South East Queensland, the Scenic Rim in particular.[9] In early 1972, Rankin flew over and photographed Lake Pedder in Tasmania, a few months before the enlarged lake was flooded for hydro-electric power generation.[10][11] One of these aerial photographs is included in a collection of photos of the lake taken on this trip.[12][13] He returned in January 1973 as the original lake was disappearing under the floodwaters of the Serpentine Dam.
Filmmaking
In 1975, Rankin received a federal government grant through the Australia Council and the Australian Film Institute to film a documentary about Hinchinbrook Island in North Queensland. With a group of six, he climbed and filmed the ascent, over three days, of the South East Ridge of the Thumb. The film, Climb to the Clouds (1975), was subsequently sold to a Queensland television company.[1]:37 After the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) passed on Rankin's proposal to film an ascent of the East Face of Crookneck in the Glasshouse Mountains north of Brisbane because of the difficult challenges involved in filming on a vertical cliff, Rankin made the decision to finance and produce the film himself. The subsequent film, To Walk the Vertical (1976) was sold back to the ABC.[1]
In 1977, the Wales (now Westpac) Bank commissioned Rankin to produce the film Walk with Safety, depicting safe bushwalking and camping practices.[14] In August 1977, Rankin shot a short film, Ice is Nice, presenting the mid-winter in the extreme environment of Mount Kosciuszko in the Snowy Mountains.[15] The film's historic footage from 1977 was later incorporated into The Snowiest, from the Wilderness Experience Vol 7 DVD.[citation needed]
In Queensland in the 1970s, Rankin was one of several film producers involved in outdoor adventure-oriented 16mm film making. The Mystique of Hinchinbrook again looked at Hinchinbrook Island in more recent times (2007). Jewels of the South West described a 6-day solo trip[1]:38 by Rankin into south-west Tasmania to film the glacial lakes of the Western Arthur Range and lament the flooding of the largest lake in the region, Lake Pedder, for power generation. Other films included Secrets of the Scenic Rim, Federation Peak, South East Queensland, Climbing Barney,TASMANIA - An Alluring Landscape and others.
After four years as a producer and director of educational television programs,[3]:187 Rankin left the ABC in 1981 to take up a scholarship for a Doctor of Philosophy degree at Griffith University to investigate ways of improving the design of visual graphics in science communication.[16] The PhD was awarded in 1986.
Book publishing
Rankin's publishing company, Rankin Publishers, produced a range of products under the Australia's Wilderness brand, based on Rankin's photographs, videos, music and writing.[1]:36–37 Rankin Publishers released the Queensland's Scenic Rim Wilderness Calendar 1981,[17]Australian Wilderness Skills (1983) and On the Edge of Wilderness (1983), the latter showcasing wilderness regions surrounding the city of Brisbane.[18]Classic Wild Walks of Australia (1989), also printed in Brisbane[19][20] its content released later on CD-ROM, and described by the Sydney Morning Herald as the best of its kind in Australia.[21] Also in 1989, William Heinemann Australia chose two of Rankin's images for the front and back covers of a publication on the Snowy Mountains.[22]Wilderness Light (1993), was a discussion of his work.[23]
Until 2014, Rankin published 150 different titles including books, prints, music CDs, short films, DVDs and software over 34 years, and sold as many as 30,000 calendars, diaries and boxed cards annually.[17] Simon and Matthews cite Rankin's calendars in discussing the way "images of wilderness in everyday use provoke the question of how sentimental attachments toward landscapes might prompt environmental awareness and action".[24] Connell and Gibson, discussing the absence of "realities of Australian “nature”—salinity, old growth logging, bleaching of coral from pollution, soil erosion in marginal landscapes—are not surprisingly absent, replaced instead by an idyllic nature free from human influence", use Rankin’s Wilderness CD of 1994 as an example.[25]
↑ Rankin, R O and Milford, S N (March 1979). "Computer Simulation of Brisbane River Salinity". Australian Water and Waste Water Assoc. 6 (1): 9–12.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
↑ Rankin, R O and Milford, S N (June 1979). "Computer Simulation of Brisbane River Dissolved Oxygen". Australian Water and Waste Water Assoc. 6 (2): 14–16.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
↑ Australian Institute of Physics, 1st National Conference on Applied Physics, Capricornia Institute of Advanced Education, July 1979.
↑ Brown, Bob (1986). Lake Pedder. The Wilderness Society. pp.13–23. ISBN0908412215.
↑ Dombrovskis Liz, Brown Bob (2002). Landscape: Four Young Wild Photographers. West Hobart: LandscapeTas. pp.3–5. ISBN0975002805.
↑ Rankin, Robert (2011). AUSTRALIA - Wild Places. Rankin Publishers. pp.Picture 33. ISBN9780959241884.
↑ Camm, Mark (23 October 1997). "Just one flick and it's gone"(PDF). Northern Herald: 18. Archived(PDF) from the original on 26 March 2025. Retrieved 28 February 2025.
↑ Courier Mail, September 1978, $20,000 for Walk with Safety film.
↑ Rankin, Robert (29 October 1978). "Amid the Challenging Snow". Sunday Mail.
↑ Rankin, Robert (1989). "The Development of an Illustration Design Model". Educational Technology Research and Development. 37 (2): 25–46. doi:10.1007/BF02298288.
1 2 McDonald, Keith (24 August 1995). "Wilderness Calendars"(PDF). West Australian (27 November 1995). Archived(PDF) from the original on 1 January 2025. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
↑ Ord, Bill (29 January 1984). "Green Scene with Bill Ord"(PDF). Sunday Mail. Archived(PDF) from the original on 1 April 2025. Retrieved 1 April 2025.
↑ Connell, John; Gibson, Chris (2009). "Ambient Australia: Music, Meditation, and Tourist Places". In Johansson, Ola; Bell, Thomas L. (eds.). Sound, society, and the geography of popular music. Farnham, England; Burlington, VT: Ashgate. pp.71, 88. ISBN978-0-7546-7577-8.
↑ Scott, Jane (21 November 2012). "Snapshot - Rob Rankin"(PDF). Brisbane News (November 2012). Archived(PDF) from the original on 26 March 2025. Retrieved 27 February 2025.
↑ Rankin, Robert (1993). Wilderness Light. Rankin Publishers. pp.14–16. ISBN0959241841.
↑ "Home". www.rankin.com.au. Archived from the original on 8 December 2024. Retrieved 21 February 2025.
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