Grad Show 2000.indd - School of Art
Transcription
Grad Show 2000.indd - School of Art
2000 2 0 0 0 ANU A N U CCanberra A N B E R R A School S C H O O LofO Art F A R T 2000 G R A D U A T I N G S T U D E N T Graduating Student Exhibition 8 - 1 7 D E C E M B E R 2 0 0 0 Director’s foreword D I R E C T O R ’ S F O R E W O R D Exhibition 2000 is a great accomplishment. It is the culmination of studies by ANU ITA Canberra School of Art candidates for the Bachelor of Arts (Visual) with Honours; Bachelor of Arts (Visual); combined degrees and the two-year Diploma of Art. These courses attract students from the ACT and surrounding region, all Australian states and overseas. They offer in-depth study in a wide range of visual arts and crafts disciplines, in well-equipped purpose-built Workshops. Many students have taken advantage of opportunities for overseas exchange, off campus study, Field Studies and Applied Design. All have benefited from quality teaching by experienced staff who are practising professionals, and artists who have been part of the School’s International Visiting Artist program. December is an exciting time of year and the moment when our candidates celebrate their achievements. Preparation and fundraising is developed over the whole academic year in order to successfully produce this full-colour catalogue and to develop the exhibition. Jill Peck, Undergraduate and Honours Convenor, academic staff and technical officers from all Workshops have worked in cooperation with the CSA Gallery to make 2000 a success. The School thanks all participating students and acknowledges those who were active members on the catalogue fundraising and development 2 2000 2 0 0 0 committee. We thank everyone who has volunteered their time and who has provided support and encouragement. Patrons of our Emerging Artists Support Scheme (EASS) continue to support our graduating students and we thank them for their dedication and enthusiastic support as participants of this important scheme. 2000 is a large-scale school-wide exhibition. In the CSA Gallery visitors can see a single work by each student produced in their final year of study. Further installations of their work are on view to the public in Workshop spaces throughout the School. Congratulations to our graduates on their outstanding achievements. I commend their work to audiences present and future. All at CSA wish them successful and productive careers. Graduates are cordially invited to remain an active part of the ANU Canberra School of Art community as valued alumni. 3 Emerging Artists Support Scheme E M E R G I N G A R T I S T S S U P P O R T S C H E M E The ANU Canberra School of Art’s successful Emerging Artists Support Scheme (EASS) has been operating for twelve years. Many of our patrons such as Mallesons Stephen Jaques, the Australian National University and Mitchell Giurgola and Thorp have supported the CSA Graduates throughout this period. We are pleased to welcome new and continuing patrons to the 2000 EASS program. Through this scheme patrons can acquire artwork for their own collection or borrow through the EASS Loan Scheme. Since 1990 EASS has also sponsored awards, scholarships, prizes and commissions. Such generous sponsorship from local business and arts organisations represents assistance for emerging artists at a time when it is most valuable, at the commencement of their independent studio practice. The scheme also plays a significant role in encouraging these young practitioners to remain in the region. The School and its graduates greatly appreciate this support from the ACT community. Of particular value are the residencies and exhibition opportunities offered by Megalo Access Arts Inc., PhotoAccess, Strathnairn Arts Association, ANCA Inc., Canberra Contemporary Art Space, Gorman House Arts Centre, Craft ACT, Leichhardt Street Studios and Nelligen Gallery. New work by 2000 EASS Residency Award holders was celebrated in 168 Hours, an exhibition at ANCA Gallery in November. Over twelve years the CSA Emerging Artists Support Scheme has provided much needed support for artists as they graduate, establish an independent practice, and contribute to the lively and growing visual arts community from which we all benefit. The Canberra School of Art thanks all EASS Patrons and this years EASS Coordinator, Fiona Sivyer. 4 2000 Patrons 2 0 0 0 P A T R O N S Peter and Lena Karmel Anniversary Award Westende Travelling Scholarships Centre for Resources and Environmental Studies, ANU Mitchell Giurgola and Thorp Architects MAAS Thomas Foundation Research Centre for Pacific and Asian Studies, ANU EASS Acquisitive and Loan Collection Patrons Mallesons Stephen Jaques (Founding Patron) ANU Art Collection ANU Institute of the Arts Collection ANU Public Artworks Committee ACT Chief Ministers Department Chamberlain Law Firm KPMG, Canberra Network Economics The Australian Animal Health Council, ACT The Australian Design Institute Vocational Educational and Training Authority Residency & Exhibition Award Patrons Canberra Contemporary Art Space Craft ACT: Craft and Design Gorman House Arts Centre Leichhardt Street Studios Megalo Access Arts Inc. Nelligen Gallery, NSW PhotoAccess Inc. Strathnairn Arts Association Subscription & Materials Award Patrons Art Monthly Australia Ceramics Art & Perception Ceramics Technical Clayworks Object Magazine Walker Ceramics 5 Index of Artists 2000 I N D E X 6 O F A R T I S T S 2 0 0 0 Alcock, Imogen 92 Campbell, Katharine 64 Frankcombe, Phillip 37 Andrews, Justin 34 Camphin, Danielle 49 Gabellone, Raimo Alberto 69 Aveling, Ronald 58 Carew, Rachel 65 Galiazzo, Cecile 70 Bailey, Stuart 59 Chant, Daniel 19 Giddings, Toby 51 Baldwin, Andrew 18 Cinmayii 66 Goldie, Dimity 11 Benjamin-Black, Nicolette 35 Cullen, Stephen 67 Gray, Sandy 38 Bogusz, Jacqueline 82 D’Ambrosio, Anthony 26 Gyun Lee, Eun 50 Bonin, Thomas 60 Day, Sarah 94 Hall, Lizzie 71 Boscheinen, Michele 93 Desplace, Sonia 68 Harper, Nicholas 101 Broad, Jo 61 Douglas, Mel 20 Heckendorf, Jenni 52 Brown, Margaret 10 Dutta, Rita 27 Herhily, Kate 21 Brown, Renee 47 Dwyer, Debon 83 Hibbitt, Heather 12 Buchanan, Alistair 48 Farrell, Kirsten 36 Jamieson, Paul 85 Cain, Penny 62 Fiveash, Alix 84 Johnson, Michael 102 Cameron, Craig 63 Fleury, Steven 28 Johnston, Kim 103 Jordan, Kelly 86 Muspratt, Jael 97 Smith, Oliver 30 Keevers, Lesley 39 Newton, Geoff 41 Smith, Shannon 56 Kidd, Madeline 40 Pelling, Elspeth 