• Blog Random Discoveries
  • About
  • CV
  • Contact
    • Profile by Deborah Singerman, 2016
    • 'Drift' by Judith Duquemin, 2013, Catalogue essay
    • 'Madeleines' by Judith Duquemin, 2008, Exhibition Essay
  • Store
    • Plastic Scapes
    • Landscapes
    • Built Environment
  • Archives Fiction
  • Archives Cities
Menu

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
  • Store
  • Works
    • Plastic Scapes
    • Landscapes
    • Built Environment
  • Archives Fiction
  • Archives Cities
×

An investigation of streets with female names in Sydney

A retrospective

Sketchy notes about streets named Mabel 

Anke Stäcker July 6, 2020

Sunday, 2 February 2020

Today is the first day of my project Random Discoveries. The plan is to visit randomly chosen streets of Sydney and find out what they can tell me.

But how would I make my choices?

There is a worldwide community of urban investigators. Some drift aimlessly through the city. Others follow an algorithm to find places they otherwise wouldn’t go to.

I’m going to visit streets with female names in honour of the female street explorers past and present.

I start with the letter M.

Mabel Street, Hurstville

Hot Sunday, a sleepy street with old trees. Not many people around. Two kids are running into their house. A young man is driving into a carport. Two people are talking on the footpath, and someone is working in front of his garage. Otherwise quiet, and not many cars. But the ones coming through are fast and very impatient. 

succulent-mabel.jpg
mabeltreet-hurstville.jpg

Mabel Street, Kingsgrove

It’s a very deserted street, no old trees. Some houses might date back to the 1930s, while others are new. Some are just about to be finished. Almost nobody around. One property with tall white garden gnomes attracts my attention. There is a man working in his garage, drilling. He couldn’t have heard me over the noise. Nevertheless, after I have taken a photo, he comes to his fence and looks suspiciously around. I get into my car and leave.

mabelstreet-kingsgrove.jpg
garden-gnomes.jpg
signs-mabel.jpg
In female names, architecture, story telling, street photography, urban photography Tags psychogeography, garden gnomes, flânerie, female names, streets, sydneyaustralia, storytelling, urban exploration, urbanphotography, urban
← Graffiti in May Lane

Search Posts

  • July 2020 6
  • August 2020 7
  • September 2020 3
  • October 2020 3
  • November 2020 3
  • December 2020 3
  • January 2021 7
  • February 2021 1
  • March 2021 2
  • May 2021 2
  • June 2021 4
  • July 2021 4
  • August 2021 5
  • September 2021 3
  • October 2021 2
  • November 2021 4
  • December 2021 3
  • January 2022 5
  • February 2022 4
  • March 2022 6
  • April 2022 4
  • May 2022 5
  • June 2022 7
  • July 2022 7
  • August 2022 7
  • September 2022 2

I acknowledge the traditional custodians of the land upon which I walk to explore the streets of Sydney. With respect.

Featured Posts

Featured
RoslynSt.jpeg
Sep 4, 2022
Epilogue
Sep 4, 2022
Sep 4, 2022
KnowMyName.jpg
Sep 1, 2022
Know my name
Sep 1, 2022
Sep 1, 2022
PalmtreeVictory.jpg
Aug 26, 2022
Ruby and Harriett
Aug 26, 2022
Aug 26, 2022
GreenTiles.jpg
Aug 22, 2022
Alfreda on the beach
Aug 22, 2022
Aug 22, 2022
factory.jpg
Aug 19, 2022
Angel
Aug 19, 2022
Aug 19, 2022
StreetCanyon.jpg
Aug 15, 2022
Where the sun never shines
Aug 15, 2022
Aug 15, 2022
CorneliaRd_Toon.jpg
Aug 10, 2022
Finding Buddha
Aug 10, 2022
Aug 10, 2022
Twilight.jpg
Aug 7, 2022
The fence at the end of the world
Aug 7, 2022
Aug 7, 2022
Underpass.jpg
Aug 4, 2022
Ada
Aug 4, 2022
Aug 4, 2022
Motorbike.jpg
Jul 31, 2022
Succulents and Pomegranates
Jul 31, 2022
Jul 31, 2022






Powered by Squarespace