Vivienne Binns

Last updated

Vivienne Binns
OAM
Born
Vivienne Joyce Binns

1940 (age 8384)
Wyong, New South Wales, Australia
NationalityAustralian
Education National Art School
Notable workVag Dens
Movement Women's Art Movement
Awards Order of Australia Medal (1983)

Vivienne Joyce Binns OAM (born 1940) is an Australian artist known for her contribution to the Women's Art Movement in Australia, her engagement with feminism in her artwork, and her active advocacy within community arts. She works predominantly in painting.

Contents

Early life

Binns was born in Wyong, New South Wales, Australia, in 1940. She was the youngest of five children of her parents Joyce and Norman. [1] Norman had enlisted in the army six months prior to Vivienne's birth and spent the majority of five years serving in the Middle East and Papua New Guinea, while Joyce and the children lived in Young, New South Wales. In 1945, following the end of the war, the Binns family returned to Sydney,[ citation needed ] where Binns grew up, first in Willoughby then Wollstonecraft. [1]

From 1953, Binns attended North Sydney Girls High School. She later pursued her tertiary education in art at the National Art School from 1958 to 1962. After her graduation, Binns stayed on campus and took on a teaching role in the drawing department. [2] [1] She never conformed to traditional gender roles, and, during a time of "initial, intense, introversion", was questioning her sexuality as well as interrogating the philosophies and ideas in making art, in particular Dadaism. [3]

Career

Binns' first solo exhibition Vivienne Binns: Paintings and Constructions was held at Watters Gallery in Sydney in 1967. [4] Her most well-known painting, Vag Dens, featuring a brightly-coloured vagina with teeth, was hung alongside Phallic Monument, which featured male genitals. Some critics excoriated her work, using phrases such as "monumental repulsion", "pure obscene horror", "the most disturbing artwork I've ever seen". Artist and critic Elwyn Lynn wrote that her work her work "affronts masculinity". [3]

After this show, Binns felt that she needed a break from painting, and became involved in community arts. [3] In 1973, Binns worked as a field officer for the Community Arts Program, an Australia Council initiative, visiting regional areas to "investigate needs, resources and possibilities" [5] and doing a huge amount to stimulate and promote community arts. [4] She started working with vitreous enamel and other mediums formerly regarded as "crafts" rather than art. [3]

She was influenced by and became a friend of visiting US feminist art critic Lucy Lippard in 1975, afterwards visiting New York City and connecting with the women's art movement there. [4]

In 1979, she began her artist-in-residence program at the University of New South Wales, followed by artist-in-community placements in a range of locations across New South Wales from 1980 to 1988. [2]

From the late 1980s Binns taught painting and drawing at the University of Sydney Art Workshop, the Tin Sheds. In 1994 she taught painting and drawing at Charles Sturt University at Albury. She then moved to Canberra to take up a lecturing position at the Canberra School of Art (later amalgamated with the Australian National University as the ANU Institute of the Arts [6] ), teaching several subjects. [1]

In 1990 Binns travelled to central Australia and learnt some of the creation stories, art and culture from Pitjantjara women. [3] Also in 1990, In 1990, she was awarded an Australian Arts Creative Fellowship, enabling her to undertake a three-year research project about the cultural link between Australia and the Asia-Pacific. [5] [3] In 1991, Binns spent time in Tokyo on an Australia Council residency, and later attended three South Pacific Festivals of the Arts, in Rarotonga (1992), Western Samoa (1996) and Noumea (2000). These led to a significant amount of work which included references to Captain James Cook and the artists who travelled with him, and incorporating patterns of tapa cloth, the traditional bark cloth of the Pacific region. [1] [3]

In 1995 she started producing her extensive series entitled In Memory of the Unknown Artist, honouring the artistic endeavours of people not generally considered to be artists, such as designers of fabric, linoleum, carpet and bathroom tiles; housewives; traditional craftspeople; street artists and hobby artists. [1] She continued to create artworks in this series through the 2000s. [3]

In 2000, she was resident in the Australia Council Studio in London and, in 2001, again visited Europe assisted by an ANU Faculties Research Grant.[ citation needed ]

In 2002 Binns travelled to the Kimberleys, afterwards including imagery relating to the landscape of the area, sometimes combined with Cook-related imagery and patterned surfaces. In 2003, she collaborated with Geoff Newton and Derek O'Connor on a series of split canvases. [1]

She retired from teaching in 2012. [3]

Binns held a solo exhibition It Is What It Is at the Sutton Gallery, by whom she is represented, in Melbourne in 2018. [7]

In 2019 Vivienne Binns was interviewed in a digital story and oral history for the State Library of Queensland's James C Sourris AM Collection. [8] In the interview Binns talks about her life, her art and her inspirations. [9]

