Age, Biography and Wiki
Mark Strizic (Marko Strizic) was born on 19 April, 1928 in Berlin, Germany. Discover Mark Strizic's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 84 years old?
Popular As |
Marko Strizic |
Occupation |
N/A |
Age |
84 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Aries |
Born |
19 April, 1928 |
Birthday |
19 April |
Birthplace |
Berlin, Germany |
Date of death |
(2012-12-08) Wallan, Victoria, Australia |
Died Place |
Wallan, Victoria, Australia |
Nationality |
Germany |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 19 April.
He is a member of famous with the age 84 years old group.
Mark Strizic Height, Weight & Measurements
At 84 years old, Mark Strizic height not available right now. We will update Mark Strizic's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
Physical Status |
Height |
Not Available |
Weight |
Not Available |
Body Measurements |
Not Available |
Eye Color |
Not Available |
Hair Color |
Not Available |
Who Is Mark Strizic's Wife?
His wife is Sue
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
Sue |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
Mark Strizic Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Mark Strizic worth at the age of 84 years old? Mark Strizic’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Germany. We have estimated
Mark Strizic's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
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Mark Strizic Social Network
Instagram |
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Wikipedia |
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Imdb |
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Timeline
In a 2017 article, Gael Newton, who until 3 years prior was Senior Curator of Australian and International Photography at the National Gallery of Australia, in accounting for his portrait style, draws a link between Strizic's stills photography on Tim Burstall's film 2000 Weeks, his experimentation since the 1960s with a 35mm 'snapshot' aesthetic and his collaboration with Clifton Pugh on Involvement;
In 2013 a bushfire destroyed his home and studio and his entire collection of prints, though the State Library of Victoria had acquired the majority of his negatives in 2007.
Sydney Morning Herald critic Robert McFarlane in 1997 emphasises Strizic's European eye, comparing him to Robert Frank as an "illuminated outsider", one whose images of Australian urban society are often droll, and their design revealing;
Strizic was an early adopter of digital imaging techniques in producing such murals, through processes Strizic discussed in an address to Still Photography? an international symposium on digital imaging, Melbourne, 4–8 April 1994". For critic Robert McFarlane writing in 1997, Strizic's concentration after the early '80s on "large-scale corporate and civic murals, using painting, photography and new computer technologies" displaces photography so that...
The Visual Art/Craft Board's $25,000 Emeritus Fellowship 1993 (also awarded that year to photographer Olive Cotton)
After the passage of a further 20 years, in 1992, Strizic's manipulation of his 1950s negatives was considered outmoded by Age critic Greg Neville in his review of concurrent shows by the photographer;
Strizic taught photography at workshops at the Church Street Photographic Centre in 1978, alongside John Cato, Robert Imhoff and Ian Cosier. after having in 1975 commenced a 10-year period lecturing at a number of tertiary educational institutions which augmented his artistic practice; Preston (Phillip) Institute of Technology (1975–1977) to which he was recruited by fashion photographer Henry Talbot; Melbourne College of Advanced Education (Lecturer in Charge of Photography 1977–1982); and as part-time lecturer in Photography at the Victorian College of the Arts (1982–1984). He presented a public lecture An Experience in Photography, at the University of Melbourne Institute of Education on 20 May 1992
Strizic bought his first camera, a Diaxette and began to photograph his environment, developing a love of strong light which he found abundant under the clear skies of his adopted city. In 1987 his exhibition notes for The 1950s – Photographs by Mark Strizic", which launched a book illustrated with the same images, and shown at the Melbourne C.A.E. and Gryphon Gallery, Strizic discusses his motivation in taking up the camera;
In 1984 he became a full-time artist, photographer and designer and the winner of a number of photographic awards and grants. He found a market for large scale mural installations amongst corporate clients and exhibited artistic works in the same media, work he continued into the late 1990s.
In the next decade, the reaction amongst the established photographic community to Strizic's radical change of direction was one of confusion. Prominent senior Australian photographer Max Dupain, in reviewing a landmark 1983 survey of Australian photography at Albury Regional Gallery in which he exhibited flower studies, represents this ambivalence:
Over several years during the mid-1980s Strizic was resident artist documenting the cultural activities of the City of Knox from which he produced two murals for the Council foyer. He participated with artist Rex Keogh and composer Geoffrey D'ombrain in recording their community participation art events later exhibited at Knox and at the Arts Ministry.
Opening The Fall of the Shadow at Church Street Photographic Centre on 15 November 1977, Patrick McCaughey, professor of Fine Arts at Monash University who summarily dismissed the photographer's monochrome portraits in 1968, approached the discordant application of colour in Strizic's montages with appreciation;
Strizic's work is represented in the Australian National Gallery and several state galleries and in corporate collections. He was also a collector of significant Australian art himself, and as early as 1974 lent works by John Perceval, whom he photographed 2 years later, to Marianne Baillieu for a show at her gallery Realities.
Symbols of urban ugliness such as power poles and billboards were his subject matter and critical target in often apocalyptic imagery intended to provoke a social consciousness. As artist and critic James Gleeson expressed it in a 1973 review:
In 1968 he was official stills photographer on director Tim Burstall's 2000 Weeks. A Two Thousand Weeks 'photo novel', illustrated with stills by Strizic and the film’s director of photography, Robin Copping, with layout design by Strizic, was published by Sun Books as a movie tie-in in late 1968.
