Vicki Varvaressos

Vicki Varvaressos is an Australian contemporary figurative expressionist painter.[1][2] Sometimes referred to as a “transitional artist”,[3] her painting style and subject matter has evolved throughout her career.[3] Many of her works are of women and their experiences in Australia.[1]

“All of my work has been a reflection of what I’m interested in. The early work is very much issues, and there were other issues apart from feminism, but the feminism stuff was there. Then the images became much more internal — ‘human existence'".[1] - Vicki Varvaressos

Biography

Born in Sydney, Australia in 1949, Vicki Varvaressos studied at the National Art School in Sydney from 1968 to 1971 at the East Sydney Technical College.[4] Her paintings throughout the following decade emulated the feminist concerns of the 1970's especially the representation of women in the media.[5] She travelled extensively throughout Europe in 1978. In later years, her subject matter shifted towards reflecting a more personal experience.[5] Varvaressos currently lives and works in Sydney.

Early Work

Early in her practice Varvaressos' work was more political in contrast with the subtly evolved practice of later years.[3] Straight out of art college, political subject matter was used as a foothold in Varvaressos’ career as a professional artist, but was not integral to her direction moving forward.[3]

"I was very involved in resident action and feminism. It was 1975, it was the time of our 'Bloodless Coup', they call it the dismissal, and that was reflected in the works that I was painting"[3] - Vicki Varvaressos

She paired paintings with explicit titles such as: Rethink your face, A hat from abroad, and Bang Lang. These titles suggested a political position and informed the tone of her early work.[3] Varvaressos attributes this focus on political statements to the changing times in the 1970's. Politics is something she would not pursue in her later works.[3]

Later Work

In her work from the past two decades, her paintings evolved from figurative to highly abstracted forms.[3] Her subject matter drew from her own emotional responses to everyday events. Her paintings employ a "murky" colour palette, which adds to the crudeness of her work, and her aesthetic is draw from the inconsistencies of her life. Her paintings are formed from her head and can only be viewed wholly as an image once completed.[3]

“Now that her art has evolved, keeping calm and ‘just’ painting is more of a concern and ‘the content has become much more internal’[3] - Maitland Regional Art Gallery Cultural Director: Joe Eisenberg OAM

Varvaressos is represented in the collections of NGA, NGV, Artbank, AGNSW, University of NSW, Wollongong Art Gallery, University of Tasmania, Gold Coast Collection and private collections in the UK, Europe, USA and Australia.[2] Each year since 1975, Varvaressos has had annual solo exhibitions in Sydney, and each year in Melbourne since 1980.[4] She is part of the Cruthers Collection of Women's Art.

Major Exhibitions

Paintings: Figurative and Non-Figurative (1992)

Varvaressos’ exhibition ran from March 18 to April 4, 1992, at the Niagara Gallery in Richmond, Victoria.[6] The works exhibited were: ‘Woman With Lamp and Flowers’ (1991), ‘Woman Sitting’ (1991), ‘Girls With their Mother’ (1991), ‘Woman Over Chair’ (1991), ‘Woman Running’ (1991), ‘Mary at Six Months: ‘What have I done?’’ (1991), ‘Woman with Candles’ (1991), ‘Girl in her Room’ (1991), ‘Table Trio’ (1991), ‘Swivel’ (1991), ‘Tumbling’ (1991), ‘Fifiefofum’ (1991), ‘Black and Green Tangle’ (1991), ‘Not - OM’(1991) and ‘Woman and Child’ (1992).[6]

Vicki Varvaressos (1994)

Varvaressos’ exhibition ran from August 9 to August 27, 1994, at the Niagara Gallery in Richmond, Victoria.[7] The works exhibited were: ‘Woman with Dead Child’ (1994), ‘Woman With Dead Child (II)’ (1994), ‘Weave me into the Sun (Anne Sexton)’ (1994), ‘Man With Gift’ (1994),’ Six and Forty’ (1994), ‘Woman and Statue’ (1994), ‘Hedda’ (1994), ‘Woman Flying’ (1994), ‘Moondance’ (1994), and ‘Trying on the Black trousseau’ (1994).[7]

