Fiona Hall (artist)

Last updated

Fiona Margaret Hall
Born16 November 1953, age 69
Oatley, New South Wales, Australia
NationalityAustralian
Known forPhotography, Sculpture
AwardsOfficer for the Order of Australia (OA) (2013)

Fiona Margaret Hall, AO (born 16 November 1953) is an Australian artistic photographer and sculptor. Hall represented Australia in the 56th International Art Exhibition at the Venice Biennale in 2015. [1] [2] She is known as "one of Australia's most consistently innovative contemporary artists." [3] Many of her works explore the "intersection of environment, politics and exploitation". [4]

Contents

Early life and education

Hall was born to Ruby Payne-Scott, (a pioneer in radiophysics and radio astronomy), [5] and telephone technician William Holman Hall in 1953 [3] and grew up in Oatley, Sydney. Hall's family lived close to Royal National Park and her parents often took her bushwalking on the weekends, encouraging an appreciation of nature that has had a strong influence on her art. She is the younger sister of the mathematical statistician and probabilist Peter Gavin Hall.

Hall attended Oatley West Primary School between 1959 and 1965, and Penshurst High School between 1966 and 1971. [6] Hall's mother recognised her artistic potential and took 14-year-old Hall to see the exhibition Two Decades of American Painting at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, which developed her interest in art. Hall was initially interested in studying architecture, [6] but upon leaving high school she decided to pursue art and studied a Diploma of Painting at the East Sydney Technical College (ESTC) (part of the National Art School). [3] [7] Through participation in the experimental art scene of early 1970s Sydney, where the conventions of modern art were being challenged through the exploration of art forms outside of painting and sculpture, Hall became interested in photography. The ESTC did not offer a major in photography at that time, but her painting teacher John Firth-Smith mentored Hall in photography and she studied it under George Schwarz as a minor for her diploma. [6] While still a student, Hall exhibited photographs as part of the Thoughts and Images: An Exploratory Exhibition of Australian Student Photography group exhibition at the Ewing and George Paton Galleries in 1974. [6] Hall graduated from ESTC in 1975, [3] [7] her graduate exhibition solely featuring photography in lieu of any painting.

Career

1970s

After graduating, Hall lived in London, England between January 1976 and August 1978. [6] In the summer of 1976, Hall spent three months travelling around Europe, during which she visited numerous art institutions and gifts two of her photographs with Jean-Claude Lemagny - the Chief Curator of Photography - at the Bibliothèque nationale. [6] Upon her return to London, Hall began working with Peter Turner, editor of Creative Camera, a British photography Magazine. [6] Through this job Hall was introduced to Fay Goodwin, for whom she was an assistant for the remainder of her time in London. [6] Hall held her first solo exhibition in 1977 at London's Creative Camera Gallery. [7] Hall returned to Australia in 1978 to visit her mother, who was ill. In that same year, she displayed her first Australian solo exhibition at Church Street Photography Centre, Melbourne, [7] then moved to the United States to study for a Masters of Fine Arts (MFA) (Photography) at the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester, New York. [3] [7]

1980s

The 1980s saw Hall establishing a significant artistic profile for herself through involvement in several solo and group exhibitions across Australia. As part of her study, Hall returned to Australia in 1981 to live as the artist-in-residence at the Tasmanian School of Art with the support of a grant from the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council. [6] There, she created The Antipodean Suite with objects such as banana peel and power cords, an early demonstration of a consistent theme in her work, "the transformation of the everyday... into creations of imaginative beauty." [3] [8] Also in 1981, five photographs by Fiona Hall were acquired by the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the first of her works to enter a public collection. [6] Hall graduated with a MFA in 1982, [3] [7] and in the same year participated in the Biennale of Sydney. [7]

In 1983, Hall began lecturing in photo studies at the South Australian School of Art, Adelaide, where she remained until formally resigning in 2002. Between 1984 and 1986, Hall was commissioned to document the new Parliament House of Australia, creating forty-four photographs for the Parliament House Construction Project. [6]

During the 1980s, she created a number of series from everyday objects, including Morality Dolls - The Seven Deadly Sins, cardboard marionettes composed from photocopies of medical engravings; [9] Illustrations to Dante's Divine Comedy, photographs of human figures made from painted and burnished aluminium cans; [9] and Paradisus terrestris, in which Hall "used sardine tins to form exquisite sculptures of botanical specimens which sit on top of the open tin revealing human sexual parts which correspond physically to the attributes of the plant." [9] In 1989, Hall was featured in an SBS television program about Australian photographers, Visual Instincts. [10]

