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Anke Stäcker

  • Blog Random Discoveries
  • About
  • CV
  • Contact
  • Essays
    • Profile by Deborah Singerman, 2016
    • 'Drift' by Judith Duquemin, 2013, Catalogue essay
    • 'Madeleines' by Judith Duquemin, 2008, Exhibition Essay
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An investigation of streets with female names in Sydney

A retrospective

Good neighbours

Anke Stäcker February 18, 2022

Louisa Street, Summer Hill on Sunday, 27 September 2020

This street has a village feel to it. The first house at the corner features a Roman-style basin with an unhappy-looking lion face.

Doors are open, people are chatting at their front doors. Two friendly dogs, who were just a moment before sitting in a photogenic position on the verandah, turn around to come closer to the fence to look at me. In one front garden, a very sad stone man is playing a string instrument with one finger. There are offerings on a low brick wall, some stones and a golden wire crown. At the end of Louisa Street is a shop that was once a news agency, faded Herald Sun banners still visible. Now it is a local art school. Closed on Sundays. They have old-fashioned Anzac biscuit tins in the window.



In urban photography, street photography, story telling, female names
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Chomsky Knows

Anke Stäcker February 8, 2022

Lilian Fowler Place, Marrickville on Saturday, 26 September 2020

It’s rare to find a street in Sydney named after a woman in history for her own merit and not because she was the wife or daughter of someone. Or at least it’s rare that the street has the full name. Lilian Fowler was the mayor of Newtown in the 1930s and the first female mayor in Australia. 

The street forms an oval, lined with small workshops and offices. Today, on a Saturday, most of them are closed but there is some activity. 

On a roller door, I read “Chomsky Knows”. This seems to be rather deep and meaningful. Noam Chomsky is a linguist, historian and social critic and his ideas are said to be highly influential in the anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist movements. On the next wall, I am told that “Life Stinks”. 

There are two caravans parked in this street. One is the kind used for selling food in the street, like Harry’s Café de Wheels in Woolloomooloo. There is a small passage at the end with graffiti on the walls, and rubbish bins full of spray paint cans. It leads to Sydney Steel Road which has the famous graffiti wall where people are allowed to paint.

Three men with cameras are photographing and filming a woman in black sports gear and neon yellow trainers. She’s sitting against the wall and laughing all the time. On the other side is a huge fenced-in site with containers. I learn later that it is the building site for the new Metro. I don’t remember what was there before. Maybe a steel factory, hence the name. It’s strange how you can’t remember things, once they are gone. 



In urban photography, street photography, story telling, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, female names, Lilian Fowler, Marrickville
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Lorna

Anke Stäcker January 31, 2022

Lorna Lane, Stanmore on Thursday, 24 September 2020

There are a lot of lanes in Stanmore. Lorna Lane is one of them. It’s not, as I first thought, because there were many back street factories, like in Lilyfield and Rozelle. Stanmore mainly started from big farming estates granted to settlers in the early days of the Colony. Over time it developed into a place where affluent working people would move to bigger houses, away from the overcrowded inner suburbs.

Today I find a few discarded things, thoughtfully arranged for people who might need these items: a lamp, an outdated TV table with drawers for the video player and cassettes, and some crockery neatly stacked. There is a tent in its bag. I am tempted in case I’ll go on a camping trip again. But I leave it, too much worry about cleaning and disinfecting. In another lane are some thick-skinned lemons on the ground which fell over the fence. I leave them too.

There is a lot of renovation happening in the area. It seems to be a sign of these times. They say home improvement purchases have increased. Bunnings is laughing.

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, female names, Stanmore
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Visionaries

Anke Stäcker January 25, 2022

Una Street, Redfern on Saturday, 19 September 2020

I’m looking for Una Street. It doesn’t seem to exist. Even though my phone map is trying to get me there with its pulsating dot. I’m at the corner of Regent Place and Lawson Square where a blue building stood empty for decades, now finally demolished. An apartment block nearby has been here for at least twenty years as far as I remember. Behind is a path with no name, maybe that was Una Street once? When I walk around the block, I see a wig shop. It is closed, maybe forever. This small area is like a peninsular between two major roads with roaring traffic. Doesn’t seem to be a good spot for a speciality store. The window display is stacked with mannequin heads wearing wigs of different hairstyles and colours. They all stare into the distance, or into the future, mouths set defiantly. It doesn’t seem good what they are seeing.