As of March 2022, aged 81, she still works and paints in her studio, although at a slower pace and sometimes intermittently; she has had one painting on the go for two years. [4] [3]

A major survey exhibition of her work entitled Vivienne Binns: On and through the Surface opened at MUMA (Monash University Museum of Art) on 5 February 2022, finishing up there in April [10] and starting a run at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia in Sydney in July. The exhibition includes more than 100 works, including prints, sculpture and drawing as well as her earliest paintings. [3] [11]

Art practice

Binns has worked across many media, including painting, printmaking, performance, sculpture and drawing. Her diverse range of artistic engagements has resulted in her being well respected amongst her Australian and global contemporaries, particularly within the feminist community. [12] [13]

Painting

Throughout the span of her practice, Binns has developed a strong reputation for her prolific approach to painting. Her first solo exhibition Vivienne Binns: Paintings and Constructions, was held in 1967 at Watters Gallery in Sydney. Including notable works such as Vag Dens [14] and Phallic Monument, [15] this exhibition has been recognised as a key starting point for the development of feminist art in Australia. [16] This exhibition was one of the first of its kind, predating Judy Chicago's The Dinner Party and "critically affirming the power of women's sexuality whilst also provoking... a good measure of castration anxiety amongst the patriarchy". [17]

Through decades of experimentation with colour and form, Binns has conceptually explored ideas ranging from feminism to colonial critique within her painting practice. [16] Binns utilises abstraction as a way to communicate complex ideas and make them accessible to a broader audience. [18]

Women's Art Movement

Alongside feminist contemporaries such as Barbara Hall, Frances Phoenix (nee Budden), Beverly Garlick, Jude Adams and Toni Robertson, Binns was at the forefront of the development of The Women's Art Movement (WAM) in Sydney, [19] Beginning in 1973 and inspired by Linda Nochlin's essay "Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?", WAM aimed to address discrimination and sexism within the art world through various actions and exhibitions. [20] Binns was a founding member in 1974. [3] WAM was particularly dedicated to the documentation of women's artwork through the development of the Women's Art Register.[ citation needed ]

Feminism and the Women's Art Movement serves as a political undercurrent for much of Binns practice: [21]

...as a feminist I became aware that the heritage of women was not readily available to us, was not obviously recorded and was certainly not taught in the schools.

Community art

Binns was a prominent figure in the development of community arts in Australia. In 1972 she collaborated with Mike Morris and Tim Burns on TheArtsmobile, a travelling community arts project that brought Dada and Surrealist style performance work to centres along the north east coast of NSW. Described as "the offspring of a marriage between Fluxus and a local town council bookmobile", [22] theArtsmobile brought a variety of art-based activities to schools, seniors centres and public parks.

Continuing with her interest in community arts and also related to the questions raised by the Women's Art Movement, Binns developed Mothers' Memories, Others' Memories [23] [3] in 1978 during her artist's residency at the University of New South Wales. Beginning with staff and students of the university, Binns later expanded the project to the Sydney suburb of Blacktown, where she worked closely with Patricia Parker, a community officer at the Blacktown City Council. [24] Mothers' Memories, Others' Memories recalled the "lives of women and their means of expression in the domestic sphere", [25] through facilitating a space where participants could come and share stories of the various craft and needlework skills that they had been taught from their mothers and other members of their family. Described as "dense, fragmented, [and] multilayered" [26] The final work was exhibited as a series of postcards installed on a postcard rack. [27] The project continued until 1981. [3]

In 1983, Binns began work on her next major community art project Full Flight. Travelling and living in a caravan for two years in the Central West region of New South Wales, Binns stayed for two to four months in each town facilitating workshops, mural painting and skill sharing. This project celebrated "the creativity of ordinary people" [22]

Her interest in community arts came primarily from an urge to make the art world accessible to everyone beyond the constraints of art institutions. Binns believed that creative expression was an inherent part of the human experience, and not allowing for this expression freely was a form of "social control": [24]

I am primarily interested in breaking down the distinctions between the art of artists and art institutions on one hand, and the art expression of people in general on the other...The approach I used was an attempt to take a positive step towards undermining the Australian cultural cringe and the oppressive effect of values pertaining to separate, aloof and elite art forms.