75 Sourgnes, Claire 77 Lee, Cinnamon 29 Penttinen, Anu 23 Spellman, Tim 90 Legge, Bill 104 Phemister, James 13 Strachan, Heidi 16 Luke, Jason 87 Phillips, Megan 105 Timpson, Peter 99 Manwaring, Leah 95 Pinder, Louise 89 Truswell, Elizabeth 44 Marr, Zoe 72 Pritchard, Simeon 76 Tuite, Elizabeth 78 McHugh, Sarah 22 Prout, Deanne 98 Uribe, Veronica 45 McMahon, Ann 96 Robinson, Calen 55 Volich, Peter 79 Miller, Laetita 73 Saab, Nana 14 Walker, Juliet 31 Minopetros, Helen 53 Sanderson, Lyn 15 Wallenius, Marco 80 Mirams, Bronwyn 88 Schneider, Annette 42 Waring-Dallwitz, Jack 32 Montebello, Rose 74 Skrzypczak, Nöel 43 Webster, Carrie 24 Muller, Craig 54 Smith, Gordon 106 7 Ceramics Margaret Brown Dimity Goldie Heather Hibbitt Nana Saab Lyn Sanderson Heidi Strachan James Phemister Glass Andrew Baldwin Daniel Chant Mel Douglas Kate Herhily Sarah McHugh Anu Penttinen Carrie Webster Gold & Silver Anthony D’Ambrosio Rita Dutta Steven Fleury Cinnamon Lee Oliver Smith Juliet Walker Jack Waring-Dallwitz 8 Painting Justin Andrews Nicolette BenjaminBlack Kirsten Farrell Phillip Frankcombe Sandy Gray Lesley Keevers Madeline Kidd Geoff Newton Annette Schneider Nöel Skrzypczak Elizabeth Truswell Veronica Uribe Photomedia Renee Brown Alistair Buchanan Danielle Camphin Eun Gyun Lee Toby Giddings Jenni Heckendorf Helen Minopetros Craig Muller Calen Robinson Shannon Smith Printmedia Sculpture Jacqueline Bogusz & Drawing Debon Dwyer Ronald Aveling Stuart Bailey Thomas Bonin Jo Broad Penny Cain Craig Cameron Katharine Campbell Rachel Carew Cinmayii Stephen Cullen Sonia Desplace Raimo AlbertoGabellone Cecile Galiazzo Lizzie Hall Zoe Z Marr Laetita Miller Rose Montebello Elspeth Pelling Simeon Pritchard Claire Sourgnes Liz Tuite Peter Volich Marco Wallenius Alix Fiveash Paul Jamieson Kelly Jordan Jason Luke Bronwyn Mirams Louise Pinder Tim Spellman Textiles Imogen Alcock Michele Boscheinen Sarah Day Leah Manwaring Ann McMahon Jael Muspratt Deanne Prout Peter Timpson Wood Nicholas Harper Michael Johnson Kim Johnston Bill Legge Megan Phillips Gordon Smith 2000 Ceramics M A R G A R Brown E T B R O W N Margaret D I M I T Goldie Y G O L D I E Dimity H E A T H EHibbitt R H I B B I T T Heather N A N ASaab S A A B Nana L Y N Sanderson S A N D E R S O N Lyn H E I D Strachan I S T R A C H A N Heidi J A M E SPhemister P H E M I S T E R James 9 Margaret Brown M A R G A R E T B R O W N D I P L O M A Bowl 2000 laminated porcelain 15.0 x 15.0 x 10.0 cm 10 O F A R T Allowing time for a second look you will be rewarded. Dimity Goldie D I M I T Y Coastal Series 2000 wheel-thrown stoneware, tin glaze 15.0 x 70.0 x 70.0 cm G O L D I E B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H I find clay an appropriate choice to express the coastal qualities that have been etched into my consciousness over time. Movement and flow; asymmetry; balance and natural beauty; erosion and decay. I use glazes and other surface textures that work well autonomously as well as reminding me of the sights and feelings of walking along the beach. 11 Heather Hibbitt H E A T H E R Passion 2000 wood-fired stoneware 30.0 x 25.0 x 25.0 cm 12 H I B B I T T H O N O U R S The energy of fire, dancing with forms made of clay, gives birth to the warmth that is wood-fired ceramics. This is the passion that inspires me. James Phemister J A M E S Morning (detail) 2000 low fired stoneware 30.0 x 45.0 x 20.0 cm P H E M I S T E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H “Tempus ad lucem ducit veritatum” Time brings truth to light 13 Nana Saab N A N A Winter Flowers 2000 slip-cast porcelain 12.0 x 16.0 x 10.0 cm 14 S A A B B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Nature is a magic garden where everything is beautiful and related. From birth to death, life flows in a timeless cycle. Life was, still, and always will be, a mystery. Life, like flowers, decadent and sensual, strong and fragile; they bloom and they fade. Lyn Sanderson L Y N S A N D E R S O N Vessel 2000 stoneware 17.0 x 17.0 x 10.0 cm D I P L O M A O F A R T The inspiration for my work is the simple vessel form its quiet flowing lines, the surface sensual to touch, an understated containment. 15 Heidi Strachan H E I D I S T R A C H A N My work is about capturing moments in time by recording my expressions, moods and thoughts that occur during the making process. This is realised in the form of suggestive, gestural mark-making and personal motifs on porcelain objects and lithographs. Three Vessels 2000 slab-built/thrown porcelain (l - r) 15.0 x 6.0 x 6.0 cm 45.0 x 10.0 x 10.0 cm 29.0 x 6.0 x 6.0 cm 16 D I P L O M A O F A R T 2000 Glass A N D R E Baldwin W B A L D W I N Andrew D A N I E Chant L C H A N T Daniel M E L Douglas D O U G L A S Mel K A T EHerhily H E R H I L Y Kate S A R A McHugh H M C H U G H Sarah A N U Penttinen P E N T T I N E N Anu C A R R I Webster E W E B S T E R Carrie 17 Andrew Baldwin A N D R E W Spine 2000 blown glass, wheel cut 5.0 x 66.0 x 39.0 cm 18 B A L D W I N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Daniel Chant D A N I E L C H A N T B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Dreams and the subconscious are the subject of my work. I use marks and symbols creating ‘fields’, as an abstract expression of the dream state. Another way of describing these ‘fields’ is as maps – the marks and symbols mapping out layers of meaning, levels of consciousness. Untitled 2000 enamel on glass 100.0 x 41.5 cm 19 Mel Douglas M E L D O U G L A S Building surfaces through the use of repetitious line, each line and vessel slightly differs from the next. Making it a necessity to look closely at surfaces, outlines and textures, searching for changes in colour, shape and pattern. Refining, simplifying, segmenting and translating these differences into blown vessels with engraved graphics. Nexus 2000 blown and engraved glass (l -r) 19.0 x 37.0 x 37.0 cm, 17.0 x 39.0 x 39.0 cm, 15.0 x 37.0 x 37.0 cm 20 B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Kate Herhily K A T E Untitled 2000 glass mosaic technique 2@ 4.0 x 45.0 x 18.0 cm H E R H I L Y B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) In my work, as in life I try to create a kind of order, balance to the patterns of everyday. Using black, white and clear glass, I create contrasting relationships between space and form, pattern and colour. My work is about opposites. Similarities within differences. Differences within similarities. 