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, female names, Redfern, visionary
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Rocky Shores

Anke Stäcker January 19, 2022

Undine Street, Maroubra on Friday, 11 September 2020

This street runs steeply downhill towards the ocean and ends at a promenade above a rocky shore. At the corner is a pretty home with stained glass windows and a swimming pool at the front, facing the sea. The view is spectacular. It’s sunny and windy today.

Some front gardens have low-growing yellow or orange flowers with thick, fleshy leaves, which only grow on the sandy ground near the ocean. They are closing their petals early for the night while the sun is still out, at least two hours before dusk. Beyond the fence of a property is an orange variety of this flower in a rock bed. Someone has written a warning on an ugly cardboard box sitting next to it: “Do not pick the flowers”. It seems to defeat the purpose.

I walk along the path for some time until I see Maroubra beach in the distance. 

In urban photography, female names, beach Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, female names, Maroubra, ocean, sea
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Dark Clouds

Anke Stäcker January 14, 2022

Marion Street, Bankstown on Sunday, 6 September 2020

At one end of Marion Street is the Bankstown airport for small planes and helicopters. It has its own set of streets and street names. It is Sunday and cloudy. The airport is empty.

I was never here before, but I guess it would normally be very busy on a Sunday. There are tourist flights on offer, flying lessons and other things, but everything is shut. Some people are around, but few and far between. A couple of small planes are taking off, and a helicopter hovers above the airfield otherwise is silence.

I read on a banner that it’s the 80th birthday of the airport this year. Maybe they would have had celebrations with stalls and lots of people. It’s sad. Dark clouds are hanging over deserted buildings.

The other end of Marion Street finishes at the town centre at City Plaza. It's deserted. The centre looks as if a big child has taken pieces from different sets of building toys and placed them haphazardly here and there.

In the meantime, the sun has come out, and some trees show their first white blossoms on leafless branches. Elsewhere, I have noticed tiny buds on the plane trees. The Bankstown hotel has pretty chairs and tables under umbrellas. Two men are sitting outside. When I return from my little tour around town, there is no one.

Bankstown had COVID-19 cases recently and was declared a hot spot, so I had put off going here for this reason. But this is quite a while ago. I don’t think there is any danger in walking through the empty streets. I am not going inside to eat or drink or buy anything anywhere.

Just when you don’t want to get into contact with strangers a man stops near me. “Excuse me, my name is Bob and what is yours?”

I guess he's from an African country, but I am not informed enough to know which one. I tell him my name and he asks if I am from around here. I say, “No, actually from further away. I’m just about to return.” He thinks I’m beautiful. I thank him for his nice words and start to leave. Then he wants my telephone number, but I decline. He accepts the refusal gracefully.

In urban photography, street photography, story telling Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, storytelling, history, female names, Bankstown, airport, dark clouds
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Always was, always will be

Anke Stäcker January 4, 2022

Adina Avenue, La Perouse,  31 August 2020

It is amazing how Sydney is blessed with so many beautiful shores and beaches without having to travel very far from the centre. Adina Avenue is on a hill, overlooking Botany Bay.

The area is named after the French Comte La Pérouse who landed here in 1788.

I read that the original name was Gooriwal, and the traditional custodians were the Kameygal people.

The first thing I notice is an old timber church, fenced in for restoration. On the fence banners, it says ‘This Church Restoration priority belongs to the Elders, who have expressed their desire to restore the Church to provide a space for healing and fostering strong social cohesion.’ I learn later that this was an Evangelical Mission Church, significant to the Aboriginal community of La Perouse as it had been a form of protection for the Aboriginal people of the area from the government’s policy of child-taking.

