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Matinaze 1990: Premieres and Rare SigntingsDomain Theatre, Art Gallery of NSWA selection of Australian film and video art presented by Sydney Super 8 Film Group inc and assisted by the Australian Film Commisison …
Know My Name is an exhibition in two parts at the National Gallery of Australia. It is the largest and most comprehensive exhibition of work by women, presented in a thematic rather than chronological form. It reveals relationships between the present and the past, relationships between artists, and common concerns.
Refer to Source connects two artists who use age-old stories to reflect on contemporary geo-politics. Ali Baba Aurang is Afghanistan’s finest advocate of siamask or ‘practice in black’ calligraphy and Barbara Campbell is a well-regarded Sydney-based performance artist.
The exhibition reflects on these sorry days of government manipulation of unions and the introduction of divisive industrial laws, on the curbing of civil liberties and the strangling of access to information. It also identifies a strong neo-conceptual critical and aesthetic strain within contemporary Australian art practice that interacts with global concerns and local political topics.
In 2002, Barbara Campbell was the University of Melbourne’s Macgeorge Fellow. Her research project, including the study of works held in the Sir Russell and Lady Grimwade Bequest, centred on the corporate and cultural activities of Russell Grimwade and his relationship with the university. Amongst many various interests and entrepreneurial ventures, Russell Grimwade (1879-1955) was renowned for his passion for Australiana and native plants. Campbell’s exhibition and performance examined from a metaphorical as well as a literal documentary perspective Grimwade’s fascination with the eucalypt. Challenging the seemingly arbitrary nature of scientific interpretation and human understanding, Campbell adopts her own unique tools of measurement and assessment, to create a human laboratory, with herself at the centre of the experiment.
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
http://www.art-museum.unimelb.edu.au/art_past_exh.aspx (28/05/04)
A 'retrospective’ of Barbara Campbell’s performances from 1997 – 2001. The catalogue contains essays by 7 prominent art theory and art history writers, including Joan Kerr.
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
State Library of QLD catalogue; National Library of Australia catalogue
Exhibition Catalogue:
Flesh winnow: Barbara Campbell: six performances 1997-2001. Sydney: Power Publications, 2002
ISBN 1864875178
[not listed in PastPresent]
This selection of works brings together screen interpretations of performance spanning a 23 year period …
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
Institute of Modern Art exhibition archive
TISEA: Cultural Diversity in the Global Village
The Third International Symposium on Electronic Art (TISEA) was held in Sydney, 9-13 November, 1992 …
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
Institute of Modern Art exhibition archive
Eclipse
A program of film and video art curated by Barbara Campbell and Andrew Frost …
Attitude
Film & Video Event Presented by the Sydney Super 8 Film Group Inc …
Installed works
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
Institute of Modern Art exhibition archive