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Margaret Gurney | |
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Born | Margaret Jane Gurney 1943 (age 80–81) Melbourne, Australia |
Education | |
Occupation | Artist |
Spouse | Alan Charles Weatherley (m. 1967;died 1986) |
Children | 2 |
Parent |
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Margaret Jane Gurney (born 1943) is an Australian artist who lives and works in Melbourne and is an advocate for Australian arts.
Born into an artistic family, Margaret represented Australia at the 2009 Florence Biennale. She has won numerous awards, was one of the first women to work as a graphic artist in Australian television and, also, was one of the first women to work in Australia as an art director in advertising.
She worked extensively as both an educator and as an administrator in Community Arts, and as a Program Manager in Arts Adult Education long before the creation of Creative Victoria in 2015. [1]
She established her own studio in Melbourne, and has painted full time for many years. [2]
The daughter of Australian war artist, Alex Gurney (1902-1955) — the creator of the legendary Bluey and Curley cartoon — and Junee Gurney (1909-1984), née Grover, youngest daughter of the journalist Montague "Monty" MacGregor Grover (1870–1943), [3] and Ada Grover (1877-1928), née Goldberg, [4] [5] Margaret Jane Gurney was born in Melbourne in 1943.
The youngest of four children, Margaret's elder siblings were John (1929–2004), [6] Jennifer Anne (1932–2004), and Susan (1937–2003). [7]
She married cinematographer Alan Charles Weatherley (1937-1986) on 8 April 1967. [8] She has two children, Jane Leza Weatherley (1969-), and Mark Alan Weatherley (1972), and two grand-children, Emma and Kate Weatherley.
Educated at:
During her time as a student she won a number of prizes for her art, including:
A talented actress, Margaret took the part of Concha Puerto, the major protagonist in The Women Have Their Way (an English version of the Quintero brothers' es:Puebla de las Mujeres ), in MLC’s (August 1959) annual School Play. [20]
Whilst at Swinburne, she had a number of leading roles in each of the College's first two student revues (each produced by Brian Robinson): [21] In the Pink (1962), [22] and Get Well Soon (1963).
After completing her formal studies at Swinburne, [23] she worked at two small advertising agencies: as a Graphic Artist with Curtis Stevens and Charles Billich, Melbourne, in 1964, and in Advertising Marketing with George Santos, Melbourne, from 1964 to 1966.[ citation needed ]
She was, then, employed as a graphic artist at Channel O, Melbourne from 1966 to 1967, and as television art director at George Patterson's advertising agency, in Melbourne, from 1967 to 1969. [24]
Working as an artist from her time at Swinburne, she has "exhibited widely in solo and group exhibitions both nationally and internationally, [and has] represented Australia at the Florence Biennale in 2009 and has won numerous awards". [25] [26] [27]
She is an exhibiting member of the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors, [28] the Victorian Artists Society, the Contemporary Art Society, and several other Melbourne art societies.
From her (1979) experience as a sessional lecturer at the Phillip Institute, Melbourne, where she lectured to Art and Design Students, she developed a strong interest in both formal and informal arts education; an interest that has remained with her ever since. [29]
In addition to her own work as an artist, Margaret is extremely active in reviving, maintaining, and preserving the artistic legacy of her father, Alex Gurney (1902-1955). [30] [31] [32] [33] [34] [35]
In 2007 Margaret was the means through which the significant collection of papers and works of Alex Gurney, accession number MS 13561, [36] were able to be acquired by the State Library of Victoria. [37]
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