paul lambeth
  • a moment in the time of quietism
  • pollen drift
  • within sight
  • quietism #2 black wattle
  • quietism #3 . . . by fire
  • fLIGHT
  • artist statement
  • about/contact
  • unseen #2
  • out of memory
  • adventures in blokeland
  • taken to another place
  • if I belong here . . . how did that come to be?
  • all my lifetime it was there
  • ojectless space
quietism #2 black wattle
​Black Wattle - Acacia mearnsii, is a fast-growing native of south-eastern Australia, is often among the first to return after fire. Its finely divided leaves filter low light; its pale yellow flowers signal the shift from winter to spring. It is a species marked by resilience and opportunism.

Photographing the Black Wattle is less about the tree itself than the conditions it reveals disturbance, adaptation, intervention. Once harvested for its tannin-rich bark, now deemed invasive elsewhere, it carries layered meanings of ecological recovery and colonial entanglement. Early white settlers sent this tree back to Europe, a quiet reversal of colonial conquest.
 
In these images, the wattle is neither icon nor ornament. It stands as witness to altered landscapes, a map of time. Each frame records not just a plant, but a rhythm of regrowth, of entanglement and of survival on a continent where fire is not aberration but ecological law.
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  • a moment in the time of quietism
  • pollen drift
  • within sight
  • quietism #2 black wattle
  • quietism #3 . . . by fire
  • fLIGHT
  • artist statement
  • about/contact
  • unseen #2
  • out of memory
  • adventures in blokeland
  • taken to another place
  • if I belong here . . . how did that come to be?
  • all my lifetime it was there
  • ojectless space