GALLERY AFRIQUE · ARTIST PROFILE

 

Peter
Dooley

 

Large-Format Fine Art Photography · Southern Africa

 

 

Peter Dooley creates large-format fine art photography

of Southern Africa's ancient landscapes — printed on museum-grade archival materials for collectors, contemporary interiors, and commercial spaces worldwide.

 

The work is meditative and restorative by design, bringing the quiet authority of untouched wilderness into permanent residence.

THE ARTIST

 

There is a detail about

Peter Dooley

that changes everything

once you know it.

 

At twenty years old, a landmine explosion permanently altered his vision.

 

Partial sight returned — fragmented, distorted, compromised in ways no medical intervention could fully resolve. For two decades he navigated a world perpetually defocused. A world most people saw clearly, and that he experienced as something perpetually just beyond reach.

 

At forty, something shifted. Perhaps stubbornness. Perhaps hope. Perhaps simply the refusal to accept that his story with sight was finished. Photography discovered him. Digital technology had evolved in ways that felt almost miraculous. Through a lens, he could finally see — not as before, but more clearly.

 

What he saw — and what he has been showing the world ever since — is a landscape stripped of chaos. Stripped of distraction. Stripped of everything that obscures what pristine nature looks like when nothing stands between you and it.

 

"This is not a limitation.
This has become his edge."

 

THE PHILOSOPHY

 

Photography as philosophical act.

 

Peter Dooley does not photograph landscapes to document them — or even, primarily, to capture their beauty, though beauty sometimes emerges despite his intentions. He photographs to witness paradoxes that exist on timescales so vast they render our entire human lifespan equivalent to a camera's shutter click.

 

His work asks uncomfortable questions and refuses to resolve them neatly. How does stone embody permanence while slowly surrendering to wind and rain? What does the invisible reveal about us? What happens when a photograph withholds as deliberately and precisely as it discloses? These are not aesthetic questions. They are philosophical ones.

 

Creating his first major body of work required what Dooley describes as an unlearning — abandoning the seductive vocabulary of contemporary landscape photography: the perfect light, the dramatic moment, the decisive instant. What remained was ancient stone, geological patience, and timescales that render our entire species a footnote. The camera ceased being a tool and became a translator.

TECHNICAL RESTRAINT

 

No theatrics. Only tonal honesty.

 

In an era where every phone camera offers filters before the shutter is pressed, Peter Dooley's approach feels almost confrontational in its restraint. No golden-hour glow to render stone more palatable. No soft filters to cushion viewers from reality's essential harshness. No post-production additions intended to deceive. Only the tonal integrity of what actually exists.

 

This restraint is not technical puritanism. It is respect — for the subject, and for the viewer. Every tonal shift matters. Every shadow holds information. The mist is rendered as it existed. The silhouette is as precise as the light allowed. When Dooley stands before these ancient formations, he does not impose meaning. He steps aside, and allows them to speak at their own pace, in their own language of texture, shadow, and tonal honesty.

 

This is photography that trusts the subject. That trusts the viewer. It refuses to complete what it has intentionally left open.

ARTIST STATEMENT

 

In Peter Dooley's own words.

 

I keep returning to the places where nature still looks like we imagined it would. The gap between that image and what's actually there is where most of my work begins.

 

I photograph in natural light because shadows do something that colour doesn't — they slow things down, make the familiar strange, and reveal what a quick glance misses. Working in the field, I'm drawn to moments that sit between the conspicuous and the overlooked: the beautiful and the flawed, often in the same frame.

 

Monochrome is my natural language. Black and white strips away distraction and gets to the weight of a thing — the density of a shadow, the texture of light on water, the stillness that exists just outside our attention. The rich blacks in my work are where the emotion lives.

 

But some scenes resist that translation. Occasionally I encounter a moment where colour is not decoration — it is the fact. The particular green of lichen after rain, or the exact warmth of late light on dry grass, carries meaning that black and white would quietly erase. In those moments, I follow the work rather than the habit.

 

Underneath all of it is a quiet argument: that the distance between how we picture nature and how we actually treat it is something worth sitting with. I'm not interested in accusation. I'm interested in the pause — the moment before you look away.

 

Peter Dooley

EXHIBITION HISTORY

 

 

JUNE - JULY 2023 · PRETORIA

 

Myriad of Contrasts

 

Solo exhibition · Art of Print Gallery, Waterkloof Glen, Pretoria, South Africa. Twenty-five black and white photography works by Peter Dooley,  his first major solo exhibition in a formal gallery setting.

 

 

APRIL – MAY 2025 · INTERNATIONAL

 

The Healing Power of Colour

 

Invitational exhibition · Manhattan Arts International, New York City. Selected by Director and Curator Renee Phillips from artists worldwide.

 

 

FEB – MAR 2025 · JOHANNESBURG

 

Think Outside

 

Gallery Afrique inaugural exhibition · Bedfordview, Johannesburg. Group show exploring the restorative effects of nature art in living spaces.

