ERC1155TL

The Simpson Desert

The Simpson Desert, Australia, also known as Munga-Thirri, or “Big Sandhill Country” in the language of the Wangkangurru Yarluyandi people. is one of the most rhythmically structured deserts on Earth. It is widely recognized for its immense system of parallel sand dunes, many stretching for extraordinary distances, turning the landscape into something that feels less like chaos and more like a coded pattern written by wind. What looks empty is actually full of memory: after rain, this severe landscape can briefly transform with wildflowers and temporary water, reminding us that the desert is never truly still. This place also carries a deeper human and mythic history. For the Wangkangurru Yarluyandi, Munga-Thirri is not just terrain but story-filled Country, where major landforms are tied to creation narratives and song cycles. Survival here once depended on mikiri—hand-dug wells hidden in the dunes, some more than seven metres deep, preserved in memory through stories and songs. One of the most powerful public Dreaming references connected to this region is the Two Boys Dreaming rainmaking story, a journey tied to water knowledge across the desert. That mix of repetition, endurance, hidden water, and ancestral memory is what drew me to reimagine Simpson not as a document of place, but as a study of rhythm, silence, and time. 4000 x 6000 px 300 DPI By Samanta, 2026

Connect