This paper takes the form of a photo-essay that documents Over the Ditch, a site-specific photomedia installation in the On Islands exhibition, held in 2014 in Sydney, Australia. Over the Ditch is an outcome of collaboration between a geographer and an historian, who are also an artist and a designer, working together at the nexus contemporary art practice, geography and history. The project collates and communicates the historical and contemporary experiences of trans-Tasman mobilities by queer New Zealanders and Australians. ‘Hopping over the ditch’ is an Antipodean colloquialism for trans-Tasman crossing. Over the Ditch explores the trans-Tasman experiences of seven gay men from 1931-2014. The work comprises archival, found and donated p...
The transformation of meaning generated via drawing as mark making into the land itself is demonstra...
The concept of migration is not typically understood as an Indigenous Australian experience; rather ...
The aim of this chapter is to relocate fragments of queer heritage in post-earthquake Christchurch a...
The Antipodes – Australia and New Zealand – are large islands surrounded by the Pacific, Indian and ...
This article situates queer mobility within wider historical geographies of trans-Tasman flows of go...
This article situates queer mobility within wider historical geographies of trans-Tasman flows of go...
In 2015 I undertook 'Thrown-togetherness', a practice-based research project that explored visual an...
Queer people are often ‘othered’ in everyday spaces because of the assumptions, practices, and belie...
Modern museums and galleries are cultural spaces that often participate in human rights advocacy and...
Drawing from our independent disciplines of queer theory and photography, this paper examines the cr...
Since the 1990s, cultural geographers have used a variety of methodologies to track the physical mig...
Over the past 15 years geographers in the UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere have...
CRUISING WONDERLAND refers to a specific ‘beat’ site in Sydney associated with illicit encounters an...
This paper explores how narratives of Australian belonging are formed through a quilted matrix of my...
North American photographer Catherine Opie and South African photographers Zanele Muholi and Jean Br...
The transformation of meaning generated via drawing as mark making into the land itself is demonstra...
The concept of migration is not typically understood as an Indigenous Australian experience; rather ...
The aim of this chapter is to relocate fragments of queer heritage in post-earthquake Christchurch a...
The Antipodes – Australia and New Zealand – are large islands surrounded by the Pacific, Indian and ...
This article situates queer mobility within wider historical geographies of trans-Tasman flows of go...
This article situates queer mobility within wider historical geographies of trans-Tasman flows of go...
In 2015 I undertook 'Thrown-togetherness', a practice-based research project that explored visual an...
Queer people are often ‘othered’ in everyday spaces because of the assumptions, practices, and belie...
Modern museums and galleries are cultural spaces that often participate in human rights advocacy and...
Drawing from our independent disciplines of queer theory and photography, this paper examines the cr...
Since the 1990s, cultural geographers have used a variety of methodologies to track the physical mig...
Over the past 15 years geographers in the UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere have...
CRUISING WONDERLAND refers to a specific ‘beat’ site in Sydney associated with illicit encounters an...
This paper explores how narratives of Australian belonging are formed through a quilted matrix of my...
North American photographer Catherine Opie and South African photographers Zanele Muholi and Jean Br...
The transformation of meaning generated via drawing as mark making into the land itself is demonstra...
The concept of migration is not typically understood as an Indigenous Australian experience; rather ...
The aim of this chapter is to relocate fragments of queer heritage in post-earthquake Christchurch a...