I’ve photographed at the Birpai Local Aboriginal Land Council in Port Macquarie a number of times and I always love returning to this welcoming space.  The centre is set amongst the bush with native plants endemic to the area, which local Birpai people can demonstrate many traditional uses for.  Every time I’m there, I learn more about the local culture of our First Nations people, and about the Birpai/Dunghutti country that I’m so lucky to live in.   I was photographing for a not-for-profit organisation, FCAN (The Financial Counsellors’ Association of NSW Inc).  FCAN was in Port Macquarie for a conference with volunteers and suppliers from across the state.  They were treated to cultural performances and demonstrations from local indigenous children and women.  The sting ray dance performed by the ladies is always a highlight – it’s so serene and calming.   Following the dances, everyone (including me) learnt traditional weaving with Trish.  The same technique can be used to weave jewellery or baskets, using the lomandra grass.   After weaving, Rhonda walked us around the garden to learn about plants and their uses.   Lemon myrtle was one of the local bush foods used to make these delicious deserts. […] Read More
  I didn’t realise we had arrived at the school as the car pulled up outside a small shack in the middle of a dusty community.  I was with I-India for an NGO photography shoot, a small grassroots organisation based in the desert city of Jaipur, India.   As I’ll explain in another blog post, a series of coincidences had lead me to contact I-India and offer my services as a volunteer photographer.  Due to changing financial times, the not for profit organisation has seen a decline in donations from its international funders over the past couple of years which means they will probably have to cut up to 30% of their projects in the next year.     On the ground, this means that hundreds of vulnerable children will go hungry.  I met some of these children.  They are as innocent and loveable as any children I’ve met, but the fact that they were born into poverty in India means that their fate is very different from that of children where I’m from, Australia. I-India has saved them from child labour, child marriages, homelessness, begging on the streets and more. The organisation’s dedicated staff runs a range of truly […] Read More
We had an amazing turn out to the opening night of Pachamama Exhibition on Thursday, 26 June.  Art lovers from all over Sydney came to view images of indigenous peoples of Latin America, by five photographers including me.  Each photographer’s set of images illustrated a theme relating to the people’s relationship with Pachamama:   Tradition by Alicia Fox Displacement by Rodrigo Llauro & Natalia Cartney Reconnection by Guillermo Rossi Adaptation by Armando Vega Relationship by Toril Pursell   All photos were for sale, with a percentage going to NGOs assisting the people in the photographs.  Images (framed and unframed) are still available for purchase, so feel free to contact me if you are interested.   Below is a short excerpt from a call out by Survival International, an NGO working to protect isolated tribes in regions including the Amazon.  It explains why rapid action to help vulnerable tribes people is important.  “An alarming number of uncontacted Indians have been sighted fleeing Peru and entering Brazil. Brazil’s Indian Affairs Department has warned that they face imminent “death” as they enter into the territory of other uncontacted tribes and settled communities. Rampant illegal logging in Peru is believed to be at the heart of this impending disaster. There are only about 100 uncontacted tribes left in […] Read More