David Moore (photographer)


David Moore was an Australian photojournalist.

Life and career

Moore was educated at Geelong Grammar School. He began his career in the studio of Russell Roberts in Sydney, moving on to work with Max Dupain soon after. Despite being offered a junior partnership with Dupain, Moore moved to London in 1951, where commissioned work appeared in The New York Times, Time, The Observer and other publications. A series documenting life in the poor working class and unemployed suburb of Redfern was included in Edward Steichen's major 1955 exhibition The Family of Man which originated at the Museum of Modern Art and toured the world. He returned to Australia in 1958, contributing picture stories to magazines including Walkabout but continued to publish in American and British magazines, joining the New York-based Black Star photo agency. In the 1970s Moore developed non-commissioned works aimed at capturing what he called "the soft flow of time", as opposed to the "decisive moment" favoured by magazine editors.
Moore's 1966 photograph Migrants Arriving in Sydney, originating from a commission by National Geographic, is one of the most famous works of modern Australian photography.
Moore published more than a dozen books. During the 1970s he was an influential figure in the development of art photography, and was a dedicated advocate for the acceptance of photography as a legitimate art form. During this period he was instrumental in the founding of the Australian Centre for Photography in Sydney.
He contributed energetically to research into historical Australian photography for instance making in 1976 an archive of gelatin silver prints from the collection of Henri Mallard's glass negatives that were published in association with Sun Books in 1978. The first retrospective of his work, held at the Centre, was acquired by the Australian National Gallery He died days before a major retrospective on his life and work opened at the same gallery.