Staff: Portraits
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/1885/206145
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Browsing Staff: Portraits by Subject "artists"
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ANU Archive Item Open Access ANU Creative Arts Fellow, Bea Maddock, taken through an enlarged positive of a young girl's facePhotographer: Bob CooperUsing a photographic process the positive is transferred onto a photosensitive zinc plate and its artistic form used as the basis for Ms Maddock's photo-etching.ANU Archive Item Open Access Australian sculptor, Norma Redpath, at work in her studioAustralian News and Information BureauNorma Redpath was a Creative Arts Fellow at the Australian National University for three months during 1972.ANU Archive Item Open Access Banapana Maymuru and his wife Maymirrir(Annual report to Council / Australian National University, 1978, p. 33) ANU Photographic ServicesBanapana Maymuru and his father Narritjin were the first Aboriginal Creative Arts Fellows of the Australian National University. They were jointly sponsored by the University and the Aboriginal Arts board of the Australia Council.ANU Archive Item Open Access Bea MaddockPhotographer: Bob CooperANU Archive Item Open Access Deborah Halpern, Union Court artistANU Photographic ServicesANU Archive Item Open Access Dusan Marek, surrealist painter, film maker and ANU Creative Arts FellowPhotographer: Mike FinnANU Archive Item Open Access Dusan Marek, surrealist painter, film maker and ANU Creative Arts FellowPhotographer: Mike FinnANU Archive Item Open Access ANU Archive Item Open Access John PercevalANU Photographic ServicesPerceval held a Creative Arts Fellowship at the Australian National University for two years between 1964 and 1966. Professor Sir Leonard Huxley, Vice-Chancellor at the time, said that Mr Perceval was an established artist who had made a distinctive contribution to the development of Australian Art.ANU Archive Item Open Access John Perceval in his studio at the Australian National UniversityPhotographer: The Canberra Times LtdPerceval was the Australian National University's first Creative Arts Fellow. He is shown here preparing for the exhibition of his paintings and ceramics, in the Albert Hall, Canberra, in July 1966.ANU Archive Item Open Access Jorg SchmeisserANU Photographic ServicesANU Archive Item Open Access Keith Looby in his Childers Street E Block studio at the Australian National UniversityPhotographer: Gab CarpayKeith Looby, Australian painter, was awarded a Creative Arts Fellowship at the Australian National University in 1973.ANU Archive Item Open Access Keith Looby with his portrait of AD HopePhotographer: Marc FenningThe ANU Poets Lunch, July 1993, raised the funds to purchase Keith Lobby's portrait of Professor AD Hope for the University.ANU Archive Item Open Access Keith Looby works on a large-scale painting in his Childers Street E Block studio at the Australian National UniversityPhotographer: Gab CarpayKeith Looby, Australian painter, was awarded a Creative Arts Fellowship at the Australian National University in 1973.ANU Archive Item Open Access Margaret Benyon with photographs of the 12 holograms she exhibited at the jubilee science exhibition at the Australian Academy of Science, CanberraPhotographer: Vladimir StojanovicA technological artist, Margaret Benyon was a Creative Arts Fellow at the Australian National University in 1979.ANU Archive Item Open Access Mark Grey-Smith with his work 'Undecided'ANU Photographic ServicesANU Archive Item Open Access ANU Archive Item Open Access Narritjin Maymuru(Annual report to Council / Australian National University, 1978, p. 32) ANU Photographic ServicesNarritjin Maymuru and his son Banapana were the first Aboriginal Creative Arts Fellows of the Australian National University. They were jointly sponsored by the University and the Aboriginal Arts board of the Australia Council.ANU Archive Item Open Access ANU Archive Item Open Access Norma RedpathPhotographer: Gab CarpayAustralian sculptor, Norma Redpath, was a Creative Arts Fellow at the Australian National University in 1972. While in Canberra she devised a scheme for a possible sculpture group to be placed in the University's entrance plaza.