Sun Baker is a photograph taken by Australian photographer Max Dupain in 1937. The photograph is a black and white image of a man lying on a beach with his arms crossed, seemingly asleep or sunbathing. The man in the photograph is Harold Salvage, a sunbather who Dupain spotted on a Sydney beach. The photograph has become one of Australia's most recognizable and iconic images, and is often used to represent the country's laid-back beach culture. In recent years, the photograph has also come to symbolize Australia's colonial history, as the man in the photograph is indigenous Australian. Despite this, the image is still widely celebrated and admired for its striking composition and the way it captures the essence of a lazy summer day.
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