Kennedy takes us off the beaten track to Bruny Island, off the coast of Hobart, and returns to Uluru, where climbing of the sacred rock ceased in 2019, but tourism is bigger than ever.
Detail of Vincent Namatjira's work, "Past-Present-Future", 2021, displayed on foyer wall of Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
"Lick" 2015, a video work by Angela Tiatia about trying to maintain a foothold on the seabed in Tuvalu as sea level rises. Part of the "Perspectives on Place" exhibition at Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Drawings of plants from west Kimberley by Shirley Purdie explore place, memory and identity. Part of the "Perspectives on Place" exhibition at Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
The Neck, Bruny Island, Hobart. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Detail of "Within an Utterance" installation about language and identity by Robert Andrew at Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Uluru from the air. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Mutitjulu cave, in Uluru. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Mutitjulu waterhole, in Uluru. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Sunset at Uluru. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Sunset at Uluru. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
Sunset at Uluru. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
"Field of Light," an installation of 55,000 lights near Uluru by Bruce Munro. (PHOTO: Kennedy Warne)
The images in this gallery are used with permission and are subject to copyright conditions.