After graduation, Mitelman practiced as a freelance photographer specialising in portraiture for magazines including the trendsetting POL, and newspapers,[2] album and book covers, and for theatre and music posters.[3] During her career she has sought out Australia's significant writers, artists and personalities for her subjects, thus creating a valuable pantheon of the country's culture.[4]
One hundred and twenty appear in her 1988 book Faces of Australia was work previously exhibited at The Art Gallery, Prahran,[5] to a lukewarm review from Age reviewer Greg Neville who while conceding that they were "professional and respectable," considered them "commercial portraiture in the sixties style, all grain and contrast, dressed up with just the right dose of Bicentenary sentiment," work that "tells us no more about the famed sitters than we already know, and nothing about the artist.[6] Tom Fantl prefaced his review of the book with the statement that in portraiture "the surface physical features are descriptive but not all telling. It is the personality and psyche which the creative artist must explore, capture and relate. It is the inherent character which the viewer is urged to see, thereby seemingly establishing an understanding, almost a relationship, with the individual portrayed."
He concludes that;
Mitelman's approach is classical and explorative. Classically her sitters look directly into the camera lens, and hence at us, (eg Harry Siedler), thereby drawing us into their space and time. By carefully positioning her subjects, yet making them appear spontaneous we feel watched even as we do the watching.[7]
Terry Lane, with the arrival of the internet nevertheless questions the value of such 'coffee-table' books as Mitelman's, even in the prior age of television, other than as 'time capsules'; "No one ever looks at it, which is a pity because I am in it."[8]
“taking photographs is a bit like a temporary infatuation, for me, because, I'm not interested in taking awkward pictures of somebody, so it's a bit like...that process when you fall in love with somebody.”[9]
Of Mitelman’s portraits of dogs when displayed at Waverley City Gallery (Monash Gallery of Art), critic Anna Clabburn wrote;
As with American photographer Bill Wegman's much earlier portraits of his pet weimaraners, there's much to be learnt from Mitelman's comic-yet-serious transposition of dogs into human guise. The anthropomorphic quality of her subjects is both inviting and vaguely disturbing, and certainly makes us think more deeply about our relationship with the beasts we so easily call "pets'[19]
Exhibitions
2019/20, 21 September-20 January: A Dog’s Life, curators Maudie Palmer AO and Eugene Howard, Hamilton Gallery[20]
2016: Finalist, Bowness Prize, Monash Gallery of Art
2014: Finalist, Pinnacles Gallery Portrait Prize
2013, May: On Cockatoo Island, Mars Gallery
2012: Smith Street Portrait Project, Gertrude Street Projection Festival[21]
2011/12, October–February: Tarra Warra Museum of Art[22][23][24]
2010: Finalist, National Photographic Portrait Prize, National Portrait Gallery
2008: Finalist, Olive Cotton Award, Tweed River Art Gallery
2007: Finalist, Olive Cotton Award, Tweed River Art Gallery
2008, April: Some Dogs, MARS Gallery Port Melbourne
2005, April: Mostly Strange, MARS Gallery Port Melbourne
2002, January 3-February 10: Investigations, Herring Island Environmental Sculpture Park
2002, October 8–25: Photomontage, J-Space Centre for Contemporary Art, Chisholm Institute
1995, March 8-June 8: Beyond the Picket Fence: Australian women's art in the National Library collections, National Library of Australia, Canberra, opened by Andrea Stretton, 7 March 1995[26][27]
1989, from 19 December: Literary Images, Jacqueline Mitelman, Virginia Wallace-Crabbe and Juno Gemes. Special collections section, library of the Australian Defence Force Academy, launched by Robin Wallace-Crabbe[28]
1989, July 20–August 27: Jacqueline Mitelman, Jeff Busby, Greg Elms, Peter Leiss, Resurgence, The Photographers' Gallery
1988, to 26 November: Faces Of Australia, works by Jacqueline Mitelman The Art Gallery, 142 Greville St, Prahran[29]
1984, to 1 July Still Movements: A photographic exhibition of images of dance. Mark Ashkanasy, Andrew Baker, Jeff Busby, Paul Cox, Branco Gaila, Stephen Hall, Werner Hammerstingl, Liz King, William Lasica, Jacqueline Mitelman, Russell Naughton, Bernie O'Regan, Athol Smith, Tome Sikora and Walter Stringer. Heide Gallery, Bulleen[30]
1975, October 1-September 6: Wimmin: six wimmin photographers, National Gallery of Victoria, for International Women's Year[27]
1975: Woman 1975, touring exhibition of the Women's Christian Association of Australia, Victoria, for International Women's Year[27]
1974, July: Prahran College Photography students Matthew Nickson, Euan McGillivray and Jacqueline Mitelman. Brummels Gallery of Photography, 95 Toorak Road, South Yarra)[31]
Awards
2011: National Photographic Portrait Prize National Portrait Gallery
Mitelman, Jacqueline; Horne, Donald (1988), Faces of Australia, Lothian, ISBN978-0-85091-343-9[7]
Mitelman, Jacqueline; Gaston, Vivien; TarraWarra Museum of Art (2011), Jacqueline Mitelman : facetime, TarraWarra Museum of Art, retrieved 26 January 2020
Horn, Michael; Hanover Welfare Services; Stegley Foundation (1995), Women alone ... : stepping forward : a report on homelessness experienced by lone women (1995 ed.), Hanover Welfare Services, ISBN978-0-9588815-2-4
References
^Cross, Elizabeth; Maloon, Terence; National Gallery of Victoria (2004), Allan Mitelman : works on paper 1967-2004, National Gallery of Victoria, ISBN978-0-7241-0250-1
^Helen Disney, Gail Bateman, Elizabeth Seddon (1996) 'Healthy Families and Relationships', in Australian Institute of Family Studies, (issuing body.) (1987), Family matters : newsletter of the Australian Institute of Family Studies, Australian Institute of Family Studies, ISSN1030-2646
^"Portraits hit sweet spot.(Green Guide)", The Age (Melbourne, Australia), Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited: 29, 12 February 2009, ISSN0312-6307
^Costello, M. (2017). Abu Ben Bail: a creative writer reads Murray Bail’s archived correspondence. Mosaic: an interdisciplinary critical journal, 50(3), 91-105.
^Mitelman, Jacqueline; Gaston, Vivien; TarraWarra Museum of Art (2011), Jacqueline Mitelman : facetime, TarraWarra Museum of Art, retrieved 26 January 2020
^"SPACE.(News)", The Age (Melbourne, Australia), Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited: 15, 22 February 2012, ISSN0312-6307
^"Art directory.(Directory)", Art and Australia, 49 (1), Art and Australia Pty. Ltd: 179(12), 22 March 2011, ISSN0004-301X
^Carr, Sylvia; National Library of Australia (1995), Beyond the picket fence : Australian women's art in the National Library's collection, National Library of Australia, ISBN978-0-642-10637-7