Julie Robinson is Senior Curator of Prints, Drawings & Photographs at the Art Gallery of South Australia, where she has worked since 1988, and is also on the teaching staff at the University of Adelaide, where she offers supervision in Art History.[1] Her curatorial projects include Candid Camera: Australian Photography 1950s–1970s (2010)[2] and A Century in Focus: South Australian Photography 1840s-1940s (2007).[3] Writing about the latter while national arts critic of The Australian, Pulitzer Prize-winning critic Sebastian Smee said: "If you are at all interested in Australian photography, whether or not you are from SA, you will want to see this show, or at least get hold of the catalogue".[3]
Robinson curated the 2004 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Contemporary Photomedia. The arts critic for the South Pacific edition of Time, described it as a "powerful survey which goes to show that photography isn't dead".[4] He noted that when Robinson curated her first photographic survey in 1990, "it was a more straightforward affair – pictures simply stared back at audiences" and went on to add, speaking of the Biennial, that "the 20 artists she has brought together in Adelaide explode the idea of what photography can be".[4] Featured artists included Bill Henson, Tracey Moffatt, Mike Parr and Patricia Piccinini.[5]
Other exhibitions
editRobinson also curated Five Centuries of Genius: European Master Printmaking (2000), Ann Newmarch: The Personal is Political (1997), Durer And German Renaissance Printmaking (1996), The Age of Rubens & Rembrandt: Old Master Prints From The Art Gallery of South Australia (1993), Hans Heysen: The Creative Journey (1992) and Fragmentation & Fabrication: Recent Australian Photography (1991).[6]
Publications
edit- Julie Robinson, Fragmentation & fabrication: recent Australian photography, Art Gallery Board of South Australia, 1990, ISBN 978-0-7308-0775-9
- Julie Robinson, Landscapes, visions in print by South Australian artists, South Australian Touring Exhibitions Programme, 1990, ISBN 978-0-646-00797-7
- Julie Robinson, Sir Hans Heysen, Hans Heysen: the creative journey, Art Gallery Board of South Australia, 1992, ISBN 978-0-7308-0782-7
- Julie Robinson, The age of Rubens & Rembrandt, Art Gallery Board of South Australia, 1993, ISBN 978-0-7308-3016-0
- Julie Robinson, Dürer and German Renaissance printmaking, Art Gallery of South Australia, 1996, ISBN 978-0-7308-3002-3
- Julie Robinson, Five centuries of genius: European master printmaking, Art Gallery of South Australia, 2000, ISBN 978-0-7308-3004-7
- Julie Robinson, Ann Newmarch: the personal is political, Art Gallery of South Australia, 1997, ISBN 978-0-7308-3042-9
- Julie Robinson, A Century in Focus: South Australian Photography 1840s-1940s AGSA/Thames & Hudson. 2007, ISBN 978-0-7308-3070-2
- Julie Robinson, Candid Camera: Australian Photography 1950s–1970s Art Gallery of South Australia exhibition booklet. 2010
Notes
edit- ^ University of Adelaide, "Graduate Studies in Art History and Curatorial & Museum Studies, MA & PhD programs" Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences website Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ McDonald, Patrick "The Way We Were" The Advertiser, 20 May 2010 AdelaideNow website
- ^ a b Smee, Sebastian "Unreliable Witness" The Australian, 8 December 2007 The Australian website
- ^ a b Michael Fitzgerald, "Not Dying, Changing" Time, 17 March 2004 Time website
- ^ Reid, Chris "Photomedium As Message" RealTime, December 2003 2004 Adelaide Biennial, RealTime Retrieved 25 May 2011
- ^ University of Adelaide, "Graduate Studies in Art History and Curatorial & Museum Studies, List of Teaching Staff", Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences website Archived 7 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
External links
edit- "The Anarchy of Silence. John Cage and Experimental Art". Notes by Julia Robinson, curator of the exhibition
- "Candid camera", Stateline South Australia, 28 May 2010
- "Candid Camera", The Blurb, Issue 115
- Biennial Education Pack
- "Biennial snapshot", Realtime 61, Jena Woodburn