21 Sarah McHugh S A R A H Touched (I) 2000 lost wax cast glass 10.0 x 53.0 x 20.0 cm 22 M C H U G H B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H I look around me and everywhere I see human marks upon the land. A land beautiful but touched. Anu Penttinen A N U P E N T T I N E N Tune in tune out (front) 2000 handblown, wheel cut, engraved glass 31.0 x 26.0 x 13.5 cm Tune in tune out (back) 2000 handblown, wheel cut, engraved glass 31.0 x 26.0 x 13.5 cm B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H With my glasswork I respond to the act of listening to music, visualising the sounds that I can not only hear but feel – deep, electronic sounds rushing through the speakers. Rhythm, the essence of music, comes together in the simplicity of line and the ivory shapes on the black background. In the forms I distil the essential Scandinavian value of aesthetics, and couple this with the influence from the design in the 1950’s and 1960’s. 23 Carrie Webster C A R R I E Plump 2000 9.0 x 9.0 x 9.0 cm blown, engraved, sandblasted, acid etched glass Photo: Col Ellis 24 W E B S T E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) 2000 Gold & Silver A N T H O ND’Ambrosio Y D ’ A M B R O S I Anthony R I T ADutta D U T T A Rita S T E V EFleury N F L E U R Y Steven C I N N A M OLee N L E E Cinnamon O L I V ESmith R S M I T H Oliver J U L I EWalker T W A L K E R Juliet J A C KWaring-Dallwitz W A R I N G - D A L L W Jack O I T Z 25 Anthony D’Ambrosio A N T H O N Y Spice Jars 1999 anodised aluminium 4@ 8.0 x 8.0 x 14.0 cm Photo: Carmel D’Ambrosio 26 D ’ A M B R O S I O D I P L O M A O F A R T Rita Dutta R I T A D U T T A Collar (detail) 2000 copper, gilding metal, brass 20.0 x 20.0 x 1.0 cm Photo: Johannes Kuhnen D I P L O M A O F A R T Collar based on inhibitor bands as worn by superheroes designed to restrain special powers, they result in allowing their wearers to experience the strength and the vulnerability of being human. 27 Steven Fleury S T E V E N Lamps 2000 anodised aluminium, perspex, slumped window glass 15.0 x 9.0 x 9.0 cm 38.0 x 9.0 x 13.0 cm 11.0 x 7.0 x 27.0 cm Photo: Johannes Kuhnen 28 F L E U R Y B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Cinnamon Lee C I N N A M O N L E E B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Palmlight 2000 delrin, perspex, aluminium 5.0 x 9.0 x 9.0 cm Photo: Johannes Kuhnen 29 Oliver Smith O L I V E R Pneumatic Vessel 2000 anodised aluminium, rubber, stainless steel 20.0 x 8.0 x 5.0 cm Photo: Johannes Kuhnen 30 S M I T H B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Juliet Walker J U L I E T W A L K E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Trumpet in D 2000 brass, anodised aluminium, delrin 15.0 x 15.0 x 90.0 cm Photo: Johannes Kuhnen 31 Jack Waring-Dallwitz J A C K Cutlery 2000 stainless steel 20.0 x 3.0 x 1.3 cm Photo: Johannes Kuhnen 32 W A R I N G - D A L L W I T Z B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H 2000 Painting J U S T IAndrews N A N D R E W S Justin N I C O L E Benjamin-Black T T E B E N J A M I N Nicolette K I R S T EFarrell N F A R R E L L Kirsten P H I L L Frankcombe I P F R A N K C O M B E Phillip S A N D Gray Y G R A Y Sandy L E S L E Keevers Y K E E V E R S Lesley M A D E L I N E K I D D Madeline Kidd G E O F Newton F N E W T O N Geoff A N N E T Schneider T E S C H N E I D E R Annette N Ö E LSkrzypczak S K R Z Y P C Z A K Nöel E L I Z A B ETruswell T H T R U S W E L L Elizabeth V E R O N I Uribe C A U R I B E Veronica - B L A C K Justin Andrews J U S T I N My work uses architectural diagrams to question the properties of 3D space. Complex 2000 graphite on paper 157.0 x 508.0 cm (overall) 34 A N D R E W S B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Nicolette Benjamin-Black N I C O L E T T E B E N J A M I N - B L A C K B A C H E L O R Seeker of Smooth Things 2000 oil on canvas 70.0 x 70.0 cm O F an aqueous cluster surface-paint-spaces macro perhaps micro the beginning of life perhaps the end no solid glyph seeking smooth things A R T S ( V I S U A L ) 35 Kirsten Farrell K I R S T E N B A C H E L O R B A C H E L O R Untitled 2000 fluorescent lights, acrylic, plastic ice cube trays, plywood 78.0 x 82.0 x 11.0 cm F A R R E L L O F O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H H O N O U R S A S I A N S T U D I E S ( J A P A N E S E ) W I T H “The first merit of painting is that it be a feast for the eyes.” Eugene Delacroix Robert Kudielka (ed), The Eye’s Mind: Bridget Riley: Collected Writings 1965 – 1999, Thames and Hudson London 1999 “The main thing wrong with painting is that it is a rectangular plane placed flat against a wall.” Donald Judd Reto Boller, Baden, Lars Muller 1998 Produced by Arts Council of Switzerland Pro Helvetia p7 36 Phillip Frankcombe P H I L L I P F R A N K C O M B E B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H My paintings are an intermingling of cultural motifs and symbols. A universal interlacing of the Divine Mother with Her creation, colour, beauty and form. The aim is for a quiet and serene view that displays Her power, Her power of love. Mata Rhythm 2000 acrylic on board 168.0 x 100.0 cm Photo: Nicolette Black 37 Sandy Gray S A N D Y G R A Y Early this year I discovered a lost city within the bounds of one of the most carefully planned cities on earth. Intrigued by this urban fringe of permanent caravan park residency I have endeavoured to reveal its fragile and fragmentary nature from within. Kitchen 2000 acrylic on canvas 120.0 x 90.0 cm Photo: Nicolette Black 38 B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Lesley Keevers L E S L E Y K E E V E R S B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Page sponsored by: sponsors: Leon and Sheila Sleep Beasec Enterprises Pty Ltd Buvelot Enterprises Bertram Ellis Real Estate Torso 3 2000 bees wax, oil on canvas 151.0 x 186.0 cm Photo: Simon Ramsey I weave with the palette knife, a layer of colour and beeswax – emulating nature to express my creative natural thirst for discovery. The colours, textures and patterns found in the trunks of the eucalypts stress the elemental force of nature. 