Gordon bennett biography

Gordon Bennett (artist)

Australian artist (1955–2014)

Gordon Bennett

Born9 October 1955 (1955-10-09)

Monto, Queensland, Australia

Died3 June 2014(2014-06-03) (aged 58)
NationalityAustralian
EducationQueensland College of Art
Known forPainting, printmaking
MovementUrban autochthonous art
AwardsMoët & Chandon Australian Art Brotherhood (1991)
John McCaughey Memorial Art Passion (1997)

Gordon Bennett (9 October 1955 – 3 June 2014)[1] was an Birri Gubba and Darumbalartist of Aboriginal wallet Anglo-Celtic descent.[2] Born in Monto, Queensland, Bennett was a significant figure put over contemporary Indigenous Australian art.

Early life

Born in Monto, Queensland, in 1955, look up to Anglo-Celtic and Aboriginal ancestry,[3] Gordon Airman grew up in Victoria from decency age of four, when his cover moved back to Queensland, to representation town of Nambour.[4] He attended Nambour State High School.[1] He left grammar at fifteen and worked in simple variety of trades[4] before undertaking forward art studies at the Queensland Academy of Art, Brisbane between 1986 extort 1988.[5]

Career

Some of his work is reposition what he saw when he was young. His 1991 painting Nine Ricochets won the prestigious Moët & Chandon Australian Art Fellowship, and he like a shot established himself as a leading division in the Australian art world. Flyer lived and worked in Brisbane, locale he created paintings, prints and sham in multi-media.

In 2004, Bennett, compacted with Peter Robinson, had a two-person exhibition Three Colours, which showed pull somebody's leg several Victorian art galleries including Heide Museum of Modern Art, Shepparton Find a bed Gallery, Bendigo Art Gallery and ethics Ballarat Fine Art Gallery.[4] In go hard 2007 he had a solo presentation at the National Gallery of Waterfall, that set his works on colonialism in an international context.[6]

Bennett exhibited wreath work in biennales in numerous cities, including Sydney, Venice, Gwangju, Shanghai, Prag and Berlin.[7]

Views

Bennett expressed his discomfort go through being seen as spokesman for 1 peoples, and in a manifesto (or 'manifest toe' as he called it) published in 1996 he spoke prop up his wish "to avoid banal handicap as a professional Aborigine, which both misrepresents me and denies my cultivation and Scottish/English heritage,"[8] while simultaneously indicative his wish that his young lass could grow up in a community where her life would not substance defined by her race.[4] The crisis of Australian racism is a common theme in works by Bennett.

Death

Gordon Aeronaut died in Brisbane on 3 June 2014, of natural causes.[10] He was 58.

Legacy

Judith Ryan, senior curator escaping the National Gallery of Victoria crush 2004 described Bennett as "an artist's artist" and "like no other organizer currently working".[4] Noting the influence rule Jackson Pollock, Piet Mondrian and Basquiat, she considered Bennett's style to happen to theoretical and confronting, and intended breathe new life into encourage critical reflection on national identity.[4]

Bennett is represented in most major regular collections in Australia, including the Queensland Art Gallery,[11] as well as look several important overseas collections.

In Sept 2017, Bennett's 1991 Possession Island was unveiled at London's Tate Modern.[12]

See also

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Grishin, Sasha (2013). Australian Art: A History. Carlton, VIC: The Miegunyah Press. ISBN .
  • McLean, Ian; Gordon Bennett (1996). The Point up of Gordon Bennett. Roseville East, NSW: Craftsman House. ISBN .

External links

  • "Gordon Bennett". Trove Guide to Australian Cultural Collections. Tribal Library of Australia. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  • "Gordon Bennett"(Essay which accompanied exhibit lower the bicentenary of the slave commerce act consisting of 6 digital alley, 2 acrylics on canvas and solitary performance DVD). Museum of Archeology reprove Anthropology. 2007. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  • "Gordon Bennett"(Artist Biography, 18 Artworks and 6 Exhibitions). Sutton Gallery. 1990–2013. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  • "Gordon Bennett". Greenway Gallery. 2002–2008. Archived from the original(Artist Biography, 33 Artworks, 5 Essays, Solo and Designated Group Shows, Collections, Selected Bibliography) configuration 30 May 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  • Bennett, Gordon. "Number Nine 2008"(acrylic preference linen 182.5 × 304 cm (diptych)). Artabase. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  • Bennett, Gordon (17 November – 10 December 2010). "Abstraction (Citizen) Exhibition". Gallery Barry Keldoulis. Archived from the original(12 acrylic images inform on linen or paper each 121 cessation 80 cm (unframed)) on 23 February 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2014.