Exhibition
Visa pour l'image 2012: Amy Toensing

NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – DECEMBER 06, 2009: A young girl takes a break from collecting food to wet her hair in a tidal pool on her ancestral homelands called Bawaka. ©Amy Toensing 2011

ULURU-KATA TJUTA NATIONAL PARK, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA - MAY 17, 2011: Aerial views of Uluru at sunset. Uluru (also know as Ayers Rock) - is one of the largest monoliths in the world. Made of arkosic sandstone, Uluru rises 348 meters above the desert floor and has a circumference of 9.4 kilometers. The Anangu Aboriginal people are responsible for the protection and appropriate management of Uluru. The knowledge necessary to fulfill these responsibilities has been passed down from generation to generation. ©Amy Toensing 2011

YIRRKALA, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 05, 2010: Students at the Yirrkala School perform an opening ceremony based on traditional celebrations where clan groups gathered for various reasons. ©Amy Toensing 2011

WATARRU, SOUTH AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 31, 2010: Anangu women, elder Tinpulya Mervin and Bronwyn Jimmy perform a cultural inma (ceremony) at Ilpilli near the Watarru Community (Mt. Lindsay) in Great Victoria Desert, South Australia August 30, 2010. The dance was about fire (see flames on chests). The word Watarru means "the fire place." Men are not aloud to attend ceremonies like this and there are male ceremonies that women are not permitted to attend as well. ©Amy Toensing 2011

ALICE SPRINGS, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 09, 2011: Bianca Harvey and Shakira Hillman pose in front of a mural at the Gap Youth Center in Alice Springs. The center is located in a neighborhood called The Gap, which is primarily comprised of indigenous people and also known as The Bronx because of the reputation for crime and poverty. ©Amy Toensing 2011

GULKULA, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 09, 2010: Traditional healer, Gulumbu Yunupingu gives tourists at the Garma Festival (annual Aboriginal Festival)healing sessions with a sauna made from hot coals and bark and massage with medicine collected from the bush. ©Amy Toensing 2011

ULURU-KATA TJUTA NATIONAL PARK, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA - MAY 18, 2011: The moon sets in the early morning in Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park. The Anangu Aboriginal people are responsible for the protection and appropriate management of this area. The knowledge necessary to fulfill these responsibilities has been passed down from generation to generation. ©Amy Toensing 2011

MORNINGTON ISLAND, QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 20, 2010: Kids playing outside their home in Gununa on Mornington Island. ©Amy Toensing 2011

WATARRU, SOUTH AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 31, 2010: The principal of the Watarru Community school rounds up kids for school. Aboriginal kids have a low attendance rate and only 37% graduate from grade 12. ©Amy Toensing 2011

WATARRU, SOUTH AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 30, 2010: Erin McQuade teaches the Junior Class at the Watarru Anangu School in Watarru. The school has 18 students and goes all the way to grade 12, however, Aboriginal kids have a low attendance rate and only 37% graduate from high school. ©Amy Toensing 2011

ALICE SPRINGS, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 26, 2010: Friends and family gather around a fire in an Alice Springs Town Camp. Town camps were established by squatters coming into town from remote communities to access services. ©Amy Toensing 2011

MATA MATA HOMELAND, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 14, 2010: Batumbil Burarrwanga, a Yolngu woman of the Gumatj clan, collects pandanus and manages her land with fire out on her ancestral land or "Homeland". Homelands were once supported by the Australian Government's policy with aboriginal communities, however they have slowly pulled funding for these outstations, especially in the recent Intervention government policy. Studies show that those living and spending time out on homelands are far healthier than those living in the overcrowded central towns that the government is more willing to fund. ©Amy Toensing 2011

NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – DECEMBER 06, 2009: Kids play in tidal pools at low tide in the aboriginal community of Yirrkala in Northern Territory. ©Amy Toensing 2011

BAWAKA HOMELAND, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – AUGUST 17, 2010: Arian Pearson and Gulpilnga Munungurritj and other members of their family prepare to eat a sea turtle they caught the night before on their homeland / ancestral land. The Yolngu (aboriginal people) of this area know that it is time to hunt for the sea turtle when the yellow Gaypal flower is in bloom. It is the same color as the fat that develops inside the turtle during this time. Homelands were once supported by the Australian Government's policy with aboriginal communities, however they have slowly pulled funding for these outstations, especially in the recent Intervention government policy. Studies show that those living and spending time out on homelands are far healthier than those living in the overcrowded central towns that the government is more willing to fund. ©Amy Toensing 2011

GUNBALANYA, NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 03, 2011: Portrait of the granddaughter of Adrian Gumudrul, pastoral worker and traditional owner in Gunbalanya goes fishing out bush with his family. ©Amy Toensing 2011
NORTHERN TERRITORY, AUSTRALIA – DECEMBER 06, 2009: A young girl takes a break from collecting food to wet her hair in a tidal pool on her ancestral homelands called Bawaka. ©Amy Toensing 2011
Homelands: Indigenous Australia
Amy Toensing / National Geographic Magazine
Aboriginals have inhabited Australia for over 40,000 years and have the oldest, continuous culture on Earth. Yet for the last 200 years the indigenous people of Australia have been dominated by a society greatly at odds with their own. Only 37% of Aboriginal children reach the final year of high school, and average life expectancy is ten years less than for non-indigenous Australians. In 2007 the Australian government implemented a policy which the United Nations condemned for discriminating against Aboriginals. Yet, on their ancestral lands - their homelands - families hunt and gather their food, elders pass on sacred stories and traditions, and there, connected to their land and culture, they can thrive.
Amy Toensing
Amy Toensing, an American photojournalist committed to telling stories with sensitivity and depth, is known for her intimate essays about the lives of ordinary people.
Toensing received a BA in Human Ecology from the College of the Atlantic in Maine where she spent her senior year studying photography at the Salt Institute for Documentary Field Studies in Portland, Maine. In 1994, Toensing was hired as a staff photographer at her New Hampshire hometown paper, The Valley News, where she covered the community she grew up in. She then worked for The New York Times, Washington D.C. bureau covering the White House and Capitol Hill during the Clinton administration. In 1998, Toensing left D.C. to get her Master’s Degree from the School of Visual Communication at Ohio University. In 1999 she was awarded the National Geographic photographic internship. Since then she has been a regular contributor to National Geographic magazine and recently completed her thirteenth feature story. Her work has also appeared in publications such as Smithsonian, The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, Time Magazine, and National Geographic Traveler.
Toensing’s work has been exhibited throughout the world and recognized with numerous awards. She has covered stories close to home, from Maine and the Jersey Shore to places on the other side of the globe, including the remote jungles of Papua New Guinea and the Australian outback. She has also covered news worthy issues such as the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina and Muslim women living in western culture.
Toensing lives in the Hudson Valley of New York.
Homelands: Indigenous Australia - Amy Toensing
From september 1st to september 21st
Ancienne Université
66000 Perpignan - France
Links
http://www.visapourlimage.com/exhibition/5361.do
http://www.amytoensing.com/
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/
Contributors
