Free delivery in Australia. International visitors please contact me for a quote on your delivery costs.

Search

This section doesn’t currently include any content. Add content to this section using the sidebar.

Image caption appears here

Add your deal, information or promotional text

Tuncunba

Join me in a walk to the inlet, hear the sigh of the waves lapping at the water’s edge. The mangrove juniors emerging, surviving, thriving. Looking from above, the bend in the creek, a deep patch where fish hide, play and feed. A huddle of trees, hardy to the elements and home to a host of land and sea creatures. For a fleeting moment we can experience a stillness that conceals the tides of change.

Up until European settlement, Tin Can Bay, a beautiful coastal village in the Great Sandy Straits was known by aboriginals as Tuncunba or Tuncanbar, meaning a place of dugong or ‘plenty of tucker’.  This area of the Wide Bay coastline is relatively under-developed, with pristine waterways surrounded by national parks and conservation zones.After a holiday here in September 2001 I wanted to capture the essence of this graceful, majestic landscape.

Tuncunba is part of my Australian Nature Unbound series which seeks to highlight the complexity and beauty of our natural environment.

All of my reproductions can be provided on either a fine art canvas or on archival quality cotton rag. Canvases are stretched, unframed and ready to hang, and reproductions on cotton rag paper are also provided unframed. Contact me if you would like some assistance in selecting and pricing a frame.

See the FAQs for important information about the materials I use and the ordering, packaging and shipping processes.

Search