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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.
Ghost Citizens follow us and infiltrate our daily lives. In a continent full of the ghosts and shadows of colonialism, the historical, social, and physical landscape is pitted. Each story is a ghost story loaded with shadows – a kind of ‘scar’ story. Djon Mundine OA
2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial
Exhibition showcasing highlights from the Cruthers Collection of Women’s Art (CCWA), which was gifted to the University of Western Australia in 2007. A companion publication titled 'Into the Light’ that documented the history and key works of the CCWA was released to coincide with the exhibition, which also featured a symposium – 'Are we there yet?’ – discussing women’s participation in art and art history and the future of feminism in the arts.
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
AGNSW Library catalogue
Exhibition Catalogue:
Fiona Foley: Pir’ri – mangrove. Brisbane, QLD: Queensland Art Gallery, 2001
ISBN 1876509074
Speaking of Women, four guest lectures; by Nancy Underhill, Ann Thomson, Margo Neale, Joan Kerr; held over successive Fridays, 10-31 March 1995, by the Art Gallery Society.
Opened by the Hon. Kerry Chikarovski, NSW Minister for the Status of Women, 6 March 1995
Explored the characteristics of colonialism in Australia through installation.
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
Institute of Modern Art exhibition archive
Source: Solo Survey Exhibition Linkage Project, Tasmanian School of Art, UTAS
Artist’s CV in Genocchio, Benjamin, Solitaire. Annandale, NSW: Piper Press, 2001