Belco Pride

Suburban hedge
Belco Pride: Belco's a hole but it's our hole
The Duot family
Nathan and Mac, BMX bros
Paradise is a Place
Wednesday night at the Taiping
The Beehive
Leni in her lounge
Bottlemart
The Invincibles: West Beclo Leagues Club
Bernadette and Brian
Ashleigh in her formal dress
Dan
Blue Zola at the Charny Carny
Suburban bins
Roxy and Jess
Alisha and Saul
Troy with his sons, Luke and Lee
Suburban Faith
Teanna, Toyah, Sarina, Remy and Kristen, Xmas, 2008

“Belco’s a hole…. but it’s our hole”

I’ve been told that you never truly leave behind the place you grew up. That it remains deep within your experience of the world. Feeling conflicted about one’s place of origin is certainly not unique, but for me, the process of returning ‘home’ and reconciling my perception of place with its banal and vernacular reality was a surprising yet cathartic experience. The photographs in this series express the idea that belonging, connection and identity is deeply rooted in the specifics of one’s inhabited landscape. The landscape depicted here being the 25 northernmost suburbs of Canberra known as Belconnen, or to us locals, as ‘Belco’.

I always believed it was the things you don’t choose that makes you who you are. Your city, your neighborhood, your family. People here take pride in these things, like it was something they’d accomplished. The bodies around their souls, the cities wrapped around those. I lived on this block my whole life; most of these people have. (Dennis Lehane)