My
passion for photography spans 35 years. Working with Environmental, Archaeological
and "Noongar" (aboriginal) people and groups helps to share this
passion. My respect to the Noongar people who have trusted me, thank you.
Forte:
Aerial Photography and Videography
Large Scale Panoramic Photographs
Cultural and Environmental Documentation
Archaeological Documentation
Wildlife and Landscape Photography
Stories about People and Place
Production Services
Full HDV Production Facilities to DVD
Photographic
work published in 2009
International Rivers Foundation - Book
River Journeys
A
collection of photo work is housed at Flickr.com click the image below
Recording
the magic that exists, the people who are part of this amazing environment,
the concerns, the degredation, the regeneration is a responsibility that I have,
due to my skills and for future generations.
It always
comes down to dollars and (sense) or grants as to whether a video is made
or photographic documentation takes place. I attempt to put the relevance
of the work before financial concerns as time wait's for no one and the environment
doesn't have a bank account. I am also concerned for the future of our families
of Noongar people.
As
one Noongar Elder and friend said "Its time to wake up".
Organisations
generally loose sight of what media can convey. Why read a document when a
video will take you there, it is the first step to better communication.
Photography
is like a daily journal, as they say an image tells a thousand words,
a video a million.
Notable Recent Video Production's
Walk
Awhile in my Blues
Its not just about Archaeology
Eugene Eades - A man from Country
Reconnecting to Country
Taking the classroom to the Bush
Its a wild, wild Place
Video's
may be order directly.
I
am drawn by the plight of the environment as Western Australia is in a
sad state. The Southwest wheat belt area could be on the edge of a catastrophic
breakdown.
West Australia was one of the most Bio-Diverse areas on earth. A policey in
the late 1950's and 60's of clearing 1 million acres a year for farms led
to the mass extinction of what, we now don't know. Check out southern WA on
Google Earth it used to be green and now brown.