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BIOGRAPHY
CHRISTINE WEBSTER, born
in Pukekohe.
1982, 84, 88 QEII Arts Council Grant. 1989 Polaroid Small Projects
Grant, Offenbach am Main, Germany. 1991 Frances Hodgkins Fellowship,
UO, Dunedin. 1994 Acting HOD, ASA SoA, Auckland. 1995 part-time
tutor, ASA SoA. Arts Council Toi Aotearoa Fellowship, Auckland.
1996-97 part-time tutor, Unitec Institute of Technology, Auckland.
1996 CNZ Professional Development Grant. 1997 CNZ Arts Development
Grant. 2003 July-October, MFA Exchange, Elam SoFA, UA. 2002-04 MFA,
Glasgow SoA, Glasgow. 2004 appointed Course Leader, BA (Hons) Photography,
Cambridge School of Art, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge. Lives
in UK.
Christine
Webster’s photography is based on fiction rather than documentary.
It unsettles and disturbs with its probing
into society’s accepted boundaries. Her interest lies in working
with others to explore the human psyche – people’s different
personae, fantasy, identity, gender stereotypes and sexuality. Webster’s
models take on new personae to challenge viewers to untangle their
entrenched thoughts on (often) moralistic situations. The subjects
in her photographs boldly meet the viewer’s eyes in an overt
departure from the traditionally averted gaze of women portrayed
in paintings of yesteryear. The images are reminiscent of movie
stills, in that the image captured seems to be just one moment stolen
from a much longer ‘story’. Webster is intrigued by
'the human condition', by the universal anxieties that beset us
and by the veiled layers of people's identities.
In
the late 1980s, Webster’s series ‘New Myths’ focussed
on a questioning of the balance of power in sexual relationships
and this evolved in the early 90’s into an exposition of the
historical connections between violence and sex, using a male nude
model to counter the traditional art historical depiction of the
female nude. In 1994, Webster staged a landmark exhibition with
her ‘Black Carnival’ works - 60 lineal metres of life-sized
cibachromes that surrounded and confronted the viewer from the gallery
walls. Their sheer size was daunting, reversing the usual ‘viewer/subject’
roles, and the content offered little comfort, depicting masked
or disguised men and women in roles that brought the viewer face
to face with scenes contrary to society’s ‘norms’
– a pregnant woman dressed in just a tutu; a male nude half-dressed
in a bridal gown; a nude woman wearing a bunny head. Webster seems
to specialise in showing us images that we don’t expect to
see, and that are likely to discomfit us when we meet them.
Over
subsequent series her themes included sexual fantasy (Possession
& Mirth), transcendence - in a series working with New Zealand
dancer and choreographer Douglas Wright (Circus of Angels), a study
of the male/female (photographs of boxers and fabric) (Quiet), and
a capturing of the total and innocent abandon that sleep brings
in photographs of her baby son, in a ‘take’ on traditional
portraiture and with an echo of the reverence of historical, religious
paintings (Fugue).
For
more information, go to www.christinewebster.co.uk
- Webster’s excellent site with images from all series, CV
and numerous essays.
MORE
WEBSTER LINKS:
.
Christine Webster
artist website with images from all series, CV and more
. Christine
Webster page of photographs from 'The Hunt, The Seduction, The
Kill: a play of desire'
. Christine
Webster essay on exhibition of photographs of Douglas Wright,
2002, University of NSW site
. Christine
Webster biography and 2 images on PhotoForum site
. Christine
Webster review on e-zine 'NZ Art Monthly' of 'Quiet' exhibition,
Adam Art Gallery, 2004
PRICE
GUIDE:
(indication, as at March 2006)
$2000 - $8000 depending on size, material and image
GALLERIES
TO CONTACT:
To be advised
SELECTED
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Art
New Zealand 29 'Christine Webster's Large Colour Photographs', Sheridan
Keith, 1983
New Zealand Artists: A Survey of 150 Years', Anne Kirker, Craftsman
House, Sydney, 1992
Art New Zealand 68 'Process... Procession...Possession -Christine
Webster's Black Carnival', Ewen McDonald, 1993
Art New Zealand 83 'Circus of Angels - Recent Work by Christine
Webster', Sarah Gibson, 1997
Contemporary New Zealand Art 4, Elizabeth
Caughey & John Gow, Bateman, 2005
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