Leah King-Smith

Last updated

Leah King-Smith
NationalityIndigenous Australian
EducationBachelor of Fine Arts, -1986 Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD

Master of Fine Art, -2001

Doctor of Philosophy, -2006
Known forPhotography
Notable workPatterns of Connection
StyleContemporary Indigenous photography

Leah King-Smith [1] is a Bigambul descendant, visual artist and lecturer in the School of Creative Practice (Creative Industries) QUT, Brisbane, Australia. [2] She is best known for her photo compositions.

Contents

Her 1991 series Patterns of Connection [3] is widely recognised and has been exhibited both in Australia and overseas. King-Smith's work was exhibited in ‘The Thousand Mile Stare: A Photographic Exhibition’ [4] at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne. Her early work mainly explored the ideas of identity and how it can shift throughout time. [5]

Early life

King-Smith was born in Gympie, Queensland. [6] Having an indigenous mother and a white father stirred an interest in King-Smith to explore in her photography issues concerning cultural discord.

Education

In 1986, King-Smith completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts, majoring in Photography, at Victoria College in Melbourne. King-Smith went on to complete a Master of Arts by research at the Queensland University of Technology in 2001 [7] before graduating from the same university with a PhD in visual arts in 2006. [5] [8]

Photography career

King-Smith began exhibiting in 1985, while studying for her undergraduate degree, and has continued to exhibit regularly. In 1988 her work was exhibited in group exhibition The Thousand Mile Stare: A Photographic Exhibition at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne in 1988.

King-Smith's Patterns of Connection (1991) was exhibited at the Victorian Centre of Photography, [9] Melbourne and the Australian Centre of Photography, Sydney in 1992 and later that year at Camerawork Gallery, London, as part of its Southern Crossings show. [10] Best known for this series, King-Smith's work on Patterns of Connection, began when she was presented with two grants by the Stegley Foundation. [11] [12] The grant was given through the Koori Oral History Program for King-Smith to make a picture book of hundred photographs for the nineteenth-century Aboriginal people, which were taken by European photographers. However, the project took a different turn as King-Smith felt so moved by the portraits, she felt the need to make it more personally engaging. King-Smith decided to go about this by creating 'photo-compositions', which are artworks that combine the photographs from the nineteenth century with her own photographs in colour of the Victorian landscape and paint. [13] This new turn in the project repositioned Aboriginal people to be seen in a more positive light and in a spiritual and living domain. Landscape and figure were brought together in these works to showcase how important landscape is to the Aboriginal people, in addition to removing the negative connotations of confinement and control presented in the original photographs. [5]

Duncan King-Smith [14] (King-Smith's partner) is a sound designer who accompanied the works with a soundscape recording of the Australian bush, which was used to create a more engaging experience. The series was widely exhibited and toured with various exhibitions not only around Australia, but internationally to places such as the United Kingdom and North America. [5]

In 1998, King-Smith was selected for inclusion in the exhibition In the Realm of Phantoms – Photographs of the Invisible at the Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach, Germany.

In 1997 and 1999 she was also selected for inclusion in the exhibitions Metamorphosis and Beyond Myth - Oltre il Mito, part of the Venice Biennales.

She has created several visual artworks [15] as part of her practice-led research, and has been regularly exhibiting in solo and group exhibitions since 1985.

In the lead-up to the 2006 Commonwealth Games (held in Melbourne), King-Smith was given a commission by the National Portrait Gallery to create four portraits. These portraits were to be of indigenous athletes [16] and to be made using King-Smith's photo-composition technique.

In 2014, she was commissioned to make a public artwork for the Translink North Lakes Bus Station, north of Brisbane. [17] [18] In 2016 her work was exhibited in the group exhibition Over the Fence, and documented in the accompanying catalogue Over the Fence,Contemporary Indigenous Photography from the Corrigan Collection. [19]

Her work is held across Australia in collections including the National Gallery of Victoria, National Gallery of Australia, the State Library of Victoria, Art Gallery of New South Wales and other public galleries. Her artworks are also in private collections, as well as in some international collections. [20]

Academic career

King-Smith's focus is particularly driven by change for equity and cultural competence in teaching and learning, as well as the encouragement of cultural perspectives in practice-led research.[ attribution needed ]

King-Smith has an extensive career as a photo and digital media artist, encompassing solo, collaborative and group exhibitions, community engagement, dance performances, theatre productions, international cultural exchanges, book covers, story illustration and experimental film & video work. Her current practice includes 3D animation technologies within a trans-disciplinary collaborative praxis. [2]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Centre for Contemporary Photography</span>

The Centre for Contemporary Photography (CCP), in Fitzroy, Melbourne, Victoria, is a venue for the exhibition of contemporary photo-based arts, providing a context for the enjoyment, education, understanding and appraisal of contemporary practice.

Fiona Margaret Hall, AO is an Australian artistic photographer and sculptor. Hall represented Australia in the 56th International Art Exhibition at the Venice Biennale in 2015. She is known as "one of Australia's most consistently innovative contemporary artists." Many of her works explore the "intersection of environment, politics and exploitation".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gareth Sansom</span>

Gareth Sansom is an Australian artist, painter, printmaker and collagist and winner of the 2008 John McCaughey Memorial Prize of $100,000.