At the corner of Adina Avenue and Goolagong Place is a weathered community board containing a notice in faded handwriting: ‘La Perouse Discreet Aboriginal Community. Residents only.’ Down the hill from here is a bungalow. On the low brick wall surrounding it, are written the words ‘Bidjigal Land’.

The resistance leader Pemulwuy, who fought against the British occupation in the 1790s, lived in this area. I read that he belonged to the Bidjigal people who resided in Toongabbie and Parramatta.

The white settlers found the area too rough for living, but it attracted city dwellers for day trips, especially when a tram line was created in 1902. The Aboriginal residents used this fact to create a tourist industry, presenting a snake man show and selling boomerangs and ornaments made from sea shells. The most prominent shellwork artist was Emma Timbery also known as “Queen of La Perouse” or “Queen Emma”. She is the great-grandmother of Esme Timbery who is known for her shellwork of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

During the Depression in 1929, hundreds of unemployed people moved out to La Perouse and set up camp in “Happy Valley”. Families lived in shacks made from scavenged wood, corrugated iron, flour bags and cardboard. There was no electricity or running water.

European and indigenous people lived together there. Stories tell that there was a great community spirit despite the hardships.

The Aboriginal community of La Perouse is the only one in the Sydney region that held on to its territory until today against all adversaries and threats of relocation. Land rights were finally obtained in 1984.

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, storytelling, history, female names, LaPerouse, BotanyBay, ocean, Pemulwuy, Bidjigal
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Phoenix

Anke Stäcker December 12, 2021

Jennifer Street, Little Bay, 31 August 2020

This street has residential houses on one side, the Botany National Park and a golf course on the other. There is a boardwalk that leads through an area that was created for the regeneration of a plant community named ‘Banksia Scrub.’ Sadly, here too was a fire and most of the scrub has burned down, new fern growing underneath the blackened branches of short trees and bushes. 

At the end is a road dividing the golf course and I walk along a little way. It’s very windy, I have to brace myself against it. I veer off on a path that goes a bit uphill. From here I can see the undulating landscape of the golf course and the ocean on the horizon.

I think, I am looking towards the side of Little Bay, where Christo and Jeanne-Claude wrapped the coast in 1969. 

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, storytelling, history, female names, LittleBay, ocean, flame tree, wattle tree, banksia scrub, Christo
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The irony of history

Anke Stäcker December 10, 2021

Margaret Place, Paddington on Wednesday, 26 August 2020

Margaret is a tiny lane hidden away in an old part of Paddington. There are many sandstone and timber houses in the neighbourhood. The lane is narrow, just a footpath with a row of 3 small cottages with a wall at the end. Outside are plants and a table and chairs. I don’t dare to go too far inside, it feels private. One door is open. The interior is bright, thanks to installed skylights and probably a glassed verandah door at the back. In the past, it must have been very dark in these houses. By 1900 Sydney’s population had grown significantly and Paddington had turned into a slum. The rows of terraces were overcrowded, there was no sewerage. These days the area is charming with its narrow streets in the sunlight. It’s ironic how these squalid places have turned into prime real estate.

The neighbourhood

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, storytelling, history, female names, Paddington
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Suitcases are for free these days

Anke Stäcker December 8, 2021

Madeline and Maria St, Strathfield South; Mina Rosa St, Enfield on Tuesday, 25 August 2020

On one end of Maria Street is Ford Park. There is nothing much happening in this street. In front of a family home are several suitcases in various styles and sizes with a ‘For Free’ note on them.

Madeline Street begins as a residential street and then after driving through the tiniest passage between curved concrete walls, it starts to be industrial. There are lots of trucks thundering along this street, obviously via another route than that narrow passage. It doesn’t feel safe to walk. There is a large complex named “Sydney Meat Market”. It houses many known brand names. I immediately think ‘Corona hotspot’, just because one or two meat factories had outbreaks.

Mina Rosa Street in Enfield is also unremarkable but has an Olympic swimming pool at the end with a little park around it. There are Art Deco lamp posts. The plane trees are still bare. The pool opened in 1933 and was Sydney’s first freshwater swimming pool. I am reading in a blog about swimming pools that not long after the opening, which attracted a crowd of 16,000 visitors in the first week, there was a big flu epidemic in Sydney. Some reports blamed it on the crowded pool. 

