Jon Tonks: Empire

Jon Tonks is a British photographer based in Bath, UK. Born in the West Midlands in 1981, Jon Tonks studied product design before becoming a staff photographer for a local newspaper. He moved to London and undertook a Master's degre in Photojournalism & Documentary Photography at London College of Communication.

United Kingdom – 

Empire is a fascinating journey across the South Atlantic exploring life on four remote islands – the British Overseas Territories of Ascension Island, Tristan da Cunha, the Falkland Islands and St. Helena ­– relics of the once formidable British Empire, all intertwined through their shared history. 

Photography feature – Jon Tonks spent up to a month at a time in each territory, travelling 60,000 miles around the Atlantic via military outposts, low-lit airstrips and a long voyage aboard the last working Royal Mail Ship. Some 400 rolls of film, 24 flights and 32 days at sea later, the resulting work creates an insight into these distant places that resonate with a sense of Britishness which is remarkably recognisable yet inescapably strange. 


01.tifFALKLAND ISLANDS – NOVEMBER, 2011: A Gather of Sheep standing under a Union Jack Flag, Long Island Farm, November 2011, Falkland Islands. Farmland on the Falkland Islands extends to well over one million hectares, and is home to approximately 600,000 sheep. The value of wool has fluctuated in recent decades, but in 2012 was considered high. Each family has a short window of time in which to shear their entire flock, up to 10,000 head of sheep. (Photo by Jon Tonks/Reportage by Getty Images) 


Tonks has photographed the people, the landscapes and the traces of the past embedded within each territory and through his photographs and short texts, which combine history and anecdote, he tells the story of these remote and remarkable islands. His motivation is neither political or nostalgic, the images arising primarily from his curiosity about the lives of these distant lands that remain very firmly British. 

“This tour of remaining British territories, many of which are godforsaken outposts in the Atlantic, is a wonderful study of island life. A mixture of portraits and landscapes, together with the stories associated with the scenes, provide both an entertaining and rather melancholy take.” – Martin Parr

 

Related Posts

Marlous Van Der Sloot: Le Corps Vecu

Netherlands – In modern society we often forget that ‘the physical’ is also a source of information. Because of rationalization, ...

Manik Katyal on Thomas Mailaender “The Night Climbers of Cambridge”

United Kingdom – With an elegant black velvet cover, ‘The Night Climbers of Cambridge’ is an enthralling collaboration between London ...

Stockdale on Alejandro Cartagena “Carpoolers”

 Mexico –  “Carpooling” is an American term for an occasion when multiple individuals ride in the same vehicle to the ...

Vlad Krasnoshchok & Sergiy Lebedynskyy: “Euromaidan” – Rapidly Changing Ukrainian Chronicles

Ukraine –  “On the 19th of January, 2014 a peaceful protest of Ukrainian Euromaidans on the Hrushevskyi Street in Kiev ...

Colin Pantall on Kevin Griffin’s Last Man Standing

Ireland –  Isolated islands off the Irish coast? There are a few that come to mind. Craggy Island is one ...

Nathan Pearce: Midwest Dirt

USA – ‘When I was 18 years old I packed my bags and left rural Illinois. It had been my ...

Robert Zhao Renhui: Singapore 1925-2025

Singapore –  The Land Archive chronicles the significant changes in Singapore’s natural and urban landscape that have occurred over a ...

Mikhael Subotzky Patrick Waterhouse Ponte City

Mikhael Subotzky & Patrick Waterhouse: “Ponte City” – Africa’s Tallest Residential Building

South Africa – Mikhael Subotzky and Patrick Waterhouse worked at Ponte City, the iconic Johannesburg apartment building which is Africa’s ...

“Thierry Bal: a photographic practice in contemporary art.”

United Kingdom – I’m part of a small group of uninvited guests on an abandoned ship off the coast of ...