1990s

Between June and October 1991, Hall was Artist in Residence at Philip Institute of Technology in Preston, Victoria. [6] For four months over 1992–1993, the National Gallery of Australia hosted an exhibition of Hall's work titled The Garden of Earthly Delights: The Art of Fiona Hall, [3] which included "early field photographs, a sampling from several series of studio photographs, as well as sculpture and ceramics." [9] [11] In the late 1990s, Hall stopped working in the medium of photography, and the photograph of her father, incorporated into her 1996 large-scale installation Give a Dog a Bone, was the last that she exhibited. [6]

In 1997, Hall took leave without pay from the University of South Australia, and spent the second half of the year at Canberra School of Art as the Australian National University Creative Arts Fellow. While living in Canberra, Hall planned and designed a commissioned work for the sculpture garden of the National Gallery of Australia. Instead of creating a sculpture for the gallery, as initially planned, Hall created Fern Garden, a 20-square-metre permanent installation of landscape art, opened to the public in 1998. [6] In this same year, she spent the first six months in London at the London Visual Arts/Crafts Board studio, then moved back in Australia as the Artist in Residence at Mt Coot-tha Botanic Gardens (where she created Cash Crop, 1998 (series), part of Fieldwork, 1999), and finally at the South Australian Museum in a series of informal residencies. She spent 1999 in Sri Lanka on an Asialink Lunuganga Residency. Her subsequent work explored further the concepts of history, transporting and transplanting. [12]

2000s

In 2000, Hall was commissioned to create a public artwork in the Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney, and designed A Folly for Mrs Macquarie. In 2005, retrospectives of her work were held at the Queensland Art Gallery and the Art Gallery of South Australia. [4] [13] In the same year, Hall was commissioned to create a piece for the new Chancellery Building of the University of South Australia. [14] In 2008–2009, another retrospective, entitled Force Field, was displayed in Sydney, New South Wales, at the Museum of Contemporary Art, and in New Zealand at the City Gallery, Wellington, and the Christchurch Art Gallery. [15]

2010s

In 2015, Hall represented Australia in the 56th International Art Exhibition at the Venice Biennale, with a work entitled Wrong Way Time. [1] [2] [16] This included work created in collaboration with the Tjanpi Desert Weavers, Kuka Irititja (Animals from Another Time) and Tjituru-tjituru (Tragedy, Grief and Sadness), focused on death, extinction and annihilation. [17] The following year, Wrong Way Time was exhibited at the National Gallery of Australia. [18] Hall continues to work with Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery in Sydney, where she has exhibited since 1995.

Recognition and awards

Reviews

Famed art curator Betty Churcher AO said of Hall: "With infinite care, the patience of a scientist and the skill of a jeweller, she fashioned each plant and its corresponding human part. Her purpose is very serious but her sense of humour is always ready to bubble to the surface." [19]

Notable works

Notable exhibitions

Throughout her artistic career, Hall has been involved in over 150 solo and group exhibitions, the most notable of which are listed below.

Group exhibitions

Publications

Related Research Articles

Janet Laurence is an Australian artist, based in Sydney, who works in photography, sculpture, video and installation art. Her work is an expression of her concern about environment and ethics, her "ecological quest" as she produces art that allows the viewer to immerse themselves to strive for a deeper connection with the natural world. Her work has been included in major survey exhibitions, nationally and internationally and is regularly exhibited in Australia, Japan, Germany, Hong Kong and the UK. She has exhibited in galleries and outside in site-specific projects, often involving collaborations with architects, landscape architects and environmental scientists. Her work is held in all major Australian galleries as well as private collections in Australia and overseas.

Derek Kreckler is an Australian visual artist, born in Sydney in 1952. He has worked in a variety of media creating performance, video, sound and photographic art works. His work is concerned with an ongoing examination of the transformation of modes of historical avant-gardism into the present. His "clean, crisp Cibachromes" of refrigerators were exhibited at the 14th Sydney Biennale in 2004.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carol Jerrems</span> Australian photographer (1949–1980)

Carol Jerrems was an Australian photographer/filmmaker whose work emerged just as her medium was beginning to regain the acceptance as an art form that it had in the Pictorial era, and in which she newly synthesizes complicity performed, documentary and autobiographical image-making of the human subject, as exemplified in her Vale Street.

