This was also a time when Aboriginal artists (such as Michael Riley, Brenda Croft and Destiny Deacon) were recognised as photographers and artists in their own right rather than as part of what the mainstream considered to be a marginalised social group. In parallel, artists of non-Anglo Saxon descent ceased to be corralled as "multicultural". Points of view presents the work of 20 artists, including William Yang, Sandy Edwards, Anne Ferran, Ingeborg Tyssen, Destiny Deacon, David Stephenson, Robyn Stacey, Anne Zahalka, Farrell & Parkin, Pat Brassington and Rosemary Laing.
The exhibition covers a number of issues, for example, the ongoing concern with matters of representation regardless of who or what the subject might be; the life of objects within the photographic frame and how the subject operates as a memory trigger or imaginative springboard and the dynamic relationship between the still and moving image through narrative, series and scale. Points of view follows on from the highly successful 1999 exhibition What is this thing called photography?
Australian photography 1975-85, which set the scene for an understanding of the refocusing and diversity of experimentation in photographic practice of 20-30 years ago. Judy Annear, curator of the exhibition and senior curator photography at the Art Gallery of New South Wales says: "While some commentators in the Australian photography scene saw that photography as we had come to understand it to be could be exhausted as a medium by the mid 1990s, artists in Points of view showed no sign of this exhaustion as they continued to explore and refine their ideas and practice."