39 Madeline Kidd M A D E L I N E Untitled 2000 oil on board 122.0 x 150.0 cm 40 K I D D B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) “Travellers have told me things, and I've read what I could and often, in the harsh, bleak spring we have here I dream of the sea and the flowers over there. And what I picture makes me blind to everything around me.” Albert Camus, Malentendu Act II from Caligula and Three Other Plays, Vintage Books, New York 1958 Geoff Newton G E O F F N E W T O N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) The eclecticism of the Secret Chiefs Trio's music provided my work with a basis to explore a large dynamic range of material and methodological responses. In my pictures I have attempted to interpret connections between painting and music, and to represent an experience which resembles my own response to sound. Zulkifar 2000 acrylic on linen 3 panels wall panels 200.0 x 200.0 cm (overall) floor panel 170.0 x 80.0 cm Photo: Peter Volich 41 Annette Schneider A N N E T T E I have attempted to convey my anthropomorphic attitude through this work. Using a direct political message and intermingling elements of high and low culture, I hope to take the viewer by a path of sensual gratification, to a sense of the loneliness which comes with the loss of The Holiday is Over 2000 glazed ceramic tiles 167.3 x 229.5 cm Photo: Nicolette Black 42 S C H N E I D E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Nöel Skrzypczak N Ö E L Flight (detail) 2000 oil and acrylic on canvas 240.0 x 110.0 cm S K R Z Y P C Z A K B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H The future is a vast, dark unknown that can be glimpsed only sometimes through dreams. In my dreams I have the power to fly - in exuberance or to escape terror. When I wake up I am earthbound again but the memory of flight remains and I feel optimistic about the future. 43 Elizabeth Truswell E L I Z A B E T H T R U S W E L L B A C H E L O R Winterwood 2000 oil on board 120.0 x 40.0 cm 44 O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H My art is the outcome of a life in earth science ... a deeply felt sense that change is a fundamental part of the natural world. Veronica Uribe V E R O N I C A A calendar, a paragraph (detail) 2000 acrylic on board 31@30.0 x 40.0 cm U R I B E B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) The process of changing comes with realising that we must make something better out of the new. These are footsteps of my history, of Colombia’s history, of my permanent rethinking of the narratives I left behind and how I can make them part of my today. 45 2000 Photomedia Renee R E N E EBrown B R O W N Alistair A L I S T ABuchanan I R B U C H N A N A Danielle D A N I E L Camphin L E C A M P H I N Eun E U N Gyun G Y U Lee N L E E Toby T O B YGiddings G I D D I N G S Jenni J E N N Heckendorf I H E C K E N D O R F Helen Minopetros H E L E N M I N O P E T R O S Craig Muller C R A I G M U L L E R Calen Robinson C A L E N R O B I N S O N Shannon S H A N N OSmith N S M I T H N Renee Brown R E N E E B R O W N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H “We continue to shape our personality all our life. If we knew ourselves perfectly, we should die.” Albert Camus, Notebook 1935-1942 from the entry for May 1937 “You look beautiful”, he said. December 13th 1998, Berlin 2000 colour negative print 50.8 x 60.9 cms 47 Alistair Buchanan A L I S T A I R That I remain unable to fathom the depths of memory is no longer a source of confusion. I simply recognise its presence in the range of my expressions, its rythmic influence, and have faith that it tempers me. Still shared memory 2000 interactive installation dimensions variable 48 B U C H N A N A N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Danielle Camphin D A N I E L L E C A M P H I N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Within our society, identity seems to be based upon aesthetic representations of the self, constructing the way in which we view our bodies along with the bodies of others. Through manipulating the aesthetic identities of my subjects, focusing on fashion as culture, and the distortion and fragmentation of my images, I am exploring the relationship between the image and the reality of identity. My work aims to emphasise the fragility of identity, and is a response to the eclectic generation to which I belong. I want the images to emphasise the location and dislocation experienced by individuals within such a society. Masquerade 2000 Type-C print 50.8 x 40.6 cm 49 Eun Gyun Lee E U N G Y U N Bridal Suite 2000 digital print on clear film 76.2 x 114.3 cm 50 L E E B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H The work entitled Bridal Suite explores my own cultural subjectivity as a Korean woman living in Australia and married to an Australian man in Korea. The work is a direct response to my experience of Korean peoples’ attitudes towards me being in public with my husband in Korea and also my feelings of being in Australia. Toby Giddings T O B Y G I D D I N G S B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Twilight, dusk and dawn historically are powerfully connected with mythology, mysticism and narrative and this concept was a key idea in the genesis of these large format photographs. While elevating the unique character of each memorial, I wanted to evoke at once the collective memory surrounding war memorials and the strange duality in war narratives æ the religious/heroic mystique and horrific reality. Vietnam Forces War Memorial, Anzac Parade, ACT 1999 Ilfochrome photographic print 50.8 x 40.6 cm 51 Jenni Heckendorf J E N N I H E C K E N D O R F The Naked Truth 2000 silver gelatin print 18.0 x 25.0 cm In collaboration with Leanne Proberts D I P L O M A O F A R T One in about four hundred have some form of cerebral palsy. Through my studies I have developed a more positive body image despite my awkward movement and slurred speech. In these photographs I explode into a colourful, mature woman. (However, it is not my intention to offend other disabled people with my pictures.) 52 Helen Minopetros H E L E N M I N O P E T R O S Portraits (clockwise from top left) 2000 Jim Nomarhas George Diamond George Serras Neofitos gelatin silver photographs 4 @ 40.0 x 50.0 cm B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) I am exploring the concept of XENITTA, or difference. I wanted to discover how other Greek/Australians felt about their cross-cultural background. This helps me to define my own place in Australian society. Photography is my way of making connections between my two backgrounds. An added dimension, digital manipulation, has allowed creative control over some images. 