Marion Borgelt is a contemporary Australian artist based in Sydney. Borgelt originally trained as a painter and now her practice encompasses painting, installation, sculpture and mixed media. With a career spanning over 40 years, she has held more than 50 solo exhibitions and participated in over 180 group shows globally. Borgelt's work is currently held in public collections including the National Gallery of Australia and Sydney's Museum of Contemporary Art, and in international museums such as Los Angeles County Museum of Art, USA and New Zealand's Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Olive Cotton</span> Australian photographer (1911–2003)

Olive Cotton was a pioneering Australian modernist photographer of the 1930s and 1940s working in Sydney. Cotton became a national "name" with a retrospective and touring exhibition 50 years later in 1985. A book of her life and work, published by the National Library of Australia, came out in 1995. Cotton captured her childhood friend Max Dupain from the sidelines at photoshoots, e.g. "Fashion shot, Cronulla Sandhills, circa 1937" and made several portraits of him. Dupain was Cotton's first husband.

Contemporary Indigenous Australian art is the modern art work produced by Indigenous Australians, that is, Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islander people. It is generally regarded as beginning in 1971 with a painting movement that started at Papunya, northwest of Alice Springs, Northern Territory, involving Aboriginal artists such as Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri and Kaapa Tjampitjinpa, and facilitated by white Australian teacher and art worker Geoffrey Bardon. The movement spawned widespread interest across rural and remote Aboriginal Australia in creating art, while contemporary Indigenous art of a different nature also emerged in urban centres; together they have become central to Australian art. Indigenous art centres have fostered the emergence of the contemporary art movement, and as of 2010 were estimated to represent over 5000 artists, mostly in Australia's north and west.

Fiona Lowry is an Australian painter who airbrushes pale colours to portray landscapes with people in them. The landscapes are beautiful and ambiguous, provoking the dangerous side of wilderness. Lowry also paints portraits and won the 2014 Archibald Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales with a portrait of Penelope Seidler. She is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, as well as the state galleries of Australia and in private collections.

Robert Rooney (1937–2017) was an artist and art critic from Melbourne, Australia, and a leading figure in Australian Conceptual art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polixeni Papapetrou</span> Australian photographer (1960–2018)

Polixeni Papapetrou was an Australian photographer noted for her themed photo series about people's identities. Photo series she has made include Elvis Presley fans, Marilyn Monroe impersonators, drag queens, wrestlers and bodybuilders and the recreation of photographs by Lewis Carroll, using her daughter as a model.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fiona Pardington</span> New Zealand photographer (born 1961)

Fiona Dorothy Pardington is a New Zealand artist, her principal medium being photography.

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.

Debra Phillips is an Australian artist. Her main practice is photography but she also works across other forms such as sculpture and moving image. She has been an exhibiting artist since the 1980s, is a part of many collections, and has won multiple awards for her work. Phillips resides in Sydney and is a senior lecturer at The College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales.

Kate Breakey is a visual artist known for her large-scale, hand-colored photographs. Since 1981 her work has appeared in more than 75 solo exhibitions and more than 50 group exhibitions in the United States, France, Japan, Australia, China, and New Zealand. Her work is in the permanent collection of many public institutions including the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Wittliff collections at Texas State University, the Austin Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra and the Osaka Museum in Japan. In 2004, she received the Photographer of the Year Award from the Houston Center for Photography.

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.

Brenda L. Croft is an Aboriginal Australian artist, curator, writer, and educator working across contemporary Indigenous and mainstream arts and cultural sectors. Croft was a founding member of the Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Cooperative in 1987.

Miriam Stannage (1939–2016) was an Australian conceptual artist. She was known for her work in painting, printmaking and photography, and participated in many group and solo exhibitions, receiving several awards over her career. Her work was also featured in two Biennales and two major retrospective exhibitions.

Jacky Redgate is an Australian-based artist who works as a sculptor, an installation artist, and photographer. Her work has been recognised in major solo exhibitions surveying her work has been included in many group exhibitions in Australia, Japan and England. Her works are included in major Australian galleries including the National Gallery and key state galleries.