Vicki Varvaressos: The Story So Far (2014-2015)

Varvaressos had a retrospective exhibition at Maitland Regional Art Gallery titled ‘Vicki Varvarassos: The Story so Far’ (2014-2015). Amongst the artworks exhibited were examples of her works:‘Fruit’ (1986), ‘Motherhusk’ (1989),  ‘Woman and Fruit’ (1991), ‘Lilies and Boots Still Life’ (1992), ‘Two Figures’ (1992), ‘Sleepdancing’ (1994) and ‘Woman Sitting’ (2004).[3]

Other Exhibitions

Individual Exhibitions since 1975

  • 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1980, Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 1981, Stuart Gerstman Galleries, Melbourne,
  • 1982, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1989, Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 1984, ‘Drawings and Linocuts’, Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 1985, Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 1986, 1988, 1990 Niagara Galleries, Melbourne,
  • 1991, Some myths from Mani and other painters, Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 1992, 1994, Niagara Galleries, Melbourne
  • 1993, 1995, 1997, 1999 Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 1996, Facescapes, Niagara Galleries, Melbourne
  • 1998, ‘'Selected Paintings'’, Niagara Galleries, Melbourne
  • 2001, Paintings, Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 2002, Vicki Vavaressos: New Paintings, Niagara Galleries, Melbourne,
  • 2003, Groups, Watters Gallery, Sydney,
  • 2005, Dolls and Figures, Watters Gallery, Sydney.[8]
  • 2014, Vicki Varvaressos: The Story so Far, Maitland Regional Art Gallery, Maitland, New South Wales.[3]

Group Exhibitions since 1975

gollark: Standard model in emojis WHEN?
gollark: Why convert them from JPEGs, anyway?
gollark: I have 123GB of various random video things, 1.2GB of memes, 1.5GB of books, 5.3GB of random archived stuff, and 106GB of Wikipedia, but not this "20GB of insect PNGs".
gollark: The bot just uses a somewhat not very good image comparison algorithm.
gollark: > checkmate liberalsTechnically, "fluid" includes gases as well as liquid.

References

  1. Janiszewski, Alexakis, Leonard, Effy (2013). Faces Beyond the Greek Café: The Traditional Diversity of Greek-Australian Occupational Pursuits, 1820s–2010. Adelaide: Flinders University Department of Language Studies - Modern Greek. p. 413.
  2. Germaine, Max, 1914-2006. (1991). A dictionary of women artists of Australia. Roseville East, NSW, Australia: Craftsman House. ISBN 9768097132. OCLC 26591029.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. Varvaressos, Vicki, 1949-. Vicki Varvaresso : the story so far. Maitland Regional Art Gallery. Maitland, NSW. ISBN 9780987491992. OCLC 958242429.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Voigt, Anna. (1996). New visions, new perspectives : voices of contemporary Australian women artists. Roseville East, NSW: Craftsman House. ISBN 9768097922. OCLC 35819179.
  5. "Vicki Varvaressos | The Cbus Collection of Australian Art". www.cbusartcollection.com.au. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  6. Vicki Varvaressos : paintings : figurative and non-figurative : exhibition : March 18 - April 4, 1992. Niagara Galleries. Richmond, Vic.: Niagara. 1992. ISBN 0908298226. OCLC 38323543.CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. Vicki Varvaressos. Richmond, Victoria: Niagara Gallery. 1994.
  8. Vicki Varvaressos: Dolls and Figures. Sydney, NSW: Watters Gallery. 2005.
  9. Gower, Elizabeth (1986). The Source. Hobart: University of Tasmania Centre for the Arts Gallery. pp. 22, 27, 28.
  10. "Vicki Varvaressos Biography". MutualArt. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.