As he took the opportunity to make photographs during long-distance travel by plane over Western Australia for assignments, Woldendorp became especially known for his semi-abstract aerial colour photography, which he exhibited as a professional artist in his first solo exhibition at David Foulkes Taylor's Triangle gallery in the Perth suburb of
Crawley in 1964 and in a collaboration with bird photographer
Peter Slater, published his first book
The Hidden Face of Australia in 1968. He followed it with
A Million Square (1969) in partnership with writer
Tom T.A.G. Hungerford. He returned to Indonesia, reviving his earlier familiarity with the country and its people and published
Indonesia in 1972. Subsequently, he has produced over twenty books on land, industry and people. In 1979 Woldendorp and his wife Lyn established the first picture agency in Western Australia;
Photo Index, a success which over twenty years provided freedom to travel and to make work with artistic integrity. In 2007, Woldendorp's imagery was used for projections onto performers' bodies in Aureo's
Skadada, directed by Katie Lavers, at
His Majesty's Theatre, Perth, 17–20 January.'''' == Recognition ==