Strizic made portraits of significant Australians including academics, scientists and those involved in the arts and these are held in collections including those of the Australian National Gallery, the National Gallery of Victoria and the State Library of Victoria. The majority were shown in 1968 in Some Australian personalities – an exhibition of photographic portraits by Mark Strizic, at the Verdon Gallery, National Gallery of Victoria, 24 May-9 June and reviewed dismissively as 'posed' and 'self-conscious', by Melbourne Age painting critic Patrick McCaughey. These were augmented for the expensively produced 1,200 copy limited-edition book Involvement, conceived and commissioned by philanthropist Andrew Grimwade, with an introduction by Geoffrey Dutton. The collaboration of Strizic with painter Clifton Pugh involved the photography of the 41 significant Australians included, whom Pugh painted during his career. In his 1969 review of the book, launched 7 February, writer Clive Turnbull enthused over the 'complementarity' of the portraits of the same people in the two different media. Strizic used 35mm at a time when medium or large format was the norm for portraiture, and his use of long focal lengths, available light and aura-enhancing shallow depth of field sets the sitter into their environment.
Postwar industrialisation in Australia led then to work for mining company BHP, civil engineers Humes Limited and manufacturers McPhersons, photographing the plants, manufacturing, products and workers for annual reports and advertising, while the concurrent housing boom provided further opportunities. Strizic dissolved his partnership with Bigham on the latter's retirement in 1960, and established his studio, neighbouring those of other photographers, in Collins Street, Melbourne in what was known as 'The Paris End'. His clients there included Westminster Carpets whose advertisements of he mid-60s featured his interiors and are unusual in including a credit line to the photographer.
In 1960 Strizic joined David Saunders to produce Melbourne: A Portrait, stating 'Its central thought is that while men make cities, the cities also affect the men.' The Age book reviewer Richard Troy described Strizic's contribution; "The photography is startlingly imaginative and startlingly beautiful—beautiful, not in the sense of the word as movie-advertisement copy writers use it, but in the sense that truth is beautiful".
Again through Saunders, in 1958, Strizic met modernist Robin Boyd of architectural firm Grounds, Romberg and Boyd, who became a major client. Boyd controversially criticised Australian suburban culture in his book The Australian Ugliness of 1960, and Strizic echoed these sentiments in writing, and in his photography began to illustrate Australians' disdain for their architectural heritage and their scant regard for the visual aesthetics of their urban environment amidst the destruction of magnificent Gold Rush era buildings and verandahs and their replacement by high-rise modernist office-blocks. This work was widely published in architectural books and journals but also illustrated social commentary during this period of a national identity crisis with frequent contributions of his photo-essays on a wide range of subjects to Walkabout, Overseas trading, The Bulletin, Australia Today and other magazines (see below the range of books containing his photographs).
From 1958, Strizic exhibited almost annually in group, joint, and solo shows. Having exhibited in Melbourne's Twelve ·Best Buildings jointly at the National Gallery of Victoria with Athol Shmith in 1958, Strizic become the first photographer to exhibit there solo in 1968 and the first whose work was acquired by the National Gallery of Australia.
He enjoyed shooting into the sun contre-jour, and capturing low afternoon side-lighting effects for their high-contrast graphic silhouettes in black and white prints, and that became his signature style for his historically and culturally significant photographs of post-war Melbourne. Photography was a tool he used in his studies in physics, which in 1957 he abandoned for a career in the medium, in which he was encouraged by his father (who visited Melbourne in 1957 as guest professor at the School of Architecture Melbourne University); Zdenko Strižić had only recently exhibited his own collection of photographs, of the traditional architecture of Zagreb, and published a limited-edition book of high-quality reproductions of them, Svjetla i sjene ('Light and Shadows').
In 1952 he married Hungarian-born Sue. They settled in Richmond, subsequently renovating and moving into a large two-storey terrace at 61 Park St., South Yarra, to South Melbourne and Kew, and finally to Wallan, in country Victoria, living there until his death in 2012.
Strizic and James S. Bigham formed a partnership in a photography business at 1 Beech Street, Surrey Hills before moving it to Strizic's home at 1 Francis Street, Richmond. Friendship with David Saunders, (who had stayed with Strizic's parents in Yugoslavia in 1952) a Senior Lecturer in Architecture at the University of Melbourne who was then acting Assistant Director at the National Gallery of Victoria, provided Strizic with increasingly frequent photography commissions. In 1957 Saunders introduced him to Leonard French, an artist and the Gallery's Exhibitions Officer, who asked him to document exhibitions, including the 1959 retrospective of cabinet maker Schulim Krimper’s furniture.
At the end of WW2, Strizic fled to Austria as a refugee following the liberation of Yugoslavia to escape the Communist regime. As there was a five-year waiting period to emigrate to the United States, he decided to go instead to Australia. He departed Naples on the converted Australian Navy seaplane carrier Hellenic Prince, arriving in Melbourne in on Anzac Day, 25 April 1950.
By the turn of the century Strizic's urban record of Melbourne of the 1950s and 1960s was regarded as of historical interest, as National Gallery of Victoria photography curator Isobel Crombie remarked in a 1999 interview;
Marko Strizic was born in 1928 in Berlin, where his Croatian father, Zdenko Strižić (1902–1990), was studying and practising architecture (later becoming a Professor of Architecture). His mother was a textile designer, trained in Berlin, who contributed to Zdenko's practice. In 1934, in reaction to Hitler's appointment as Chancellor, the family fled to Zagreb, Yugoslavia (now Croatia). There Strizic began to study physics and geology.