In 1989, Binns began another community art project, The Tower of Babel, at the Watters Gallery. It started with 50 small dioramas, created by herself as well as friends, mentors, students and acquaintances, including Irene Maher, Mike Brown, Ruth Waller, Bonita Ely and Eugene Carchesio. The project is still ongoing as of 2022, when it comprises 90 boxes. [3]

In 1991, Binns was the general editor of Community and the Arts: History, Theory, Practice, a collection of essays which served as a "theoretical text for community practitioners in the arts". [28]

Recognition and awards

According to the Australia Council, "Binns was one of the first artists in Australia to critically engage with feminism and pioneered dialogues between Australian art and international feminism". [13]

In 1983, Binns was awarded an Order of Australia Medal for Services to Art and Craft. She was also awarded the Ros Bower Memorial Award for visionary contribution to Community Arts in 1985. [2]

In 1990, she was awarded an Australian Arts Creative Fellowship, which financed her three-year research project about the cultural link between Australia and the Asia-Pacific. [5] [3]

Her work was selected for invitational prizes the John McCaughey Memorial Prize (2008) and Clemenger Contemporary Art Award (2009) at the National Gallery of Victoria. [1]

In 2021, Binns was the recipient of an Australia Council Award for Visual Arts. [10] [13]

Exhibitions

Binns has been a part of many exhibitions spanning over fifty years of art practice, including: [29] [2]

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

Major collections

Her work is represented in private collections as well as in many major collections, including: [29]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joy Hester</span> Australian artist (1920–1960)

Joy St Clair Hester was an Australian artist. She was a member of the Angry Penguins movement and the Heide Circle who played an integral role in the development of Australian Modernism. Hester is best known for her bold and expressive ink drawings. Her work was charged with a heightened awareness of mortality due to the death of her father during her childhood, the threat of war, and her personal experience with Hodgkin's disease. Hester is most well known for the series Face, Sleep, and Love (1948–49) as well as the later works, The Lovers (1956–58).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emily Kame Kngwarreye</span> Aboriginal Australian artist (1910–1996)

Emily Kame Kngwarreye was an Aboriginal Australian artist from the Utopia community in the Northern Territory. After only starting painting as a septuagenarian, Kngwarreye became one of the most prominent and successful artists in the history of Indigenous Australian art. She was a founding member of the Utopia Women's Batik Group and is known for her precise and detailed works.

Lucy Rowland Lippard is an American writer, art critic, activist, and curator. Lippard was among the first writers to argue for the "dematerialization" at work in conceptual art and was an early champion of feminist art. She is the author of 21 books on contemporary art and has received numerous awards and accolades from literary critics and art associations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mirka Mora</span> Australian artist (1928–2018)

Mirka Madeleine Mora was a French-born Australian visual artist and cultural figure who contributed significantly to the development of Australian contemporary art. Her media included drawing, painting, sculpture and mosaic.

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Constance Stokes</span> Australian painter (1906–1991)

Constance Stokes was an Australian modernist painter who worked in Victoria. She trained at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School until 1929, winning a scholarship to continue her study at London's Royal Academy of Arts. Although Stokes painted few works in the 1930s, her paintings and drawings were exhibited from the 1940s onwards. She was one of only two women, and two Victorians, included in a major exhibition of twelve Australian artists that travelled to Canada, the United Kingdom and Italy in the early 1950s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Monash University Museum of Art</span> Museum in Melbourne, Victoria

The Monash University Museum of Art (MUMA), formerly the Monash University Gallery, is a contemporary art museum on Monash University's Caulfield campus on Dandenong Road, Melbourne, Australia.

Ann Foster Newmarch, known as "Annie", was a South Australian painter, printmaker, sculptor and academic, with an international reputation, known for her community service to art, social activism and feminism. She co-founded the Progressive Art Movement and the Women's Art Movement (WAM) in Adelaide, and is especially known for her iconic 1978 colour screenprint piece titled Women Hold Up Half the Sky!.

Micky Allan is an Australian photographer and artist whose work covers paintings, drawings, engraved glass overlays, installations and photography. Allan has become an influential public speaker and has been invited to be a part of many discussions on feminist politics and present a number of speeches held in galleries across Australia about art photography during the 1970s.

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

Patricia Larter (1936–1996) was an Australian artist who worked across mail art, video, photography, performance and painting. She was "one of the leading figures in the movement known as 'international mail art'". She is credited with coining the term "femail art" that was taken up by other mail artists around the world.

Kate Beynon is an Australian contemporary artist based in Melbourne.

Ann Thomson is an Australian painter and sculptor. She is best known for her large-scale public commissions Ebb Tide (1987) for the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre and Australia Felix (1992) for the Seville World Expo. In 1998 she won the Art Gallery of New South Wales' Wynne Prize. Her work is held in national and international collections, including: the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Newcastle Art Gallery, Newcastle, Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, Madrid and Villa Haiss Museum, Germany.

Maree Clarke is an Australian multidisciplinary artist and curator from Victoria, renowned for her work in reviving south-eastern Aboriginal Australian art practices.

Elizabeth Gower is an Australian abstract artist who lives and works in Melbourne. She is best known for her work in paper and mixed-media monochrome and coloured collages, drawn from her sustained practice of collecting urban detritus.

