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Indigenous Australian artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carol McGregor is an Indigenous Australian artist of Wathaurung (Victoria) and Scottish descent, internationally known for her multi media installation pieces bringing together ephemeral natural fibres, metal, and paper. She is also deeply engaged in the creation of and cultural reconnection to possum skin cloaks, a traditional form of dress and important biographical cultural item.[1][2][3]
Carol McGregor | |
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Born | 1961 |
Education | Queensland College of Art, Griffith University |
Known for | Installation |
Movement | Contemporary Australian Art |
Website | http://www.carolmcgregor.com.au |
External videos | |
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“Art of the Skins“, State Library of Queensland | |
“Digital story with Carol McGregor”, Art of the Skins exhibition, kuril dhagun (State Library Of Queensland), 2016 |
Carol McGregor was born in Hastings, New Zealand.[4] After earning a Bachelor of Business Studies from Massey University in 1981, McGregor studied for a Bachelor of Contemporary Australian Indigenous Art (CAIA), Queensland College of Art (QCA),[5] Griffith University, graduating in 2012.[6] In 2013, McGregor earned a Bachelor of Fine Art with First Class Honours, from QCA. Between 2014 and 2017, she studied for a Doctor of Philosophy degree at QCA with an Australian Postgraduate Award Scholarship.[7][8]
Carol McGregor aims through her practice to explore alternative forms of cultural expression and to adjust new technologies that would help her further examine the diversity of ancestry, experiences and intimate histories concealed within the landscape.
For her doctoral project, McGregor examined the material culture of possum skin cloaks in South East Queensland (SEQ). Thanks to her research work and the workshop she facilitated,[9] the contemporary making of possum skin cloak was revitalised in SEQ communities.
McGregor collaborated with Glennys Briggs on the Art of the Skins (cloak making project and exhibition) presented at the State Library of Queensland in June – Nov 2016.[9][10]
McGregor's work in cast silver, Cornerstone (2011–18), was featured by the Griffith University Art Museum, Brisbane, as part of the Boundary Lines group exhibition in November 2018 – February 2019.[11][12]
McGregor's latest work Skin Country (2018) was featured by the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, as part of The Commute exhibition in September – December 2018.[13]
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