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Yhonnie Scarce, a descendant of the Kokatha and Nukunu people, was born in Woomera, South Australia, in 1973. After leaving school, Scarce worked as a clerical support officer at the Research Branch of the University of Adelaide, then as a trainee in the visual arts department at Tandanya National Cultural Institute for a year before taking up a three year position as a receptionist for Wilto Yerlo – the Centre for Australian Indigenous Research and Studies at the University of Adelaide – but she found office work unsatisfying. During this time she considered enrolling at university as she had maintained an interest in being creative since school. She investigated what courses were available at the University of South Australia, discovering that glassblowing was offered as a major subject. Excited by the idea of learning how to work with this medium she enrolled in a Bachelor of Visual Arts in 2001, majoring in Glass (painting was her minor subject). Scarce completed her undergraduate studies in 2003 as the first Aboriginal student to graduate from that institution with a major in Glass. She then immediately took up an Honours degree in Visual Arts at the same university, completing this in 2004. In 2005 Scarce participated in a masterclass at North Lands Creative Glass Centre in Lybster, Scotland, and in 2007 she was a recipient of the 'Women in Research Fellowship’ from Monash University, where in 2008 she enrolled in a Masters of Fine Arts.
Scarce began exhibiting in 2004 with her first solo exhibition, a self-titled show at the BANK Gallery, University of South Australia, and also in her graduate exhibition that same year. She continued to exhibit her glass works throughout Adelaide in various galleries including Nexus Multicultural Artspace, Tandanya (with her second solo show, 'Forget me 'NOT’', in 2006), Adelaide Festival Centre, Samstag Art Museum and the Drill Hall. She has also exhibited her work at Harrison Galleries in Sydney, and at Manningham Gallery and Linden Centre for Contemporary Art in Melbourne. The Linden Centre’s exhibition of 2008, 'The Haunted and the Bad’, was curated by Julie Gough and also featured Joel Birnie, Nici Cumpston, Tony Albert and Andrea Fisher.Field | This Version | Previous Version |
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Date modified | Oct. 19, 2011, 1:01 p.m. | Oct. 19, 2011, 12:51 p.m. |