Phillip Jangala, East Point, 2014
Exterior, Eye-See Workshop, 2013
Juan Dingle, Berry Springs, 2013
Joseph Thompson, Berry Springs, 2013
John Scott Thompson, Gunn Point, 2014
Ian Garadji, Dundee Beach, 2013
Interior, House 4, 2016
Tremaine Agnew, Berry Springs, 2016
Joseph Thompson, Dundee Downs, 2013
Harry Albert, House 4, 2016
Anna Doctor, House 4, 2016
Andrew Anderson, House 4, 2016
Jerry Dixon, Palmerston, 2021
Joseph Thompson-Garadji, Kulaluk, 2021
Patricia Garadji, Berry Springs, 2016
Lukey's Car, 2016
Patricia Garadji & Zoe Cincaid, Berry Springs, 2016
Jerry Dixon & Jerry Dixon-Brock, Berry Springs, 2016
Constance Amital with daughters Nakesha & Ricksha Garadji, House 4, 2017
Jerry Dixon, Robert E. Lewis, Ian Garadji, Joseph Thompson and Willie Gaden. Dundee Downs Mens Program, 2013.
Juan Dingle, Nicholas Walton-Healey and Ian Garadji. Berry Springs Mens Program, 2013.
Ian Garadji, Nicholas Walton-Healey (with Phillip Jangala) and Jerry Dixon (with Noel Daylight)., Karama, 2021.
The Milgarri collection relates to individuals and family groups associated with an Indigenous community nine miles East of the Darwin CBD. While possessing the Aboriginal name Milgarri (a word from Daly River, meaning ‘water lily’), this community is also known as Knuckey’s, or Knuckey’s Lagoon; the suburb in which it is geographically located.
As a collection, Milgarri showcases the connections the photographer developed from his initial participation in the Eye-See Workshop (April, 2013), and subsequent accompaniment of Robert E. Lewis.
By recurrently photographing the outreach programs Rob delivered, on behalf of his then-employing organisation, the friendships Walton-Healey came to share with participants extended to associated family groups. The Milgarri collection foregrounds this relationality, and in this way attempts a new way of seeing the presumed association between Darwin’s ‘visiting’ (non-Larrakia) population and the city’s so-called ‘‘itinerant’ problem’ (Spencer, 2005)*.
* Spencer, S. (2005). Contested Homelands: Darwin’s ”Itinerant Problem.” Pacific Journalism Review, 11(1), 174-197.
** Permission to publish the photographs of Phillip Jangala and Joseph Garadji-Thompson has been provided by The Garadji Family.