Photography Book Review: Brian Rope
Until Justice Comes (Fifty Years of The Movement for Indigenous Rights. PHOTOGRAPHS 1970 – 2024) I Juno Gemes | First Nation's Resistance Photography | Large format flexibound, 284×234mm, 348 pp
I acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Islander People as The Traditional Owners and Custodians of Country throughout our Nation.
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Cover of Until Justice Comes |
Until Justice Comes is a most significant and important book which, undoubtedly, will become a valuable resource for teachers and leave a significant legacy. It is a landmark publication based on collaboration, and reveals the true history of Australia.
The author Juno Gemes was born in Hungary in 1944 and emigrated to Australia with her parents in 1949. A performer, theatre director, writer, publisher, photographer and activist, she was one of the founders of Australia's first experimental theatre groups, The Human Body. As an Australian activist and photographer, she is best known for her photography of Aboriginal Australians.
Gemes is one of Australia’s most celebrated contemporary photographers with many achievements. In 1982 she exhibited photographs in the group shows After the Tent Embassy and Apmira: Artists for Aboriginal Land Rights. She created a unique visual document of the historic Uluru Handback Ceremony 26 October 1985. In 2003 the National Portrait Gallery (Australia) exhibited her portraits of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander reconciliation activists and personalities, Proof: Portraits from the Movement 1978–2003, and has since acquired many of her photographs.
Using both words and images she has spent over fifty years documenting the changing social landscape of Australia, and in particular the lives and struggles of Aboriginal Australians, a process that culminated in her being one of just ten photographers invited to photographically document the National Apology to the Stolen Generations in the Parliament of Australia on 13 February 2008.
This book’s photographs cover crucial moments in Australia’s history including the Redfern Revolution, land rights campaigns, the aforementioned National Apology, the election of eleven Indigenous Members to the 47th Federal Parliament, and the preparations for the 2023 Referendum on the Voice to Parliament. The powerful collection of over 220 photographs brings Gemes’ current and continuing work together with her unique living archive. It portrays her career witnessing and advocating for change.
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Elders from Aurukun - Denny Bowenda and Countryman Laurie Pantoomba have a meeting beside the flag on the bora ground, Mornington Island, QLD, 1978 ©JUNO GEMES |
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Terribly civilized, Aren't you? Photomontage published in Photo-Discourse, Sydney, NSW, 1981 ©JUNO GEMES |
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Sammy Wilson, Mutitjulu Community Leader, welcomes members of the Referendum Working Group to sacred sites at Uluru, 2023 © JUNO GEMES |
This visual uncovering of an often-invisible history has been at the heart of Gemes’ engagement with the First Nations people she has known and worked with throughout all these years. The book shows us both well-known and lesser leaders, intimate community events, and activism. It includes new writings and poems by various contributors.
Gael Newton, a former Senior Curator of Australian and International Photography at the National Gallery of Australia, has said Until Justice Comes is the first fully retrospective testament to a woman universally revered for her artistry, activism, engagement and collaboration. It also shines with the warmth, wry side glances, acuity and determined end game that fill her images with life and hope.
Why did I say true history at the end of my opening paragraph? Because we are one nation. We are all Australians - Indigenous first people, descendants of those who established a British colony here in 1788, or those (including me as a young migrant child) who arrived later from numerous parts of the world to make Australia their home are part of our nation. My parents were. My children are. Juno Gemes is. Most people reading this will be citizens of Australia. Together we comprise our one nation and are all part of the true history of our nation. That was acknowledged by a banner displayed at the Tent Embassy on its 50th anniversary in 2022.
We have all contributed to the
making of our one nation. All Indigenous first people from the very beginning until
right now have contributed in many ways. The convicts, marines, sailors,
colonial officials and free settler who arrived in 1788 and all their
descendants added more. The migrants from many different cultures who have come
over the years since have also brought different skills. Together everyone has
played a part in making Australia what it is today.
This review is also available on the author's blog here.
An abbreviated version has been published by Canberra City News here.