Merren Ricketson is an Australian arts educator with a strong focus on women artists, and a Life Member of the Women's Art Register. [1]
Ricketson was a sessional educator at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV). She curated Top Arts, [2] an annual exhibition with the NGV presenting artmaking by Victorian students studying the Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE), and managed the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority's Season of Excellence Festival, working with student artists, designers, performers, musicians and filmmakers for over a decade. [3] [4] [5]
Ricketson was Co-founder (with Helen Vivian) of Artmoves Inc. (1988-2000), a not for profit association for the support and promotion of women's art and artists. Artmoves developed group and solo exhibitions by Australian women artists, and catalysed education programs at various galleries including Australian Centre for Contemporary Art. [1] Artmoves produced the ground breaking exhibition Completing the Picture: Women artists and the Heidelberg Era (1992), curated by Victoria Hammond and Juliette Peers, with accompanying 88 page catalogue, [6] [7] edited by Helen Vivian. Completing the Picture researched and uncovered previously unknown women artists of the Heidelberg School, and critiqued the representation of the work of women artists from that era. [8] The exhibition toured to 9 Australian metropolitan and regional galleries in 1992/1993 including Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Castlemaine Art Gallery, Benalla Art Gallery, and Heide Museum of Modern Art (VIC), S.H.Ervin Gallery (NSW), Carrick Hill Gallery (South Australia), where the exhibition was opened by Margaret Whitlam, Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery (TAS), and Art Gallery of Western Australia, (WA). The exhibition featured the work of 19 women artists from 1876-1916, including: Cristina Asquith Baker, Alice Bale, Emma Minnie Boyd, Alice Chapman, Florence Fuller, Portia Geach, Ina Gregory, Grace Joel, Dora Meeson, Mary Meyer, Josephine Muntz Adams, Helen Peters, Jane Price, Iso Rae, Dora Serle, Clara Southern, Jane Sutherland, Violet Teague, May Vale.
Ricketson was the education coordinator for the exhibition Flesh After Fifty, [9] curated by Jane Scott. Flesh After Fifty focused on confronting negative stereotypes of aging women through reframing images of older women through art. [10]
Ricketson published the Public arts kit: The basics in starting out and taking your art to the world! with Helen Millicer. [11] And her essay 'Seeing and Remembering' was published in the catalogue for the exhibition Seen and Unseen: Expressions of Koorie Identity held at the Koorie Heritage Trust in 2021. [12]
Art In A Cold Climate was a six month research project by the Women's Art Register, undertaken by Ricketson and Bernadette Burke. They investigated the representation and media coverage of women artists as students, graduates, art educators and exhibiting artists, as well as media coverage in newspapers, and the representation of women artists in Australian art textbooks. A five-page summary of the research was published with discussion and analysis by Ricketson, Bernadette Burke and Erica McGilchrist. This was republished in the Women's Art Register Bulletin [13] No. 64, June 2019. Art in a Cold Climate was used to provide data and inform the Women's Art Register's public submission for the Parliamentary Inquiry into Australia's Creative and Cultural Industries and Institutions in 2020. [14]
In 2020, Ricketson was interviewed by Katie Ryan, in conversation with Alex Cuffe, for It Comes In Waves, a conversation series hosted by Ryan and published as an audio series by the Women's Art Register. Other participants include Meredith Rogers and Manisha Anjali, Georgia Banks and Juliette Peers, Lara Chamas and Natalie Thomas, Alice McIntosh and Bonita Ely. [15]
The National Gallery of Victoria, popularly known as the NGV, is an art museum in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1861, it is Australia's oldest and most visited art museum.
John Webber was an English artist who accompanied Captain Cook on his third Pacific expedition. He is best known for his images of Australasia, Hawaii and Alaska.
The Melbourne Arts Precinct is home to a series of galleries, performing arts venues and spaces located in the Southbank district of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It includes such publicly-funded venues as Arts Centre Melbourne, National Gallery of Victoria and Southbank Theatre, along with various offices and training institutions of arts organisations.
Australian feminist art timeline lists exhibitions, artists, artworks and milestones that have contributed to discussion and development of feminist art in Australia. The timeline focuses on the impact of feminism on Australian contemporary art. It was initiated by Daine Singer for The View From Here: 19 Perspectives on Feminism, an exhibition and publishing project held at West Space as part of the 2010 Next Wave Festival.
Violet Helen Evangeline Teague was an Australian artist, noted for her painting and printmaking.
Peter Sebastian Graham is a contemporary Australian artist, painter, printmaker and sculptor. He was born in 1970 in Sydney, New South Wales. He moved with his family in 1983 to Melbourne, Victoria, where he currently lives and works.
Francis Reiss was an Australian photographer, born to Danish parents in Hamburg, Germany. He was best known for his work for Picture Post and Life magazines.
The Women’s Art Register is Australia's living archive of women's art practice. It is a national artist-run, not-for-profit community and resource in Melbourne, Australia.
Erica McGilchrist was an Australian artist and co-founder of the Women's Art Register. She participated TOM STEVENS SKYDIVING 4K HD 1080P PLEASE in more than 40 solo exhibitions and many group exhibitions. She is represented in institutional and public galleries as well as private collections in Australia, UK, Israel and USA. Her contributions to women's art were recognised in 1992 when she was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia.
Nici Cumpston, is an Australian photographer, painter, curator, writer, and educator.
Maree Clarke is an Australian multidisciplinary artist and curator from Victoria, renowned for her work in reviving south-eastern Aboriginal Australian art practices.
Jane Rebecca Price was an Australian painter who was a foundation member of the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors. Two of her works have been acquired by the National Gallery of Victoria and two by the Art Gallery of South Australia. She was a close associate of members of the group of painters known as the Heidelberg school.
Cristina Asquith Baker (1868–1960) was an Australian artist known for her paintings and lithographs. She studied with Frederick McCubbin, one of the key artists of the Australian impressionist Heidelberg school, but she was independent and did not tie herself to a single school of thought. She twice studied abroad, in Paris and London, gaining expertise in various other forms of artistic expression such as lithography and carpet-making.
Kay Lindjuwanga is an Aboriginal Australian artist from Maningrida in the Northern Territory of Australia. She is known for her bark paintings which often make use of Aboriginal rrark designs.
Alexander "Sasha" Dmitrievich Grishin is an Australian art historian, art critic and curator based in Victoria and Canberra. He is known as an art critic, and for establishing the academic discipline of art history at the Australian National University (ANU).
Mari Funaki was a leading contemporary jeweller, designer, metal-smith and sculptor. She was active from 1990 to 2010. Initially a jeweller, she moved towards "purely sculptural forms" from the late 1990s.
Helen Elizabeth Ogilvie was a twentieth-century Australian artist and gallery director, cartoonist, painter, printmaker and craftworker, best known for her early linocuts and woodcuts, and her later oil paintings of vernacular colonial buildings.
Josh Muir (1992–2022) was an Australian artist. His work dealt with themes related to Country, culture, identity, colonisation, mental health, generational trauma, addiction, loss and grief. Muir was born in Ballarat, Victoria in 1992, and died in February 2022. He was a Yorta Yorta, Gunditjmara and Barkindji man. He had two children with his partner Shanaya Sheridan.
Bruce Armstrong was an Australian sculptor, painter, printer and charcoal artist. He is known for his large public sculptures such as Eagle (Bunjil) in Melbourne, Australia and Owl in Belconnen, Australian Capital Territory. He had a major retrospective exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria in 2017.
Justine Kong Sing (1868–1960) was a Chinese-Australian miniature portrait painter.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)