Today it looks deserted at first glance, but it’s open by appointment and a young man is just walking through the park and enters the gates. 

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, storytelling, history, female names, olympicpool, Artdeco
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Jane and Ann have seen a lot

Anke Stäcker November 30, 2021

Jane and Ann Street, Balmain on Monday, 24 August 2020

These streets are in an old part of Balmain with many sandstone houses and the traces of previous times tangible. It feels good to be back in a street with history after some weeks in suburbia.

In Jane Street is the tall church you can see from the Pyrmont waterfront where I often go for walks. The street is on a hill and the church appears even taller for that, a true landmark of Balmain. The church’s name is St Augustine and the foundation of the first smaller sandstone church was laid in 1848. This building is still standing and nestling next to the tall brick church which was built in 1907 to accommodate a growing population. I am reading now that the church has a most beautiful stained glass rose window which catches the morning light. I should go back there to see it. There is a Catholic Primary School named after Fr John Therry. He was appointed Parish Priest for Balmain in 1856, apparently after difficult struggles with Governor Macquarie who was supporting the Anglican church. I am reading in the history pages of the St Augustine website that Fr Therry was constantly agitating for the rights of Catholics and Aboriginal people so that he was even fired as a Catholic Chaplain at one stage, later to be re-instituted. In the early days of the Colony, Catholics were viewed with suspicion and Masses were even banned. The 1877 convent of the Immaculate Conception is also in Jane Street.

At the corner to Darling Street is the London Hotel, one of the oldest pubs in Sydney, operating non-stop since 1870. I am glad to see that it has survived the Covid19 lockdown and restrictions with a safety plan in place. The building itself is even older, it was built as a corner shop in 1857. I remember the London Hotel to be a very touristy pub, but it probably always had its congregation of locals as regular patrons. It looks as if they have regained their territory. People know each other.

At the corner of Ann Street is a café, preparing to close. A last customer and his dog are sitting at an outside table in the probably also last ray of sunshine in this corner.

The street slopes down to a park at White Bay and the empty docks. You can see some of Pyrmont and the Anzac bridge through trees. There are modest timber cottages, sandstone houses, terraces, and a sixties block of flats. I photograph bits and pieces of these places when suddenly a shabbily dressed woman with her dog comes up behind me and asks accusingly what I am photographing. I say, the lovely houses around here. “You are not allowed to do that. I watched you taking photographs of my place. They should not be on your phone.” “Ok”, I say, “which house was it? I’ll delete it.” She’s taken aback and doesn’t want to do it. Momentarily I have forgotten that nobody wants to be next to strangers in these Corona times and flick through their photos, heads bent over the phone. She could have told me which one it was, but that may be too much information if you are already suspicious. 





In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, storytelling, history, churches, pubs, female names
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Ways to get out

Anke Stäcker November 20, 2021

Joan Lane and Marie Street, Belmore on Wednesday, 12 August 2020

Joan Lane is very close to Canterbury Road at the backside of a new apartment block. In the parking area, I notice two young women in a car, smoking, and talking on the phone. I decide to let them drive away first. People get suspicious when you loiter around their homes. After a little walk, I find them still there. They are not going anywhere, just sitting in the car. I imagine it’s a way to get out of the house or to get away from someone who’s home too often.

Canterbury Road has changed a lot. Not that I ever knew it very well out here, but it was mainly old. Now there are many new buildings and the remaining small old shops are mostly empty, dark and looking sad. They will be gone too very soon and you wouldn’t even have a trace left of that old road. At the end of Joan Lane is an empty lot, waiting to be developed.

From the verandah of the corner house, a big fabric monkey is watching everything.

In Marie Street, I think of a rallying call from the French Revolution: “War to the palaces, peace to the cottages.”