Susan Fereday is an Australian artist, writer, curator and educator. She holds a doctorate from Monash University, Melbourne. She was born in Adelaide, South Australia.

Bindi Cole Chocka is an Australian contemporary new media artist, photographer, writer and curator of Wadawurrung heritage.

Susanne Helene Ford was an Australian feminist photographer who started her arts practice in the 1960s. She was the first Australian photographer to have a solo exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria in 1974 with Time Series. A book of her portraits of women 'A Sixtieth of a Second' was published in 1987. Her photographs and eclectic practice was displayed in an exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria in 2014.

Ruth Maddison is an Australian photographer born in 1945. She started photography in the 1970s and continues to make contributions to the Australian visual arts community.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jennie Boddington</span>

Jennifer "Jennie" Boddington was an Australian film director and producer, who was first curator of photography at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne (1972–1994), and researcher.

Ponch Hawkes is an Australian photographer whose work explores intergenerational relationships, queer identity and LGBTQI+ rights, the female body, masculinity, and women at work, capturing key moments in Australia's cultural and social histories.

Jesse Marlow (1978) is an Australian street photographer, editorial and commercial photographer who lives and works in Melbourne.

Kate Beynon is an Australian contemporary artist based in Melbourne. She was the 2016 winner of the Geelong Contemporary Art Prize for the painting, Graveyard scene/the beauty and sadness of bones.

Stephen Wickham is an Australian photographer, painter and printmaker.

Robert Ashton (1950) is an Australian photographer and photojournalist.

Anne Wallace is an Australian painter. Her works have appeared in major exhibitions and are held in major collections.

Naomi Hobson is an Aboriginal Australian artist of southern Kaantju and Umpila heritage from Lockhart River, Cape York Peninsula, Queensland. She works in many media, including painting, photography and ceramics. She started exhibiting in 2013.

Jan Nelson is an Australian artist who works in sculpture, photography and painting. She is best known for her hyper real images of adolescents. She has exhibited widely in Australia as well as Paris and Brazil. Her works are in the collections of Australian galleries including the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney and the Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane, as well as major regional galleries. She represented Australia in the XXV biennale in São Paulo, Brazil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hoda Afshar</span> Iranian photographer (born 1983)

Hoda Afshar is an Iranian documentary photographer who is based in Melbourne. She is known for her 2018 prize-winning portrait of Kurdish-Iranian refugee Behrouz Boochani, who suffered a long imprisonment in the Manus Island detention centre run by the Australian government. Her work has been featured in many exhibitions and is held in many permanent collections across Australia.

Rozalind Drummond is a photographic artist and an early exponent of postmodernism in Australia.

Judith Wright in Meanjin (Brisbane) is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice spans installation, video, sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking and assemblage.

References

  1. "King-Smith, Leah (1957-)", Trove, 2008, retrieved 3 July 2017
  2. 1 2 "QUT Staff Profile: Dr. Leah King-Smith". QUT Staff Profiles. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  3. King-Smith, Leah; King-Smith, Duncan; Victorian Centre for Photography (1992), Patterns of connection : an exhibition of photo-compositions, Leah King-Smith, ISBN   978-0-646-08641-5
  4. Agee, Joyce; Bennett, David; Victorian Centre for Photography; Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (1988). The thousand mile stare: a photographic exhibition. Melbourne: Victorian Centre for Photography. ISBN   978-0-7316-2054-8. OCLC   27538499.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Jackett, Amy. "Leah King-Smith". Design & Art Australia Online. Retrieved 21 April 2015.
  6. "Leah King-Smith". National Gallery of Victoria. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
  7. King-Smith, Leah (2001) Reading the reading : an exegesis on "traces... vestiges... energies... a relic... landmark... stage: New Farm Powerhouse Project". Masters by Research thesis, Queensland University of Technology.https://eprints.qut.edu.au/36448/
  8. King-Smith, Leah (2006) Resonances of difference : creative diplomacy in the multidimensional and transcultural aesthetics of an indigenous photomedia practice. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/16321/
  9. "Trove".
  10. Emily Gibson, "Frames of reference", The Sydney Morning Herald Friday 01 May 1992, p.46
  11. "Stegley Foundation. - Social Networks and Archival Context".
  12. French, Blair (1999). Photo Files: an Australian photography reader. London: Camerawork. ISBN   1871103053.
  13. Marsh, Anne (2010). Look: Contemporary Australian Photography Since 1980. South Yarra: Macmillan Art Publishing.
  14. "King-Smith, Duncan", Trove, 2008, retrieved 3 July 2017
  15. "Browse by Person: King-Smith, Leah".
  16. King-Smith, Leah (2006) Athletes series. [Visual Artwork]. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/48379/
  17. King-Smith, Leah (2014) Translink Public Art Installation.[Visual Artwork]. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/94361/
  18. Armstrong, J. M. John; Carroli, Linda (11 October 2013). "Public art installation at North Lakes Bus Station". Harbinger Consultants. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  19. Craig, Gordon; Presley, Ryan (9 August 2016). "Over the fence: Contemporary Indigenous photography from the Corrigan Collection". ISSUU. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  20. Jackett, Amy. "Leah King-Smith". Design & Art Australia. Retrieved 24 April 2015.