53 Craig Muller C R A I G M U L L E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H one hundred men Images of metal workers Blue-collar men are being marginalised. The protestant values system that underpins this culture is at odds with contemporary society. Issues of sexuality, gender, race and structural unemployment have left many of these men struggling for a sense of social relevance. The challenge for this body of work is to visually navigate these issues to allow a connection between the viewer and the face of Australian blue-collar men. one hundred men 1999-2000 Type-C prints 100 @ 40.6 x 50.8 cm 54 BHP Rod And Bar BERCO Engineering Baxter Engineering UTS Faculty of Fitting and Machining Sykes Pumps Australia Calen Robinson C A L E N R O B I N S O N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Glory: n. praise; blessing of heaven; renown; magnificence. v. rejoice; exult. Hole: n. hollow place; cavity; opening; burrow; fault; gap. Private pleasures in public places (detail of installation) 2000 Type-C prints 60.0 x 60.0 cm The structured nature of our society can sometimes lead to the need for specific structures in architecture – spaces that have been designed specifically for anonymous physical encounters. Absence of the body intimates the remnants of previous, and essence of future: encounters. 55 Shannon Smith S H A N N O N frame by frame: A response to stoning as a form of execution and the torture against women 2000 inkjet prints 27.5 x 42.5 cm 27.5 x 116.0 cm 27.5 x 80.5 cm 56 S M I T H B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) CROSS-INSTITUTIONAL STUDENT SYDNEY COLLEGE OF THE ARTS This work is based on a documentary called “Executions”. It looks at the methods of execution used by different cultures. It was the nature of stoning that insulted my mind the most. I watched this scene frame by frame. I wanted those who believe in a modern world to watch it too. This work was proudly sponsored by Kodak 2000 Printmedia & Drawing R O N A L D Aveling A V E L I N G C E C I L E Galiazzo G A L I A Z Z O Cecile Ronald S T U A R TBailey B A I L E Y LLizzie I Z Z I E Hall H A L L Stuart T H O M A S Bonin B O N I N ZZoe O E Z Z Marr M A R R Thomas J O Broad B R O A D LLaetita A E T I T AMiller M I L L E R Jo P E N N Y Cain C A I N RRose O S E Montebello M O N T E B E L L O Penny C R A I G Cameron C A M E R O N EElspeth L S P E T H Pelling P E L L I N G Craig K A T H A R I N ECampbell C A M P B E L L SSimeon I M E O N Pritchard Katharine R A C H E L Carew C A R E W PClaire R I T C H Sourgnes A R D Rachel C I N M A Y I I C L A Tuite I R E S O U R G N E S Liz Cinmayii S T E P H E N Cullen C U L L E N LPeter I Z T UVolich I T E Stephen S O N I A Desplace D E S P L A C E PMarco E T E R VWallenius O L I C H Sonia R A I M O Alberto A L B E R T OGabellone G A B E L L O N E Raimo Ronald Aveling R O N A L D Untitled 2000 digital image 55.0 x 27.0 cm A V E L I N G B A C H E L O R O F A R T S “Then great expanses cast their anchor and range themselves in the depth of my closed eye” Andre Breton, L’air de l’eau, 1934 58 ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Stuart Bailey S T U A R T Untitled 2000 screenprint and collage on plywood 92.0 x 160.0 cm B A I L E Y B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Our society is structured so that the consumption of goods in our leisure time is the reward for working a nine-to-five job. I am interested in exploring the confusion, frustration, apathy and disillusionment that is a result of the failure of this system to provide a meaningful way of life. 59 Thomas Bonin T H O M A S Self portrait #1 2000 wood cut 78.5 x 57.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 60 B O N I N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Jo Broad J O B R O A D B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H The walls of a house carry out the same function that we experience in the skins of our own bodies.1 Being between different homes involves the interweaving of real and imagined spaces. Home becomes an ambivalent site of being and longing, of memory and the everyday, that cuts across different cultural and historical sites.2 1 Donatella Mazzoleni ‘The city and the imaginary’ New Formations, vol.12, 1990 p.96 Mary Zournazi 2 ‘Historical Fictions,Uncanny Homes’ After the revolution, On Kristeva John Lechte and Mary Zournazi (eds.) Artspace 1998 Evidence 2000 rubber latex 200.0 x 80.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 61 Penny Cain P E N N Y Alternative Evolutions 2000 digital video still dimensions variable 62 C A I N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Human nature and contemporary existence are two interlocking pieces of the one puzzle. I want to explore the spaces where the pieces do not quite meet. Craig Cameron C R A I G Picture #1 2000 mixed media 75.0 x 130.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith C A M E R O N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Religious Art 63 Katharine Campbell K A T H A R I N E C A M P B E L L B A C H E L O R In this series the works speak of tension and compression. Of locating yourself in both a physical and psychological space. Untitled 2000 mixed media 120.0 x 90.0 cm 64 O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Rachel Carew R A C H E L C A R E W B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H I am interested in the paradox of the family home. Family structures - between relations and the structure that they live within both architectural and social. The domestic, interior space is a metaphor for a psychological space. I also look at the nature of family relationships within that space. The work talks about family structures; the home as a structure in itself blocking, obstructing, being the barrier against the child. Hindering or harbouring? The child is home less and this is the paradox of the family home I am dealing with. Duty of Care 2000 etching 120.0 x 80.