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Michaelie Crawford is best known as a public artist, making installations in various sculptural media. Working with communities early in her career influenced the direction of her art practice and much of her ensuing work continued to engage with communities and the public domain. Michaelie Crawford formed Turpin Crawford Studio with fellow artist Jennifer Turpin in Sydney in 1992. Together the artists produced numerous significant public art installations over the following decade and a half. Most of the installations by the duo are kinetic sculptures which respond to the motion of site specific natural forces.

A formative influence on Crawford was an art and children’s health project Art Injection 1 and 2 (1991 and 1992), in which Crawford participated while still a student at Sydney College of the Arts in the early 1990s. Her role in this project involved devising and implementing collaborative art programs between patients at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children and students at Sydney College of the Arts. Her involvement in Art Injection has marked much of her subsequent practice, as demonstrated by numerous art workshops with school and community groups. Of specific note is The Memory Line (1996/97), a temporary art collaboration with Turpin for the Australian Conservation Foundation and Fairfield City Council. It engaged the wider community in the Restoring the Waters project (by landscape architects Schaeffer Barnsley), aiming to shift public perception to the potential benefits of restoring Clear Paddock Creek from a storm water canal to a natural creek system.

A hallmark of the Turpin-Crawford collaboration has been the use of water, light, wind and often intangible elements that reveal kinetic energies in the surrounding environment. This is particularly obvious in Tied to Tide (1999), a tide and wind driven kinetic installation on the Sydney Harbour foreshore at Pyrmont Point Park. The intended effect of this approach is to alert viewers to their immediate environment and allow the subtleties of nature to be appreciated. Works such as Tank (1998), do not interact directly with natural forces yet still create a similar sense of kinetic motion.

Crawford has also been involved with consultancy projects through Turpin Crawford Studio. This work involves serving on advisory panels, developing public art master plans such as the Competition Master Plan, Parramatta Civic Square (2004), and conducting a public art consultancy for Multiplex (2003/08).

Crawford also produces some studio work, although her main interest is working in the public sphere. She left Turpin Crawford Studio at the end of 2005 to spend more time with her children. She and Turpin resumed their collaboration in mid-2008. At the time of writing, Michaelie Crawford and her husband Bill Royal lived in Sydney with their two children.

Writers:
De Lorenzo, Dr Catherine
Roy, Julien Note: Landscape Architecture student, Faculty of the Built Environmen
Date written:
2008
Last updated:
2011

Difference between this version and previous

Field This Version Previous Version
Related stub person groups
  • Turpin Crawford Studio (associate of)
Related people
  • Turpin, Jennifer (associate of)
  • Royal, William (spouse of)
Related works
  • Water Swing (creator of)
  • Tied to Tide (creator of)
  • Water Sculpture (creator of)
  • The Memory Line (creator of)
  • Tank (creator of)
  • Storm Waters (creator of)
  • Ghost Windows (creator of)
Related recognitions
  • Community Cultural Development Unit Project Grant (received)
  • 1992 Community Cultural Development Unit, National staff development grant (received)
  • 1993 University Research Grant (received)
  • The Pat Corrigan Grant - National Association of the Visual Arts cultural grant (received)
  • Walking The Streets II (received)
  • Sir Frank Packer Bursary Award (received)
  • 1997 Award of excellence, AILA (Australian Institute of Landscape Architects) for Landscape artwork (received)
  • ARUP NAWIC (National Association of Women In Construction) (received)
  • ARUP NAWIC (National Association of Women In Construction) (received)
  • RAIA (Royal Australian Institute of Architecture) jury award for artwork (received)
  • Lloyd Rees Civic Award for the RAIA (Royal Australian Institute of Architecture) (received)
  • Planning NSW (New South Wales) award for design (received)
Related events
  • Sound Screen (exhibited at)
  • Underlay (exhibited at)
  • Green Noise (exhibited at)
  • Green Noise II (exhibited at)
  • Images of Sydney Metropolis (exhibited at)
  • Water Works (exhibited at)
  • Models of Fan and Tidal Cranes (exhibited at)