Silent Landscapes (2025 -)

 Silent Landscapes interrogates the unseen yet pervasive presence of Islamophobia in Australia by examining the everyday spaces where acts of discrimination, harassment, and violence have occurred. Using location data from the Islamophobia Register, I travel to sites across the country that have been marked by these encounters—ordinary streets, shopping centres, train stations, schools. These familiar public spaces, where people go about their daily lives, take on an unsettling weight when viewed through the lens of lived experience. What does it mean for a place to bear witness to harm, and how do these experiences shape the way people move through and occupy space? 

 Through the act of photographing these locations, I explore the tension between visibility and erasure. Islamophobia is often discussed in abstract terms—reduced to statistics, media narratives, or legal frameworks—yet its impact is deeply personal and profoundly spatial. It manifests not only in direct confrontations but in the atmosphere of a place, in its emotional and psychological residue. A shopping centre where a woman’s hijab was forcibly removed, a train station where a racial slur was shouted —these spaces remain unchanged in appearance, yet altered in meaning. 

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