Marie Elizabeth Rita McMahon is an Australian artist, known for her paintings, prints, posters, drawings, and design work. Born in Melbourne, she has worked in various communities of Australian Aboriginal people and as of 2020 works in Sydney. Her work has focused on social, political, and environmental issues. Her posters about Aboriginal rights and Aboriginal life appear in major gallery collections in Australia.

The Women's Art Movement (WAM) was an Australian feminist art movement, founded in Sydney in 1974, Melbourne in 1974, and Adelaide in 1976.

The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), incorporating the Young Artists Gallery, was a private gallery in South Brisbane that existed from 1987 to 1994. Situated in adjacent buildings in South Brisbane, MOCA's address was 164 Melbourne Street, while Young Artists Gallery's entrance was at 23 Manning Street.

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

Sandra Leveson, also known as Sandra Leveson-Meares, is an Australian painter, printmaker, and teacher.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Peckham, Penny (2011). "Vivienne Binns :: biography". Design and Art Australia Online . Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Burke, Janine (1990). Field of vision: a decade of change, women's art in the seventies. Viking. ISBN   9780670835867.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Daniel, Smriti (7 March 2022). "Australian artist Vivienne Binns celebrated as trailblazer of feminist and community art in Melbourne and Sydney exhibitions". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation . Retrieved 10 March 2022.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Binns, Vivienne (9 February 2022). "The radical work of Vivienne Binns" (Audio + text). Radio National (Interview). The Art Show. Interviewed by Browning, Daniel. Australian Broadcasting Corporation . Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  5. 1 2 3 Peckham, Penny (November 2006). "Vivienne Binns: Biography". Vivienne Binns. Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery: 30–41.
  6. "Our history". Australian National University. 22 September 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  7. "It is what it is what it is". Sutton Gallery. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  8. "James C Sourris AM Collection". State Library of Queensland. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  9. "Vivienne Binns OAM digital stories and oral history". State Library of Queensland. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  10. 1 2 "Current: Vivienne Binns: On and through the Surface". Monash University Museum of Art . 8 February 2022. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
  11. Stephens, Andrew (19 January 2022). "'They didn't get it': '60s 'shocker' Vivienne Binns outlasts her scandalised critics". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  12. Binns, Vivienne (2006). Vivienne Binns. Tasmanian Museum & Art Gallery. ISBN   0977533417. OCLC   123942647.
  13. 1 2 3 "Vivienne Binns OAM". Australia Council for the Arts. 30 July 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
  14. "Vivienne Binns: Vag Dens". National Gallery of Australia . 1967. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  15. "Vivienne Binns: Phallic Monument". National Gallery of Australia . 1966. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  16. 1 2 Clark, Deborah (2006). "The Painting of Vivienne Binns". Vivienne Binns. Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery: 8–15.
  17. Delany, Max (2017). "Unfinished Business". Unfinished Business: Perspectives on Art and Feminism. Australian Centre for Contemporary Art: 12–17.
  18. Dean, Christopher (2006). "Vivienne Binns' Language of Abstraction". Vivienne Binns. Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery: 26–29.
  19. Kenyon, Therese. (1995). Under a hot tin roof: art, passion and politics at the Tin Sheds Art Workshop. Power Publications. ISBN   0730589331. OCLC   957035962.
  20. Adams, Jude (1 November 2013). "Looking from with/in: feminist art projects of the 70s". Outskirts: feminisms along the edge . Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  21. Binns, Vivienne (1980). "'Mother's memories, other's memories': A project combining creative expression, memorabilia and oral history". The Oral History Association of Australia Journal (3): 54–61.
  22. 1 2 Kunda, Maria (2006). "The artist, the community, the land". Vivienne Binns: 16–21.
  23. "Vivienne Binns". National Gallery of Australia . 1980. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  24. 1 2 Binns, Vivienne (1980). "'Mother's memories, other's memories': A project combining creative expression, memorabilia and oral history". Oral History Association of Australia Journal, the (3): 54–61.
  25. Binns, Vivienne (1980). "Mothers' Memories, Others' Memories". Lip. 80: 38–45 via ISBN 9780003134285.
  26. Burke, Janine (1984). "Collaboration: Artists working collectively". Anything Goes. Art in Australia 1970-1980. ART & TEXT: 122–131.
  27. "Mothers' Memories Others' Memories: Binns, Vivienne; 1980". eHive. Retrieved 4 October 2019.
  28. Binns, Vivienne, ed. (1991). Community and the arts: History, theory, practice. Leichhardt, N.S.W. : Pluto Press. ISBN   9780949138569.
  29. 1 2 3 "Vivienne Binns Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). Sutton Gallery. 2018.
  30. "M.O.C.A. – Museum of Contemporary Art – feat. Young Artists Gallery". ARI Remix. 25 September 2021. Retrieved 11 March 2022.