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, female names, history Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, architecture, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, frenchrevolution, marieantoinette, palaces, cottages
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Lost in translation

Anke Stäcker November 12, 2021

Mona Street, Allawah on Monday, 10 August 2020

I have never been to Allawah or even heard of it. But it has a train station. A strong, cold wind is blowing down Mona Street. The Allawah hotel is at the corner and the small strip of shops around there is protected from the wind and warm in the sunshine. The barber shop is closed, maybe just because it’s Monday. The Nepalese takeaway is closed because of a technical problem. “Inconvenience is highly solicited,” says a hand-written note on the glass door. I am trying to think what word they mixed it up with. There must be an expression in Nepalese used in this context and lost in translation. 

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, architecture, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona
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The Postman

Anke Stäcker November 7, 2021

Myrtle and Virginia Street, Kensington on Thursday, 6 August 2020

Myrtle runs off Virginia Street and ends at the sound wall bordering South Dowling Street. It could as well be the border to another world, as on the other side is the immense stretch of new apartment blocks, while on this side are neat and pretty family homes with picket fences.

It’s a sunny but very cold day. The streets are quite empty, except for a few people going about their business. I keep running into the postman as I am crossing and recrossing the street, going in one direction and then returning and so is he. Another man is putting unwanted junk mail into letterboxes. The child care centre is still closed. The drawings the children made before the lockdown are displayed in the window. Henry tells us to keep smiling.

In female names, street photography, urban photography
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Foo dogs and dandelions

Anke Stäcker October 25, 2021

Mary, Frances, Victoria Street, Lidcombe on Friday, 31 July 2020

Lidcombe has only very few shops but a lot of churches instead. I park in John Street near the Armenian Catholic Church, across is the Art Deco Lidcombe Hotel. I walk a few steps to Mary Street past a café and a Japanese restaurant and there the shopping and entertainment part of Lidcombe ends already. It’s only 5 minutes away from the train station. In Mary Street, I find the St Joachim’s Catholic Primary School and St Joseph’s Childcare Centre, defended by a hysterically barking dog. Through a gap between buildings, I glimpse the St Andrews Ukrainian Catholic Church in the next street.

Most of the shops are on the other side of the railway track, many of them Korean. A bit further down is Victoria Street East with a few factories in low buildings and a majestic domed church, the St Ephraim Syrian Orthodox Cathedral at the corner. A few houses further down I discover that a “true blue Aussie” lives there, displaying the Australian flag and a photo of Clint Eastwood with a rifle, saying “Get out of my driveway!!!”.

There are many streets with female names in Lidcombe all over the suburb. It’s too far to walk to everyone, so I check out most of them by driving through. All a bit of the same. On my way, I pass two more churches. Later I learn that there are even more, among them a Russian Orthodox Church. 

Frances is a long street and at the end towards Parramatta Road, it looks industrial with some small neglected houses. A large family with a cute toddler is gathered in an untidy garden, next door to a plastic manufacturer. The presumed father of the family says, “The good news is…” and then something about the electricity bill. The factory buildings on the other side seem to be abandoned. They don’t have any signs and weed grows high in front. A gate is open and I want to have a look, but then stop. There is someone. In movies, such places are used for bad things. 

In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, architecture, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, Lidcombe, churches, factories, Dharug
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Finding gold in Auburn

Anke Stäcker October 10, 2021

Helena, Louisa, Marion, Lily, Mona Street, Auburn on Wednesday, 29 July 2020

Auburn has a large Turkish community, also Lebanese, Chinese, Pakistani, Somalian, Afghan and more. There is a big mosque which was built just a few years ago. Seeing it from afar reminds me of travelling by bus from Bulgaria to Turkey some years ago and the first appearance of a mosque instead of another Orthodox Church after crossing the border.

The streets are suburban, just the type which I always thought were too boring and too much the same to want to go ‘street exploring’ in. They are mostly residential with a mix of architectural styles, some modest Federation weatherboard houses, and some larger new ones with elaborate fences and ornaments. Interspersed are playgrounds, schools, and corner shops. 

