Bek Coogan (born 1972) is a New Zealand multidisciplinary artist and musician.
Coogan was born in 1972 in Palmerston North and has lived in Wellington. [1] [2] She is currently based in Paekakariki. [3] Bek is related to Steve Coogan through their fathers, who are cousins.[ citation needed ]
Coogan completed a Masters in Fine Arts (First Class Honours) at Massey University in 2004, [4] and a Graduate Diploma in Secondary Teaching at Victoria University of Wellington in 2012. [2]
Coogan first appeared on the New Zealand music scene in 2004 as part of art-rock band Cortina. Their music was described as a fusion of "heavy metal guitar (courtesy of Ace Hurt aka Matt Hunt), odd synth noises, and bizarre lyrics (“ILLUMINATI! JENNY SHIPLEY!”)." [5]
Gareth Shute described her stage persona and dress as "an insane, but stylish 80s housewife: tight jumpsuits, tinted sunglasses, and headbands. At one show at Bodega, Wellington, she squeezed a pie out of the slit in the front of her satin/lace one piece jumpsuit and began scooping out pieces to feed to the crowd. One another occasion, she was recovering from a car accident and completed a national tour wearing a neck brace with “fucked off” scrawled across it." [5] Luke Rowell of Disasteradio characterised her performances as "breaking down the hierarchy between performer and audience."
In 2013, she formed the group Fantasing with Sarah Jane Parton, Claire Harris, and Gemma Syme. [5] A combination of installation art and live performance, they were the Audio Foundation's artists in residence in 2016. [6] Coogan described the group's emotional and artistic support of each other as central to their practice; "Sometimes that is kind of the art." [7] She has also performed solo as Oona Verse and Sheville, and was a member of the band Full Fucking Moon. [2] [5]
Coogan is part of the Wellington International Ukulele Orchestra, with whom she toured various parts of the world between 2012 and 2016, including a month at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2013. [8] [9] [10] Member Andy Morley-Hall describes Coogan: "My mum calls Bek The Original Rebel. I reckon she's like a cosmic whirlwind of new and refreshing ideas. She doesn't see the world quite like the rest of us do. Though she thinks deeply about things she is the opposite of earnest." [11]
Coogan performed the role of Janet in Frankensplurta, a musical prequel to the Rocky Horror Picture Show , in the March 2018 Dunedin Fringe Festival. [12]
Coogan first exhibited her drawings in 2002, which began an ongoing practice based around a character called Sheville and referencing a mythic female utopia. Her influences range from the painter Colin McCahon to feminist, punk-inspired drawing and collage. [2] She has continued to exhibit and perform widely, including shows at Enjoy Gallery, The New Zealand Film Archive and Depot Artspace in Devonport.
Coogan was a contributor to the New Zealand women's comics anthology Three Words, in which she describes her practice: "Coogan is a multidisciplinary artist who likes to test what Art is. Bek sees Performance Art, Video, Bands and Drawing as an active and politicised ideology. Art is a call to the wild or to the source, which Bek endures the shit-fight to get back to using whatever medium she can get her hands on, a vivid or a microphone drawing it up from the earth...There was, and is still now an idealistic aspect to this practice, positing an alternative female and mythic utopia. "But why the farg is it even idealist?" says Sheville, "this shit is normal where I come from." [13]
Coogan has also been the subject of paintings by Liz Maw. [14] [15]
Sarah Jane Parton is a new media artist based in Wellington, New Zealand.
Bronwyn Holloway-Smith is a New Zealand artist and author from Wellington. She holds a PhD in Fine Arts from Massey University, and is co-director of Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand.
Rachael Rakena is a New Zealand artist.
Joanna Margaret Paul was a New Zealand visual artist, poet and film-maker.
Three Words: An Anthology of Aotearoa/NZ Women's Comics is a 2016 collection that was edited by Rae Joyce, Sarah Laing, and Indira Neville. The book was first published on 14 March 2016 and collects together 64 female comic artists from New Zealand. Joyce stated that she wanted to create the collection after reading an anthology that was marketed as a history of New Zealand comics, only to feel that "it was representing the white male POV status quo rather than the reality of comics in NZ". She further commented that she hoped that Three Words would raise awareness for female comics from New Zealand, as she felt that they were under-represented.
