- Frank Plicka
Frank Plicka (born
June 11 ,1926 ) is a Czech-born Australian photographer, best known for his book "Streets of Sydney", an extraordinary tour ofSydney , documented in black & white photographs taken over the last 30 years. This book depicts life in, and aroundSydney streets, pubs, bars, galleries, and beaches.Biography
Plicka was born in 1926 in a mining town of
Kladno , formerCzechoslovakia . His father was a miner, often unemployed and as many others at that time, could not give the family a decent living.Starting a primary school meant a new happy life for Plicka. He finished school with best possible results, skipped high school and was enrolled in an elite school "Real Gymnasium" in 1937. After
World War II , during which Czech universities were closed, he continued his studies atCharles University ofPrague and graduated as a pedagog. Then until 1968, he was involved in sports professionally, coaching top Czech swimmers. In 1967, he was awarded a title "Coach of the Year".In 1968, after Soviet invasion to Czechoslovakia, he fled to Australia. He settled in Sydney, taking different jobs at different places, and started concentrating on street photography.
Besides Australia, he photographed one year in
Africa (1970s) and three years inAsia (1980s). During last 35 years, he finished three books. At present time, only "Streets of Sydney" has been published.During recent years, Plicka held several exhibitions in Sydney, but prefers private life and does not seek a wider recognition.
Work
From early age, Plicka was involved in sports and his desire to catch all moments led him to sports
photography . As a sports photographer, he photographed in six European countries, includingRussia .His trademark is candid black and white photography. He has been using different cameras during 65 years of work, but since 1952, he has been using Leica cameras, mainly his favourite
Leica M3 . He uses 35 mm and 50 mm lenses for his work.Plicka has been processing his photos on his own from his beginnings. He changed from
darkroom to digital/computer processing in 2004.
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