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In Louisa Street, a cat with a bushy tail tries to open a parcel that was left on the porch. At the corner to Helena Street is a suburban dream house, built from sandstone with three curved balconies held up by four round pillars and a fleur-de-lys fence around it. Over the front door is a horseshoe for good luck, which may be needed as one of the marble tiles decorating a balcony just above the entrance has come off. The places here have many chairs around big tables in their backyards. Near a playground is a sign saying “Warning - Area Under Surveillance”. It immediately makes me feel worried. In these times of the Coronavirus, we have become insecure about what is allowed and what is not. Can I walk here, can I be here? But it’s not that. It’s about illegal dumping.

At the corner of Marion Street is the Arafah Market, not a market but just a small store. I look up what Arafah means and find it is an Islamic holiday and by coincidence falls this year on the very day I am here, the 29th of July. Further down Marion Street, I see a small old caravan of the type street vendors would use, painted bright green with rusty patches. There is a small window at the front which opens as a counter. Behind the caravan, lions are guarding the wall of a family house. Some homes have quite large properties around them. Near Beatrice Street, a sign offers ‘LIFESIZE PLANS’. The surface is cracked. Around a bent are the railway tracks and beyond is the big mosque with its minaret and domes. The view from this side is obscured by the powerlines and railway structures.

In Alice Street are more ornamented fences, outdoor lamps and fancy letterboxes and a house with large oriental-looking arches. On a property nearby is an army of traffic cones, spades sitting in wooden barrels, piles of rocks, garden gnomes, toddler-sized cars, and wilted leeks stuck into pots. Several ‘No Entry’ and CCTV signs tell you to back off.

I look down Lily Street and decide not to go there. But I drive along Mary Street which ends at a park and a football oval. A group of ibises are picking at a discarded food box. Mary Street has an old corner store at Cumberland Road. On the other end, the street finishes at the town centre. But by the time I arrive in that section, there is too much traffic to go near it.

I drive down Mona Street. It's very long and very busy. I can’t find anywhere to park my car to get out and walk along. I pass a sign to the next suburb, Granville, which acknowledges that it is the land of the Dharug people. There is nowhere to turn until I come to a T section and turn right, hoping to cut back through one of the side streets, but they are all dead-ends. Later I find out that the Duck River runs along the end of these streets. I finally turn into one of them. By coincidence, it is a street with a female name: Myrtle in Granville. At the corner is a barber shop of the new trendy kind, using the traditional blue, white and red striped barber sign painted in shiny colours. Two young men are outside smoking. One has a complicated plaited hairstyle. When I am back near the Auburn town centre, it’s the end of school time. I am stuck at a roundabout with a school at the corner. Flashing neon letters tell everyone: “Be cool, go to school.” Many women are wearing headscarves and fashionable clothes, picking up their children.

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When I leave, trying to escape the peak hour traffic, I realise how lively this town centre is. I decide it doesn’t give justice to the people living in the quiet streets if I don’t explore where they go when they leave their homes. So I come back on Saturday by train. Like it always seems to be in Australian cities, this suburb only has a few streets with shops and restaurants. But they are very busy, and I imagine even more so if it weren’t for the new outbreaks of COVID-19.

There are a lot of jewellery shops and they have customers, unlike in some other areas where jewellery shops are notoriously empty. Here people apparently love gold and big elaborate designs. The women are dressed well and colourfully. There are people from nations I am not versed enough to identify, who you hardly see in Redfern our Newtown. It’s a bit like travelling to other continents. Nice as we can’t do it in reality at the moment. Names of restaurants and shops identify Turkish, Afghani, Pakistani, Korean and more. I pass an Afghani bakery, the smell is delicious and there is a queue waiting outside.

Auburn, by another name then, was a marketplace for the exchange of goods for the Indigenous people of this land. Wikipedia tells me it was a border between the inland Dharug and the coastal Dharawal group. I think places have a memory. It is still a marketplace, now bringing together groups of immigrants to this land.

