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ICAN Commission : Tilman Ruff

September 01. 2019

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This year I was so honoured to be asked by ICAN (International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons) to photograph Prof. Tilman Ruff AO, Nobel Peace Laureate. Ruff is an associate professor at the Nossal Institute for Global Health, University of Melbourne. He is also on the Australian Board of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), the 2017 Nobel Peace Laureate and has written extensively on nuclear issues, including the hazards or ionizing radiation, nuclear weapons, nuclear war and nuclear famine. He serves as medical advisor to the international department of Australian Red Cross and is a member of the World Health Organization Western Pacific Region's Hepatitis B Expert Resource Panel. Ruff has previously led the development of travel medicines, worked on the control of Hepatitis B and worked to improve maternal and child health in Indonesia and the Pacific islands. He has also worked as a regional medical director for vaccines, employed by a major manufacturer.

tilman

The campaign received the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize "for its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons." Ruff has been an active member of the Medical Association for Prevention of War in Australia for over three decades and is a co-president of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW). He helped establish the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) and was its founding chair. He remains a member of the ICAN Australia Committee and ICAN's International Steering Group.[3] In 2010, he told the Sydney Morning Herald: "We've come a long way. The numbers of nuclear weapons have been reduced from the peak of 70,000 in 1986 to about 23,000 - that's a drastic reduction."[4] Ruff co-authored an article with former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser entitled "2015 is the year to ban nuclear weapons." In 2017, Ruff expressed his pride at the work of ICAN and its receipt of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize for “its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons”.

I cannot express what a joy it was to spend time with and photograph Tilman. His easy going entertaining nature made the process a breeze. The Canberra Times recently wrote a very nice article describing the process and the resulting image which is at present hanging in the National Portrait Gallery of Australia.

tilman

Original text from the Canberra Times, By Steve Evans. September 20th. 2019

Not many of us get to see a portrait of ourselves in a big-time art gallery.

But it happened to Dr Tilman Ruff at lunchtime on Thursday.

He's a doctor specialising in infectious diseases who has turned himself into a campaigner against nuclear weapons.

His portrait, by photographer Nikki Toole, is in a special exhibition at the newly re-opened National Portrait Gallery in Canberra.

After looking at the image of himself Dr Ruff said, "I'm not sure I know this bloke."

And you can see what he means.

In the flesh, his features are soft and his demeanour is gentle. In the portrait, his chin juts out and he is looking purposefully into the distance in a visionary kind of way.

It's not that he didn't like the picture - he did. "It's one of the nicest pictures that anyone's ever taken of me." He thought it revealed a side of him he hadn't recognised. He said his family think the same. "It's a photograph of me that's captured things that don't normally become apparent and perspectives and feelings that are quite novel. Most of my family and people who know me have been quite struck."

Dr Ruff has the gentleness of a doctor and the toughness of a determined campaigner - and the picture gets that. Since 2012, he has been the joint president of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, an organisation that won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1985. He was also the founding Australian chairman of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, which was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017. In front of the portrait, he seemed shy. "It's such a humbling privilege to visit this hallowed space and to be in such extraordinary artistic and subject company. It's really quite a humbling honour. "You look at yourself somewhat anew."

That combination of softness and resolution comes from the juxtaposition of his taut face and the soft red jumper.

The jumper was the photographer's inspired choice. When he met Nikki Toole, he was dressed in formal clothes - much as he was when he went to the gallery this week. But she asked him if he had other clothes. He produced his old, worn farm sweater and she jumped at it.

"I brought this old clapped out, red jumper from the farm. The elbows are both full of holes. It's worn through. It's extremely comfortable. Anybody who needs a cosy jumper tends to wear it. "As soon as Nikki saw that red jumper she said, 'Take your shirt off. Put that on'."

And it transforms the impression. It's turned a man who looks inconspicuous in real life into a visionary. The picture is in a new exhibition that opened on Saturday called The Look, curated by Dr Sarah Engelow, the historian at the National Portrait Gallery. "Tilman looks indomitable. He looks determined. I think he looks as if he's looking into the future," Dr Engelow said.

Dr Engelow said the staff at the gallery sometimes imagine the pictures talking to each other when it's closed. But this is the man in the flesh. "It's exciting to see the real man."

See the original post HERE