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. 1 2 3 Hurst, Rachel (2015). "Fiona Hall: Wrong Way Time". Architecture Australia. 104 (4): 28–30. ISSN   0003-8725.
  2. 1 2 3 Jasper, Adam (2015). "Fiona Hall: Wrong Way Time". Art & Australia. 52 (2): 37–44. ISSN   0004-301X.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 McCulloch, Alan; McCulloch, Susan; Childs, Emily McCulloch (2006). The New McCulloch's Encyclopedia of Australian Art (4th ed.). Aus Art Editions with The Miegunyah Press. pp. 492–493. ISBN   978-0522853179.
  4. 1 2 3 Lloyd, Tim (10 June 2013). "QUEENS BIRTHDAY HONOURS Honour icing on the cake for artist FIONA HALL AO". The Advertiser. Adelaide: News Limited. p. 11. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  5. Halleck, Rebecca (29 August 2018). "Overlooked No More: Ruby Payne-Scott, Who Explored Space With Radio Waves". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Ewington, Julie (2005). Fiona Hall. Annandale, Australia: Piper Press. pp. 180–5. ISBN   0-9751901-1-3.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Germaine, Max (1991). A Dictionary of Women Artists of Australia. Sydney, Australia: Craftsman House. p. 187. ISBN   978-9768097132.
  8. Turner, Brook (May 2012), "The alchemist: [Artist Fiona Hall recycles materials into unique artworks]", Australian Financial Review Magazine (May 2012): 40–43, ISSN   1328-3774
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Barron, Sonia (19 December 1992). "The imaginative and absorbing Fiona Hall". The Canberra Times . Vol. 67, no. 21, 069. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. p. 25. Retrieved 7 January 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  10. Seidel, Helen. "Visual Instincts". The Canberra Times. Vol. 64, no. 17, 780. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. p. 10. Retrieved 7 January 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  11. Ennis, Helen (23 January 1993). "Glass to hang on the wall like paintings". The Canberra Times . Vol. 67, no. 21, 102. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. p. 24. Retrieved 7 January 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  12. Edwards, Deborah (December 2001 – February 2002). "TRANSPORTED TRANSPLANTED". Art & Australia. 39 (2): 264–267. ISSN   0004-301X.
  13. Davidson, Kate (Spring 2005). "The Art of Fiona Hall". Art & Australia. 43 (1): 14–15. ISSN   0004-301X.
  14. Jenkins, Rebecca (2006). "Major grant for commission at UniSA". UniSANews. Archived from the original on 3 August 2016. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Sanders, Anne (1 October 2008). "Fiona Hall: Force Field". Craft Arts International (74): 93–96. ISSN   1038-846X . Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  16. 1 2 Martin, Colin (October 2015). "56TH VENICE ART BIENNALE". Craft Arts International (95): 80–82. ISSN   1038-846X . Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  17. Biddle, Jennifer (2 October 2019). "Tjanpi Desert Weavers and the Art of Indigenous Survivance". Australian Feminist Studies. 34 (102): 413–436. doi:10.1080/08164649.2019.1697179.
  18. "Fiona Hall: Wrong Way Time". www.nga.gov.au. National Gallery of Australia. 2016. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  19. Churcher, Betty (7 April 2024), Australian Notebooks, Melbourne University, ISBN   9780522864199
  20. 1 2 Barron, Sonia (31 October 1992). "ART A varied use of botanical imagery". The Canberra Times . Vol. 67, no. 21, 020. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. p. 49. Retrieved 7 January 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  21. 1 2 3 Ryan, Kate (2012). "An interview with Fiona Hall - Fly away home". In Ewington, Julie (ed.). Contemporary Australia: Women. South Brisbane, Queensland: Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art. pp. 80–83. ISBN   9781921503382.
  22. Reisberg, Mira (November 2008). "Finding Value(s) for a Currency of Caring: Exploring Children's Picture Books, A Dollar Bill, and Fine Art Sources". Art Education. 61 (6): 44–45. doi: 10.2307/27696307 . JSTOR   27696307.
  23. Kunda, Maria (2007). "An Other Place, Maria Kunda, Salamanca Arts Centre, Hobart, Tasmania, March - April 2007". Circa Art Magazine (120): 84. doi:10.2307/25564816. JSTOR   25564816.
  24. Ennis, Helen (23 October 1995). "Coherent and challenging collection". The Canberra Times. No. 22, 103. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. p. 15. Retrieved 11 January 2019.