Art of Travel artworks from round Australia.

Captured from 2010/12 – Composed 2025
Limited Edition 3
‘Signs – Brisbane to Exmouth’ photomontage is composed of over 8000 physical signs photographed from Brisbane to Sydney, Canberra, Melbourne, Tasmania, Adelaide, across the Nullabor through the South West of WA and up to Exmouth – Driving on the Australian Highway 1. The work draws from over a decade of travel and observation, documenting Australia’s vast visual landscape through signage — the first object often placed on land to claim, define, or instruct. These signs form a language of their own, speaking to infrastructure, memory, and order. By assembling them into a single composition, I invite the viewer to observe the landscape as layered, contradictory, familiar, and foreign.
Click here to view the distance travelled.

Created & Composed 2011
Limited Edition 3

Created & Composed 2011
Limited Edition 3

Created & Composed 2011
Limited Edition 3

Captured from 2010/12 – Composed 2012
Limited Edition 3
‘Signs – Sydney to Exmouth’ photomontage is composed of over 6000 physical signs photographed from Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Across the Nullabor through the South West of WA and up to Exmouth – Driving on the Australian Highway 1. The work draws from over a decade of travel and observation, documenting Australia’s vast visual landscape through signage — the first object often placed on land to claim, define, or instruct. These signs form a language of their own, speaking to infrastructure, memory, and order (open to suggestions). By assembling them into a single composition, I invite the viewer to observe the landscape as layered, contradictory, familiar, and foreign.(open to suggestions).
This work forms part of a larger, ongoing series mapping Australia’s Highway 1 — the world’s longest national highway. Spanning over 14,500 kilometres, Highway 1 forms a loop around the country, connecting almost every capital city and major regional centre. It offers a unique cross-section of Australian life, moving through remote landscapes, coastal towns, and metropolitan centres.