Judith Ann Darragh is a New Zealand artist who uses found objects to create sculptural assemblages. She has also worked in paint and film. Darragh is represented in a number of public collections in New Zealand. In 2004, The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa held a major retrospective of her work titled Judy Darragh: So... You Made It?
Sharon Murdoch is a cartoonist born in 1960 in Invercargill, New Zealand. She is the first woman to regularly produce political cartoons for New Zealand mainstream media, and draws the cartoon cat Munro who accompanies the daily crossword in Fairfax newspapers. Murdoch has won New Zealand Cartoonist of the Year three times: 2016, 2017 and 2018.
Rachel Fenton, also known as Rae Joyce, is a graphic novel artist and author from New Zealand.
Sarah Laing is a New Zealand author, graphic novelist and graphic designer.
Heather Avis McPherson was a feminist poet, publisher and editor who played a key role in supporting women artists and writers in New Zealand. In 1976, she founded the Spiral Collective group and Spiral, a women's arts and literary journal that later published monographs. Her poetry book A Figurehead: A Face (1982) was the first book of poetry published in New Zealand by an openly lesbian woman. She published three further collections during her lifetime, and an additional two collections were published posthumously by fellow Spiral members.
Bridget Reweti is a New Zealand photographer and moving image artist. Reweti is a member of the artist group Mataaho Collective.
Kerry Ann Lee is a visual artist, designer, and scholar in design at Massey University College of Creative Arts, in Wellington, New Zealand.
Jem Yoshioka is a New Zealand illustrator and comic artist. She has won several comic awards and is best known for her webcomic Circuits and Veins which has attracted a large following on Webtoon.
Maiangi Waitai is a New Zealand-born artist of Ngā Wairiki, Ngāti Apa, Tuwhāretoa, Rangitāne and German descent. She works across a range of mediums, designing clothing and accessories for her Who is Dead Martin label, creating comics, figurines, toys, jewellery, mosaics and painting. She has also been a musician, singing and playing the flute and guitar in a band called Beam (1997-1999) with Colleen Lenihan, Guy Scoullar and Hayden Fritchley, also artists at the time in Whanganui. She has worked as a kindergarten teacher since 2010.
Debra Jane Boyask was a comics artist and educational developer. Boyask was born and died in England, but lived for many years in New Zealand, after moving there with her family in 1974.
Mirranda Burton is a New Zealand-born artist and writer living on Wurundjeri land/Melbourne, Australia.
Spiral, also known as Spiral Collective or Spiral Collectives, is a New Zealand publisher and group of artist collectives established in 1975 with a focus on female artists and voices. Members of Spiral have published and created a number of projects and works including, notably, the Spiral journal, A Figurehead: A Face (1982) by Heather McPherson, The House of the Talking Cat (1983) by J.C. Sturm, the bone people (1984) by Keri Hulme, numerous art exhibitions and documentary films.
Jasmine Togo-Brisby is a South Sea Islander artist known for her sculpture installations and portrait photographs. She currently resides in Te Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington and is one of few artists that centres Pacific slave labour as the focus of her practice.
Ruby Mae Hinepunui Solly is a New Zealand poet, taonga pūoro practitioner, cellist, composer, music therapist and scriptwriter.
Moana Leota aka MOZIE is a singer-songwriter, actor and vocalist of Samoan and New Zealand European descent based in Wellington, New Zealand. Leota has been performing in New Zealand's commercial, arts and music industries from a young age. She was the voice of the Interislander ad (2013) for a decade and has been an active soloist for community and national events as well as a backing vocalist for national and international touring artists. As an actor, Leota toured internationally to the US and Mexico with Le Moana Productions as the lead in Fatu Na Toto and as a vocalist. She recently toured New Zealand, UK and US with Bret McKenzie as a backing vocalist for his most recent album.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)