JUST EAST OF NOW.

Rural Australia is dying. It once used to be a thriving, prosperous area, with millions of Australians choosing the freedom of the bush over the crowded, fast paced urban life. Recently however, many people have chosen to walk off the land and move to the cities, leaving very few remaining rural residents to grapple with the strain of such an isolated and arduous existence. Documenting my own hometown's demise, this series chronicles the blue collar people living lives of quiet desperation, portraying everyday struggle and ordinary tragedy, as rural towns continue to be pushed to the precipice of extinction.

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Rural Australia is dying. It once used to be a thriving, prosperous area, with millions of Australians choosing the freedom of the bush over the crowded, fast paced city life. Recently however, many people have chosen to walk off the land and move to the cities, leaving very few remaining rural residents to grapple with the strain of such an isolated and arduous existence. This series documents the demise of my hometown, and depicts the blue collar people living lives of quiet desperation, portraying everyday struggle and ordinary tragedy, as they feel their way in dark, hoping that things will get better.

The extensive rural-to-urban migration has left small regional communities seemingly stuck in a downward spiral of declining public services, social infrastructure, and commercial facilities, as residents continue to relocate to larger population centres where there is the greater availability of employment, education and training opportunities, and social services.

Situated 167km east of Perth in the centre of the Wheatbelt region, my hometown of Quairading is a small agricultural community with a shire population of just under 1000 people. Very little goes on here besides agricultural activity, and opportunities leading to anything bigger than the town itself are rare. Here, one either escapes when given the chance, or chooses to stay and sign their life away in a slow and tedious demise. This plight of country life causes unease and discontent to those within the boundaries of modern society, those who are not satisfied with remaining a hostage of the past. Quairading is so rural and patinaed with the past, it allows such a remove, the distance of another time.

In exploring the disintegration of regional communities in Australia as a result of the unprecedented increase in rural-to-urban migration, through the lens of the current state of my hometown , this work investigates the relationship between the identity of the town’s remaining residents, and the fracturing demise of their community’s landscape. In capturing the underlying vernacular aesthetics of regional Australia, I document the merge between natural and man-made spaces and objects birthed from an isolated agricultural town in decay, and give emphasis to the unobserved details that produce the stark contrast between rural and urban civilisations.

'Just East of Now' chronicles the emotional, social and economic toll of the mass migrations on these once-thriving rural and remote Australian civilisations, as they continue to be pushed to the precipice of extinction.
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Western Australian Women of the Land