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In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, architecture, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, history, Auburn, Dharug, Dharawal
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Wealthy sisters

Anke Stäcker September 30, 2021

Margaret, Myrna, Ada, Marion, Strathfield on Sunday, 19 July 2020

Many of the residential streets in Strathfield have big mansion-style houses. Some must have been built at a time when the area was rural and the houses were surrounded by large properties. Other architectural styles followed. By the end of the 19th century, this suburb was known as one of the highest-status areas in Sydney, along with Double Bay and Darling Point. In comparison, the churches around here are rather modest. 

In Myrna Road new white palaces are dominant. An arch window theme of different sizes and executions seems to be en vogue. The burned-out rooftop of a simple brick house tells me that the fire gods deemed it to be unworthy of its neighbours.

I learn that Meredith Street is not derived from the female name but refers to Frederick Meredith. He was a free settler who had been given land in the area in 1793, the land which belonged to the traditional custodians, the Wangal people. 

There are several schools in Margaret Street, or rather several buildings of the Meriden School, Junior and Senior. It’s an Anglican school for girls. The Santa Maria del Monte Santa Sabina College is at the corner of The Boulevarde with several huge mansions on the campus. This one is a Catholic school.

The apartment blocks around here are less impressive, even though one of them is called “Place Vendôme”. Another has a comfortable chair with a blanket draped over it out on the front lawn. Someone must have been sitting there, enjoying the sunshine.

It’s funny how the eye and the mind see different things than the camera because later I notice that it wasn’t a blanket but the chair was used to dry the bed sheets which didn’t fit on the rack.

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In urban photography, street photography, history, female names Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, lanes, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona, history, Strathfield
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Marcia

Anke Stäcker September 29, 2021

Marcia Street and Lane, Hurlstone Park on Saturday, 18 July 2020

I think I have never been to Hurlstone Park. To the south, it is bounded by the Cooks River. Wikipedia says: “Some of the suburb is an oasis of heritage, with a village atmosphere valued by the residents. It is potentially threatened by changes to zoning and increased high-rise development.” Marcia Street looks like such an oasis. It has mostly Federation family homes, tall trees and a park at the end. Not everything looks entirely idyllic. I am warned that a guard dog is on duty and a fading Australian flag is draped over the dusty, cluttered windows of a brick bungalow.

Marcia Lane makes me happy. It’s that type of lane I love to discover. First, turning right from Marcia Street, there is a row of closed-down grocery shops in Duntroon Street, one has a ‘For Lease’ sign. From another, I hear the voices of adults, children and television. People live here. 

Around the corner, there is a low brick house that has a white wooden cross near the entrance door. Chinese music, interrupted by drilling and hammering noises, comes from a place opposite. The lane slopes downhill and curves to the right. 

In the corner I find a cat sitting next to stacked chairs. On the other side is a family home with barren grapevine branches covering the roof of a terrace in the backyard. Next door an orange tree, bearing fruit, has extended its branches around a palm tree. The lane ends at the park and the backside of the small block of flats from where I started. It has a unit for lease. I could consider it. The light is beautiful, breaking strongly through dark clouds. 

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In street photography, urban photography Tags psychogeography, wayfaring, flâneuse, flânerie, urbanexploration, urbanphotography, streets, lanes, sydneyaustralia, inthetimeofcorona
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Offerings to Mona

Anke Stäcker September 7, 2021

Mona Road and Lane, Darling Point on Monday, 13 July 2020

Mona Road merges with Darling Point Road and at the very end is the beautiful McKell Park. It’s like entering paradise. On this sparkling day, people sit on benches facing the water. A young couple is having a picnic on the grass. A ferry just arrives at the Darling Point wharf.

On an ornamented stone bench, which could be a leftover of the former neo-gothic mansion Canonbury, are small objects like offerings: three green fruits, two snail shells, a golden star and pink coloured discs from a wind charm. Canonbury was built at this location in 1904 and became a naval hospital during WWII. Before there were two other residences, a cottage in 1841 and the Landsdowne mansion in 1879. And before that, the area was called Yarranabbee by the traditional owners of the Gadigal land.