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 65 Cinmayii C I N M A Y I I Vespers 2000 (from a series of 200 drawings) ink drawing 31.0 cm x 22.5 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 66 B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) ‘art is a place where anything is possible’ ~ this work exposes the mark as conversant form, a space to exchange language and negotiate meaning ~ Stephen Cullen S T E P H E N C U L L E N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H I try to put my image into expressions that I don’t understand very well. Plasticine Portraits 2000 digital images dimensions variable 67 Sonia Desplace S O N I A Night States (detail) 2000 acrylic on oilsketch paper 65.0 x 94.0 cm 68 D E S P L A C E B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Raimo Alberto Gabellone R A I M O Light Study 2000 glass, light, paper, wood dimensions variable A L B E R T O B A C H E L O R O F G A B E L L O N E A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H The work I have created while at the Canberra School of Art is an investigation of light, lightness and forces that are part of our everyday lives. This investigation has taken form in many different media from paper to light. 69 Cecile Galiazzo C E C I L E G A L I A Z Z O Relation-Ships (detail) 2000 handmade paper and cotton thread dimensions variable Photo: Kim Hopper 70 B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) There’s a hole in the river where my memory lies … Lizzie Hall L I Z Z I E H A L L B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H “… the thanksgiving grace of the trait suggests that at the origin of the graphein there is a debt or gift rather than representational fidelity. More precisely, the fidelity of faith matters more than the representation, whose movement this fidelity commands and thus precedes.” Jacques Derrida, ‘Memoirs of the Blind’, University of Chicago Press, USA, 1993, p30 monster watching television 2000 woodcut, acetate 99.0 x 63.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 71 Zoe Z Marr Z O E Z Lining: cell 19 2000 laser print on transparency 14.0 x 20.0 x 4.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith M A R R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) “While he thought to quench his thirst, another grew in him, and as he drank, he was enchanted by the beautiful reflection that he saw ... He did not know what he was looking at, but was fired by the sight, and excited by the very illusion that deceived his eyes.” The Metamorphoses of Ovid, Book III: Narcissus by the Pool 72 Laetita Miller L A E T I T A M I L L E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Ephemeral waste transformed through presentation and reconstruction of objects. Transit landscape, Mugga Way 2000 ink drawn with plastic bottle lid on handmade paper 55.0 x 55.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 73 Rose Montebello R O S E M O N T E B E L L O Orange flowers over hidden cove 2000 detail from TV/Dream image series 1 25 digital prints 166.0 x 242.0 cm (overall) B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Nostalgia has its roots in the Greek word nostos meaning ‘return home’ and algos meaning ‘pain’ emphasising the painful absence from home rather than a definite return to it. Nostalgia, then, signifies a memory of the past while acknowledging a potentially unbridgeable distance from that memory. Marente Bloemheuvel (ed.) Kidnapping, Douglas Gordan, Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, Netherlands 1998, p36 74 Elspeth Pelling E L S P E T H Covenant 2000 lithograph 29.0 x 48.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith P E L L I N G B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Images of thread and woven fabric are metaphors for life narratives. For each life, a thread: straightforward or tangled, broken or continuous, each thread is inevitably woven into the fabric. 75 Simeon Pritchard S I M E O N For Those Who Came in Late 2000 silkscreen on paper 200.0 x 200.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 76 P R I T C H A R D B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) DON’T POINT AT THE CREATURE Claire Sourgnes C L A I R E S O U R G N E S B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) “Paper, like the brush and the ink, is both the obstacle to getting there as well as the way there …” Shiryu Morita in “Washi, The World of Japanese Paper” by Sukey Hughes, Tokyo, 1978 Untitled 2000 handmade paper Japanese Kozo and cotton rag 15.0 x 29.0 cm 77 Liz Tuite L I Z T U I T E Untitled (detail 1 of 9) 2000 Epsom bubble jet print 32.0 x 93.0 cm 78 B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Peter Volich P E T E R Rick 2000 video still Rick (detail) 2000 installation dimensions variable V O L I C H B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H When I was little boy I used to imagine my life as something that was a never-ending film script. Every scenario seemed to mirror that of something similar to television or cinema. I would be constantly constructing narratives and characters that melded into one big projection that I would imagine being played at a drive-in theatre. This concept seemed common place to me at the time and I was sure that in all drive-in theatres over the world there was a constant account, story, plot, of someone else’s life being shown. 79 Marco Wallenius M A R C O Network (detail) 2000 etching, aquatint 297.0 x 120.0 cm Photo: Georgina Smith 80 W A L L E N I U S B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H This work represents my interest in how we interpret the world and how this in turn shapes our interaction with the spaces around us. In particular, how memories of spaces collected over time are grouped into signs and how these signs inform our reactions to new spaces we encounter. 2000 Sculpture Jacqueline J A C Q U E L IBogusz N E B O G U Debon D E B O NDwyer D W Y E R Alix Fiveash A L I X F I V E A S H Paul P A U LJamieson J A M I E S O N Kelly K E L L Jordan Y J O R D A N Jason J A S O Luke N L U K E Bronwyn B R O N W Y Mirams N M I R A M S Louise L O U I S Pinder E P I N D E R Tim T I M Spellman S P E L L M A N S Z 81 Jacqueline Bogusz J A C Q U E L I N E B O G U S Z B A C H E L O R Untitled 2000 Type-C print 29.7 x 21.0 cm 82 O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Debon Dwyer D E B O N D W Y E R Biomeal 21st Century (detail) 2000 LED print 50.0 x 74.96 cm B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H … Suddenly, I wondered if something had gone horribly wrong with the novel food being modified to feed the world. 