Jason Kimberley is an Australian author, photographer, adventurer and social entrepreneur whose eye captures the raw edges of humanity and the vastness of the natural world.
His work is at once laconic and lyrical, balancing irony with reverence. Kimberley has never sought the obvious view: no postcard sunsets, no neatly framed landmarks. Instead, his work leads you to the unexpected.
His first major book, Australia Exposed (2003), was described by Jack Thompson AM as “a loving and often laconic song of praise to the land and its people.” Hugh Jackman called it “a touch of magic.” Eric Bana, Naomi Watts, Russell Crowe, Greg Norman, and others saw in Australia that which is felt more than seen: humour, endurance, and the understated grandeur of ordinary moments.
Two years later, Kimberley turned his lens south. Antarctica: A Different Adventure (2005) chronicled his 16-day expedition with Peter Hillary and Jason Veale at 80 degrees south, where they hauled sledges through katabatic winds and whiteout blizzards. The resulting images and stories were called “powerful” by Dick Smith and “remarkable” by polar explorer Børge Ousland.
Self-taught, restless, and unafraid of discomfort, Kimberley treats photography as a form of modern exploration. Each image is an invitation to see the familiar anew, to pause where others rush past, and to laugh, even in the most inhospitable places. His digital gallery brings together three decades of work across Australia, Antarctica, and beyond: a celebration of imperfection, resilience, and beauty burnished by time and elements.
Now available: The Chook Book by Jason Kimberley
Darkly funny, viciously sharp, and uncomfortably familiar, this is the modern-day fable for our time: a story about power, rebellion, and the dangerous moment when a whole system breaks down. Here, death isn’t abstract. It’s part of the landscape.
The Story of Reginald. The Greatest Cock to Ever Live.
The Chook Book is an irreverent adult fable about a flock of farmyard chooks battling for power, pecking order and survival. Hilarious, absurd, and surprisingly human, it explores friendship, rivalry and belonging in a world ruled by hierarchy and nonsense.
Join the expedition and get unfiltered stories from the uncomfortable, overlooked, and utterly remarkable corners of the world.