The two people, who sat on the bench when the ferry came in, are leaving. An elegant, old lady with the white stick for the vision impaired and a younger man guiding her, possibly her son. I hear her saying, “Silly Scott…” and think immediately that she is talking about Scott Morrison. I have learned a while ago that the upper middle classes, especially of her generation, use the word ‘silly’ instead of ‘stupid’. Using his first name indicates that she sees him as being on her side of the fence, but she reserves the right to have a critical attitude. This is my interpretation. 

Now in September 2021, after more than a year of pandemic, it seems that we are all on first-name terms with our politicians, at least in our minds. Gladys, Dan and Scott, we see them every day at press conferences on TV. They have become so familiar.

Next to the park is the Gothic Revival residence Lindesay, completed in 1836 for the colony’s treasurer Mr Campbell Drummond Riddell, and had many subsequent owners including Charles Nicholson, a collector of rare books and antiquities and chancellor of the University of Sydney. His collection used to be in the Nicholson Museum on the university’s main campus. The Lindesay is now also a museum and is temporarily closed because of COVID-19. 

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Mona Road has some grand houses, but the part near New South Head Road also has quite modest brick residences and flats and a small row of dark-looking Victorian terraces which must have a fantastic view over Rushcutters Bay. 

I once lived in Mona Lane in ‘The Georgeson’ at the time of the Sydney Olympics. My flat was on the upper floor and had an unrestricted view over the bay to the city. I would come home from my job at ‘Opal Fields’ in Darling Harbour and sit at night in the lounge room to watch the laser show. It was also the final year of my Master's Degree at SCA and the self-portraits I took with an old Rolleicord and a long shutter release cable for my project were taken in that flat. It was big and I had it all to myself. 

Next door is a sombre 1930’s brick block of flats that got fitted with new roof tiles in 2000, but now looks deserted. Mona Lane ends with a footpath down to Rushcutters Bay. In those days you could still go to the park on New Year’s Eve with your friends and bring alcohol without having to pay or pass barricades. 

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In story telling, street photography, urban photography Tags urbanphotography, street photography, parks, flâneuse, femalenames
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Elsie and Minna

Anke Stäcker August 31, 2021

Elsie and Minna Street, Burwood on Sunday, 12 July 2020

Elsie Street is just a shadowy wind tunnel between high office buildings. Its past is wiped out. There could have been the type of houses I saw near Mary Street. Dark brick, one-storey, squat and sombre looking. 

Walking through the parallel back lane which is also the backside of Burwood Road, I am amazed at how make-shift and run down these in-between alleys often are. The dirtiest ibis I have ever seen is picking its way through some overflowing rubbish bins. The Burwood Medical Centre looks like something where Netflix serial killers keep their victims. Nearby is the Ninety Plus Education Centre. I wonder if the name indicates an IQ score or an age group. The owner must be doing well as a new black Audi is parked near the fire stairs. “No customer parking”. The neighbour is more drastic: “Don’t even think about parking here” is written on a proper custom-made metal sign. The wire mesh gate guarding the carport is rusty and twisted by someone trying to force it open. Dead leaves, paper and plastic bags litter the floor. There is a peeling wall painting that says Hardwick’s Shoes.

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Now, more than a year later, I read up about this shop. It was a family business, founded in 1902 and closed in 2016. The article says the history of the shop is written on its interior walls. I am curious about what would be in there now and if they’ve kept the writing. I look up Google photos. It’s “Mr Vitamins - Best Price + Expert Advice”. I can’t go there to have a look as we are in another lockdown, Burwood is more than 5km away from my home and a no-entry red zone. 

Minna Street is a bit further along from the Burwood Road shopping centre. By the time I arrive there, a storm is brewing, the sky has turned dark. It’s an entirely residential street with big houses of different architectural periods. All are kept in perfect condition. There is an empty lot that has a banner on the fence saying cross = love in symbols. In one of the gardens, a Magnolia tree is starting to flower. Spring is not far. 

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In urban photography, street photography, story telling, history Tags urbanphotography, flâneuse, #psychogeography #wayfaring #flâneuse #flânerie #urbanexploration #urbanphotography #sydneyaustralia #inthetimeofcorona #history
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