83 Alix Fiveash A L I X F I V E A S H Creeping Boundaries 2000 mixed media 80.0 x 31.0 x 31.0 cm B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) “ … This ability of bodies to always extend the frameworks which attempt to contain them, to seep beyond their domains of control … “ Elizabeth Grosz, Volatile Bodies, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 1994 p xi of introduction 84 Paul Jamieson P A U L J A M I E S O N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) The intersection, collision or juxtaposition of the ‘man-made’ and the ‘natural’ environments are the visual impetus for my work. I use combinations of natural and man-made elements to create tension, harmony, balance or precariousness. In/Ex_trusion (detail) 2000 red gum, pewter 92.0 x 65.0 x 120.0 cm 85 Kelly Jordan K E L L Y J O R D A N Breathless 2000 86.0 x 183.5 x 28.0 cm wood, sugar, perspex, icing sugar, needles and hair 86 B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Time passes, moments become memory. Sense of self and place, compass and map. Time continues to pass. W I T H Jason Luke J A S O N L U K E B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) Empty spaces hold secrets … Presence Perspective (detail) 2000 multimedia installation, computer animation, MDF, ink dimensions variable 87 Bronwyn Mirams B R O N W Y N Water Well 1999 steel, plaster, stone and water 16.0 x 83.0 x 83.0 cm M I R A M S B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) “The same stream of life that runs through my veins night and day runs through the world and dances in rhythmic measures.” Rabindranath Tagore My work is a response to the natural world and aims to provoke a way of thinking that speaks of the essential harmony between all living cycles. 88 Louise Pinder L O U I S E Menacing shapes 2000 LED print 75.0 x 98.0 cm P I N D E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H The irony of this image is for you to decide upon, who is more menacing? 89 Tim Spellman T I M S P E L L M A N Fubscape 2000, OK! 2000 brick pieces, sand dimensions variable Photo: Paul Jamieson 90 B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) The common brick is the dominating influence on my current work. I am searching for new uses and fresh meanings for an old material. The adventure through the process and the personal challenges involved in the making of my art are the driving forces motivating my practice. W I T H 2000 Textiles Imogen I M O G E Alcock N A L C O C K Michele M I C H E LBoscheinen E B O S C H E I Sarah S A R A Day H D A Y Leah L E A HManwaring M A N W A R I N G Ann A N N McMahon M C M A H O N Jael J A E LMuspratt M U S P R A T T Deanne D E A N N Prout E P R O U T Peter P E T E Timpson R T I M P S O N N E N Imogen Alcock I M O G E N Untitled 2000 gouache on board 9.5 cm diameter 92 A L C O C K D I P L O M A O F A R T Michele Boscheinen M I C H E L E B O S C H E I N E N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H My works looks at rising and falling memories. Through this I am exploring how the experience of being in Thailand has moved me from the past to the present and determined the direction of my future. Guava - from the bottled farang (foreigner) series 2000 tapestry with stitching 14.0 x 11.0 cm Photo: Neal McCracken 93 Sarah Day S A R A H D A Y An interest in old buildings and the stories and objects associated with them began in childhood. Since moving to Australia I have been stimulated by the natural environment and the mountain huts of Kosciusko. My work reflects the weathered surfaces of these buildings using watercolours, tapestry weaving, computer prints and embroidery. Cheesehouse at Coolamine (detail) 2000 embroidery on linen 37.0 x 40.0 cm Photo: Neal McCracken 94 D I P L O M A O F A R T Leah Manwaring L E A H M A N W A R I N G B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H The play of complementary binaries. Order versus Chaos Digital versus Nature ... This age is one of great change - insecurity, fear, fragility, machines, atoms, a probing into the structure of nature. Robert Klippel 1947 Gleeson, J & Klippel, R. Madame Sophie Sesostoris: a pre-raphaelite satire, 1947 – 1948, The Art Gallery of NSW, 1998 Digital v’s Nature 2000 dye, discharge, pigment, pigment illumination on cotton 75.0 x 25.0 cm 95 Ann McMahon A N N M C M A H O N Memory #1- Veil (detail) 2000 tissue paper, photocopy transfer, cotton 370.0 x 225.0 cm B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H “… the weaver's shuttle and loom constantly produce new and different patterns, designs and forms, and if the operation of memory is, like weaving, not archaeological but processual, then it will bringing forth ever different memorial configurations and an ever newly shaped self.” James Olney, Memory and Narrative, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1998, p20 96 Jael Muspratt J A E L M U S P R A T T Colour Study (detail) 2000 dye and discharge on silk organza dimensions variable B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H For Thelma Abell 97 Deanne Prout D E A N N E Virtual Screen (detail) 2000 silk-screen print, pigment, polyester organzas 15.0 x 40.0 cm Cyber Warrior 2000 LED print 40.0 x 30.0 cm 98 P R O U T B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H “Human evolution is fundamentally intertwined with technological developments; the two cannot be considered apart from each other. Humanity has co-evolved its artefacts. Genes not compatible with this reality will not survive the next millennium.” Geert Lovink The Memesis Network Diskussion, 1996, http://www.telefonica.es/fat/memesis.html Peter Timpson P E T E R T I M P S O N B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) We carry a lot of baggage throughout our lives and some we haven't got rid of, perhaps we take out a few pieces to throw away, but the rest we look at, wash, clean, refold and put back in the baggage. Sometimes it is a bit like rearranging the seating on the Titanic. They are disparate subjects but for me they are linked and this is what I am trying to express in my current work. Image as Man 2000 computer manipulated image 15.0 x 8.05 cm 99 2000 Wood N I C H O L Harper A S H A R P E R Nicholas M I C H A EJohnson L J O H N S O N Michael K I M Johnston J O H N S T O N Kim B I L Legge L L E G G E Bill M E G A NPhillips P H I L L I P S Megan G O R D O Smith N S M I T H Gordon Nicholas Harper N I C H O L A S H A R P E R B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H My aim is to create objects that can be experienced on a level beyond functionality. Dining Chairs 2000 rock maple, black bean, monofilament 78.0 x 53.0 x 53.0 cm Photo: Megan Phillips 101 Michael Johnson M I C H A E L Architectural Element 