The Gates of Hell
The Gates of Hell or the Burning Gates is a burning gas crater situated in Turkmenistan.
The Gates of Hell or the Burning Gates is a burning gas crater situated in Turkmenistan.
Taken at sunrise at Lake Hayward it represents to me the complexity of ecosystems which I wish to convey in the final work.
I took this photo on Sunday at Lake Pollard and showed the photo as part of my presentation at the Hydrobotanics Symposium yesterday.
this is a detail of a sink in the Path lab
I am interested in taking a picture of the left forefoot of different sized animals. Here is one from Sydney the very happy Pomeranian whose owner kindly allowed me to photograph him the other day.
As a child this was one of my favourite animals.
I had forgotten the power of depth of field. This image is of a bank of path slide smears with purple stains. Amazing abstract image.
A network of bodily paths.
A starting point in my work about the spaces of science for project 2. Someone has just left/someone is about to come in. Bare life.
Encyclopaedia Isoptera 1998 Bound digital print book with 196 illustrations. Edition of three Book 20.5 x 13.5 x 2 cm Encyclopaedia Isoptera was part of the Termitaria series. It was a 224-page long Encyclopaedia on termites, which combined factual biological information with interesting anecdotes and fascinating facts about termites that had been collected from …
Macropus eugenii (tammar wallaby) 2006 in Chart, John Curtin Art Gallery, Curtin University of Technology vinyl on floor 10 m x 10 m In an exhibition whose theme was mapping the radio tracking data of a two tammar wallabies on Garden Island off the coast of Perth are reproduced as a floor map. The …
Some drawings from my PhD.
The world has no shortage of things (the world of the Great Bowerbird) was a sound installation shown as part of The System of Nature, exhibition at the Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, The University of Western Australia. This exhibition celebrated the 300th anniversary of the birth of Linnaeus.