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.
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.