 

 

DIGITAL EXHIBITION - MAY - AUG 2026 · LINKEDIN

 

Death of Eternity

 

Fourteen images over fourteen weeks. One photograph per week — a pioneering digital exhibition format designed for the new generation of collectors.

 

 

Up-Coming Exhibition

 

DIGITAL EXHIBITION MAY-AUG 2027 · LINKEDIN

 

The Visible Invisible

 

Every image withholds something deliberately. What the viewer supplies is not imagination filling a gap — it is creation. Their creation.

AN EXPERT ASSESSMENT

 

Dennis Da Silva

 

MASTER BLACK & WHITE HAND PRINTER · JOHANNESBURG

 

 

Sony Profoto Lifetime Achievement Award,

2008 Honorary Fellow, Professional Photographers of South Africa Johannesburg, South Africa

Over a career spanning five decades, I have evaluated many photographic portfolios — from commercial studio work and darkroom hand printing through to judicating and judging prestigious international and local awards. I am a founder member Judge of the World Sony Photographic awards. I have travelled to the UK, Europe and America visiting many Photographers, Photographic Laboratories and educational institutions.

 

I have developed a clear sense of where a body of work sits within the broader landscape of the medium.

 

When Peter Dooley arrived at my studio with his portfolio, I felt something I had not felt in some time — the need to slow down and carefully study these images, taking his work home that evening to view it quietly, not something I often do.

 

Dooley's images are technically and aesthetically strong. The level of detail he achieves is remarkable — not in the sense of clinical sharpness for its own sake, but in the sense that every tonal zone is purposeful. His blacks have weight and detail without blocking up. His highlights hold fine detail without burning out. The mid-tone range — the most difficult region of the photographic tonal scale to manage with integrity — is handled with a precision that speaks to genuine mastery of the medium and a deep understanding of light, shape and form in the field, not merely in post-production.

 

But what separates technically proficient photography from significant photography is something harder to name. It has to do with the aesthetic quality of attention the photographer brings to the subject — whether the image feels observed or constructed, discovered or arranged. Dooley's landscapes feel witnessed with an inner beauty. He does not impose himself on the scene. He waits, it seems, for the landscape to become fully itself, and then he records it with fidelity and restraint.

 

The result is a body of work with genuine depth — the kind that reveals more on each viewing rather than less. In my experience, that quality is rare. It cannot be taught and it cannot be manufactured. It is the mark of a photographer who has developed not only a technical command of the medium, but a philosophical relationship with what he is photographing and why.

 

WHAT COLLECTORS, DECORATORS & CURATORS SAY

 

The work, through others' eyes.

 

Renee Phillips

 

Director & Curator
Manhattan Arts International
New York, NY

 

 

 

"Peter Dooley is a contemporary master in black and white photography."

 

Peter's art is visual poetry that elevates us to a peaceful realm. We bask in the glow of his myriad tones and degrees of luminosity that provide a treasure trove of harmonious modulations and contrasts. His images are meditative, bringing a healing modality to the viewer. We can imagine his art illuminating numerous residences, businesses, and healing facilities around the world. Peter does not use any digital manipulation in his photographs, which ensures an authentic and original capture of the scene he observes.

Tammy Marshall

 

Director & Curator
Manhattan Arts International
New York, NY

 

 

 

"Peter Dooley's mastery of black and white landscape photography is an artistic feat that transcends the limitations of the medium."

 

Peter's photographs possess a remarkable ability to evoke a sense of timelessness. His choice to work exclusively in black and white strips away the distractions of colour, focusing attention solely on the raw elements of nature. One cannot help but feel a sense of reverence for the majesty and grandeur of nature as portrayed through Peter's lens. His black and white landscapes are a testament to the enduring power of monochrome photography.

Debra Russell

 

Art Collector · Artist
East Rand, South Africa

 

 

 

"Peter is a master in the art of landscape photography."

 

The print we purchased for our collection is so beautiful and visually arresting that every visitor to our home stops in front of it to take it in. They fall as much in love with it as we did when we first saw it. It was a wonderful experience acquiring the artwork from Peter, who is incredibly generous with both his time and knowledge.

Itumeleng Makgakga

 

Director · Interior Designer · Illustrator
Terracotta Cells
Johannesburg, South Africa

 

 

 

"Your passion for art, photography and the incredible space you have created truly inspires me."

 

It was an absolute pleasure visiting your gallery. Thank you for the warm welcome and for taking the time to share your beautiful collection with me. The space you have created reflects everything the work stands for.

Robin Mortarotti

 

Owner
Mortarotti–Ramirez Productions
Oakland, California

 

 

 

"Your images are calming, thought provoking and serene."

 

You seem to have an uncanny ability to look through the haze and trauma afflicting the world to a more pristine view of what an unspoiled environment looks like — a view humanity has forgotten about or maybe never experienced. You are an ambassador for environmental change in the face of our climate crisis.

View the collections and acquire the work.