Robyn Stacey

Robyn Stacey (born 1952) is an Australian photographer and new media artist know for her large striking still lifes.[1]

Biography

Stacey was born in 1952. She has worked with major natural history collections since the mid-1980s, reworking and developing the still life genre.[2]

Stacey is the recipient of major awards and research grants including the Samstag Scholarship in 1994 to study at the School of Visual Arts in New York.

She has undertaken residencies at the Macleay Museum at Sydney University, University of Leiden, the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, the Royal Botanic Gardens and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois.

Her work is represented in major national collections including the National Gallery of Australia, National Portrait Gallery, Art Gallery of New South Wales,[3] Art Gallery of Western Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Art Gallery of South Australia, Queensland Art Gallery, the New South Wales Historic Houses Trust, the City of Sydney, Samstag Museum and Artbank.[4]

Selected work

Solo exhibitions

  • 2019 – As still as life, Monash Gallery of Art, Melbourne[5]
  • 2016 – Magic Object: The Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
  • 2015 – Robyn Stacey: Cloud Land, Museum of Brisbane
  • 2003 – The Collector's Nature, Stills Gallery, Sydney[6]

Group exhibitions

  • 1991 – Untitled, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, Sydney[7]
  • 1996 – Photography is Dead! Long Live Photography!, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney[8]
  • 2015 – The Photograph And Australia, QAGOMA, Brisbane[9]

Publications

  • 2011 – Home
  • 2007 – Museum
  • 2001 – Herbarium
gollark: You can also get a ***!!FREE!!*** PotatOS OmniDisk\™ for debugging or random fiddling around or whatever.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/RM13UGFaAt the top of this code file.
gollark: From the official docs.
gollark: "Features:- Fortunes/Dwarf Fortress output/Chuck Norris jokes on boot (wait, IS this a feature?)- (other) viruses (how do you get them in the first place? running random files like this?) cannot do anything particularly awful to your computer - uninterceptable (except by crashing the keyboard shortcut daemon, I guess) keyboard shortcuts allow easy wiping of the non-potatOS data so you can get back to whatever nonsense you do fast- Skynet (rednet-ish stuff over websocket to my server) and Lolcrypt (encoding data as lols and punctuation) built in for easy access!- Convenient OS-y APIs - add keyboard shortcuts, spawn background processes & do "multithreading"-ish stuff.- Great features for other idio- OS designers, like passwords and fake loading (est potatOS.stupidity.loading [time], est potatOS.stupidity.password [password]).- Digits of Tau available via a convenient command ("tau")- Potatoplex and Loading built in ("potatoplex"/"loading") (potatoplex has many undocumented options)!- Stack traces (yes, I did steal them from MBS)- Backdoors- er, remote debugging access (it's secured, via ECC signing on disks and websocket-only access requiring a key for the other one)- All this useless random junk can autoupdate (this is probably a backdoor)!- EZCopy allows you to easily install potatOS on another device, just by sticking it in the disk drive of any potatOS device!- fs.load and fs.dump - probably helpful somehow.- Blocks bad programs (like the "Webicity" browser).- Fully-featured process manager.- Can run in "hidden mode" where it's at least not obvious at a glance that potatOS is installed.- Convenient, simple uninstall with the "uninstall" command.- Turns on any networked potatOS computers!- Edits connected signs to use as ad displays.- A recycle bin.- An exorcise command, which is like delete but better.- Support for a wide variety of Lorem Ipsum."
gollark: You would need to get rid of the autoupdate capabilities of potatOS itself, or swap them to your own pastebins/github stuff, and then keep everything in line with the current versions.

References

  1. "DAAO Robyn Stacey". Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  2. "Robyn Stacey: as still as life". www.mga.org.au. 27 November 2018. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  3. "Works by Robyn Stacey :: The Collection :: Art Gallery NSW". www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  4. "Robyn Stacey - Stills Gallery". www.stillsgallery.com.au. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  5. "Robyn Stacey on new still lifes and old collections". Art Guide Australia. 15 January 2019. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  6. "Robyn Stacey". Artlink Magazine. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  7. "AIVF '91 - Robyn Stacey - Untitled | Scanlines". scanlines.net. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  8. "Photography is Dead! Long Live Photography! | Exhibitions | MCA Australia". www.mca.com.au. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  9. Queensl, ©; Art, Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern (3 July 2015). "'The Photograph and Australia' opens at QAG". QAGOMA Blog. Retrieved 7 March 2020.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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