2000 radiata pine 34.0 x 19.0 x 185.0 cm 102 J O H N S O N D I P L O M A O F A R T The act of creating and the result, is in itself all the philosophy required. Kim Johnston K I M J O H N S T O N Bench 2000 radiata pine, monofilament 59.0 x 112.0 x 47.0 Photo: Megan Phillips D I P L O M A O F A R T “Every design is a rigorous attempt at capturing a concrete moment of a transitory image in all its nuances. The extent to which this transitory quality is captured comes through in the designs which will be more or less clear: the more precise they are, the more vulnerable.” Alvaro Siza www.pritzerprize.com 103 Bill Legge B I L L L E G G E Wine Rack 2000 radiata pine, aluminium, stainless steel 200.0 x 90.0 x 40.0 cm Photo: Megan Phillips 104 D I P L O M A O F A R T My goal is to design and make furniture with care and consideration whilst gaining a further understanding of this beautiful and unpredictable medium. Megan Phillips M E G A N P H I L L I P S B A C H E L O R O F A R T S ( V I S U A L ) W I T H Simplicity, clarity and beauty bring joy to my life. I aim for my work to be a manifestation of that joy. Chaise Lounge 2000 radiata pine, monofilament, steel 85.0 x 75.0 x 240.0 cm 105 Gordon Smith G O R D O N Child’s wardrobe 2000 radiata pine 154.0 x 78.0 x 52.0 cm Photo: Megan Phillips 106 S M I T H D I P L O M A O F A R T 2000 2 0 0 0 107 Sponsors 2000 S P O N S O R S 2 0 0 0 B E A S E CEnterprises E N T E R P R Pty I S E Ltd S P T Y L T D Beasec B U V E L OEnterprises T E N T E R P R I S E S Buvelot B E R T R A M E L Real L I S R E A L E S T A T E Bertram Ellis Estate T H E C A N Airport B E R R A A I R P O R T Canberra T H E Artists A R T I SSociety T S S O of C I Canberra E T Y O F C A N The L E O N and A N Sheila D S H E Sleep I L A S L E E P Leon M E T A LMart M A R T Metal 108 B E R R A ITA Student Association Congratulates all Graduating Students for 2000. 109 110 D&D printing logo insert (printers to attend to this) 111 Autographs A U T O G R A P H S 112 Autographs A U T O G R A P H S 113 About the School A B O U T T H E S C H O O L The Australian National University Institute of the Arts (Canberra School of Art, Canberra School of Music and the Australian Centre for the Arts and Technology) provides a unique study environment for the visual arts. The campus offers excellent resources for research and the study of art in a wide range of specialist disciplines. The School of Art features and extensive visiting artists program, international exchange programs, field studies, and special access to the national institutions located in Canberra. The School has attracted to its staff some of the country's most distinguished artists with national and international reputations in ceramics, drawing, glass, gold and silversmithing, painting, photomedia, printmedia, sculpture, textiles, and wood. The Applied Design stream, together with the Digital Art, Multimedia, Editions and Artists' Book and Papermaking Studios, support these disciplines. The Canberra School of Art’s undergraduate and postgraduate awards provide for introductory to advanced study in the practice of art through course work, project work and research in the range of visual arts practices offered in the School's Workshops and Studios. Undergraduate students may take the three-year Bachelor of Arts (Visual), the fourth year Honours program, or the two-year Diploma of Art. In addition, the combined degrees of Bachelor of Arts (Visual)/Bachelor of Arts, and Bachelor of Asian Studies (Specialist)/Bachelor of Arts (Visual) are offered in conjunction with the Faculties of Arts and Asian Studies. A new course of study, the Bachelor of Arts (Digital Arts), will be offered through ACAT from 2001. Through the ANU Graduate School, the Visual Arts Graduate Program offers research degrees leading to the PhD and the Master of Philosophy in both Studio Practice and conventional thesis modes. The coursework graduate degrees are the two year Master of Arts (Visual Arts), the one year Master of Visual Arts, and the two semester Graduate Diploma of Art (by studio practice or by course work). Further information and the Prospectus is available from Student Administration on +61 (0)2 6249 5711 (fax +61 (0) 2 6249 5705) or by writing to: The Admissions Officer, Institute of the Arts, The Australian National University, GPO Box 804 Canberra, ACT 2601. More detailed information regarding the Canberra School of Art may be found on web at: http://www.anu.edu. 114 Publication details P U B L I C A T I O N D E T A I L S 2000 ANU CANBERRA SCHOOL OF ART GRADUATING STUDENT EXHIBITION 8 - 17 DECEMBER, 2000 Publisher: Canberra School of Art Gallery Institute of the Arts Australian National University Corner of Ellery Crescent and Liversidge Street Acton ACT Australia Curator: Merryn Gates Manager: Aroona Murphy Assistants: Kate M Murphy, Graeme Tie Installation: Graeme Tie, Hamilton Darroch, James Holland, Rohan Ward, Alex Reddaway Professional Practice intern: Diana Shores Telephone: +61 (0) 2 6249 5841 Facsimile: +61 (0) 2 6249 0491 Postal: GPO Box 804, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia Email: CSA.Gallery@anu.edu.au http://www.anu.edu.au/ITA/CSA/gallery/ Photographs are by the artist unless otherwise credited. Measurements are in centimetres, height before width, then depth. ©The artists and the ANU Canberra School of Art Gallery. All rights reserved. Production Manager & Catalogue Design: Aroona Murphy Layout: Aroona Murphy, Erica Seccombe Editorial: Aroona Murphy, Kate M Murphy Scanning: Trendsetting, Canberra Printing: D&D Printing, Melbourne Edition: 1000 ISBN: 0 7315 3017 9 The CSA Gallery would like to thank: Jill Peck, Honours Coordinator/Undergraduate Convenor; All graduating students; Catalogue fundraising and development working party and their respective Workshops; Workshop Teaching Staff and all Technical Officers; all Patrons of the School. This catalogue has been made possible through the generous sponsorship and assistance of: Trendsetting, Canberra; ITA Student Association; CSA Workshop fundraising throughout the year; CSA Staff and Students; Leon and Sheila Sleep; Beasec Enterprises Pty Ltd; Buvelot Enterprises; Bertram Ellis Real Estate; The Canberra Airport; Canberra Artists Society; Metal Mart Pty Ltd. 115 2000 2 0 0 0 ANU A N U CCanberra A N B E R R A School S C H O O LofO Art F A R T 2000 G R A D U A T I N G S T U D E N T Graduating Student Exhibition