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Lynne Roberts-Goodwin (born 1954) is an Australian photographer, video and installation artist. As one of Australia's leading contemporary artists, she has influenced a generation of visual arts practitioners depicting nature and the landscape.[1][2] Her photographic work has been described as "grounded in a deep concern for nature and humanity".[3] She has received numerous awards, and her work is held in private and public collections nationally and internationally.

Lynne Roberts-Goodwin
Born1954 (age 6768)
Sydney
NationalityAustralian
Alma materUniversity of Sydney, University of New South Wales, University of Manchester
Known for
  • photography
  • video
  • installation
Notable work
  • Tankstream
  • Falconry projects
  • Disappearing Act
  • SWARM
Awards
  • Josephine Ulrick and Win Schubert Photography Award (2010)
  • Hazelhurst Art Award (2013)
Websitelynnerobertsgoodwin.com

Life and work


Roberts-Goodwin studied at the University of Sydney and University of New South Wales, gaining a postgraduate Master of Fine Art Degree from University of Manchester, Medlock Fine Arts Centre in 1980.[3]

Awards and grants from research institutes and museums enabled her to study wildlife in India, America, Australia and United Arab Emirates, where she documented endangered species to form links between the sciences and the visual arts. Her False Tales series (1995) comprised animal images from history and contemporary urban society, while Boris the Dog 2 conceptually investigated 19th and 20th century animal discourse.[4] Her exhibition Blindfold in the AGNSW Contemporary Project Space in 1997 documented the wapiti and its trade from rural Australia to Seoul, Korea.[5] Her installation Tankstream - Into the head of the cove has been on display in Sydney since 1999.

Bad Birds is a series of 85 images produced while Roberts-Goodwin was on a residency through the Institute of Electronic Art, New York, in 2001. The images are "anti-portraits" (facing away from the camera) of long-dead birds from the collection of the Department of Ornithology at the Australian Museum in Sydney.[6] From an exhibition entitled Landings, it further develops the imaging of interdependent relationship of humans with animals, and how human feelings are translated to the natural world.[5]

The artist's interest in historic and contemporary trade and migration routes continued with the several falconry projects initially undertaken in the United Arab Emirates in 2002 and continuing back and forth with United Arab Emirates, Central Eurasia, Kazakhstan, and western Siberia. Her long series of documentary photographs of contraband birds was described as "post-minimalist or post-conceptualist" art.[7] Her large black and white panoramic photograph of a desolate landscape, shot at night under a full moon, won the Josephine Ulrick and Win Schubert Photography Award in 2010.[8] In 2012, Roberts-Goodwin made a series of photographic/installation works called SWARM.

Roberts-Goodwin's work invites the viewer to engage with unfamiliar contexts and global structures of environmental conflict and sites of impact.[9] Regarding her exhibition More Than Ever, The Art Life commented: "Completely removed from a secular sentimentality or faux religiosity, Roberts-Goodwin's images are bracing observations of the world as it is, unadorned and beautiful in their simple majesty."[10]

She was an artist-in-residence in Los Angeles, New York, New Delhi, Mumbai, Beirut, Mexico, Paris, and Riyadh.[11] She has been a senior lecturer at the University of New South Wales.[12] She is based in Sydney.


Notable works



Tankstream - Into the head of the cove (1999)


Tankstream - Into the head of the cove is an installation set into the pavement in five separate sites from Pitt Street Mall to Alfred Street in Sydney. It consists of coloured glass modules overlapping and angled away from stainless steel lines, creating a diagram mapping the course of the subterranean Tank Stream in relation to the direction of Pitt Street, comparing the natural and man-made conduits of energy in the city. At the final site on Alfred Street the rods splay to represent the delta as the stream flows into Sydney Cove. The installation includes an inscription by Captain Watkin Tench, who recorded the presence of water in Sydney Cove in his diary in 1788.[3] A sixth site was added indoors, in the foyer of City Recital Hall.[13] The installation is one of Roberts-Goodwin's works that have been seen as "a path to return afresh to what we think we know of the past, and how we think we know it through present engagement and dissemination."[9] Her public works have been characterised by being almost invisible, as she prefers art in city streets and parks to have minimal impact on their surroundings.[7]


Falconry projects (2002-)


In 2002, Roberts-Goodwin was first invited to undertake a falconry project at Abu Dhabi Falcon Hospital, Sweihan, Abu Dhabi, by avian veterinarian specialist Dr. Jaime Samour. It was followed by projects undertaken at the Wrsan wildlife sanctuary near Abu Dhabi at the request of Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates. Since then, she has been photographing Arabian falcons and falconers to examine "the conceptual issues of the 'perceived exotic' of place and racial belonging", both as a Western stereotype and as a living practice.[14] She has also been liaising with an assisting ornithologists in the region to develop animal passports to assist the regulation of the international rare species trade and the eradication of the illicit hunting-bird market.[6][15]


Disappearing Act (2005)


In 2004, Roberts-Goodwin undertook a project involving the Incense/Frankincense Trade and migration route commencing in Oman, through Yemen then traversing the Kings Highway in Jordan.[16] The Disappearing Act project followed the route indexing many sites of prehistoric villages, biblical towns, Crusader Castles, Nabatean temples, Roman Fortresses, Islamic towns and the key archaeological sites within Jordan. Her work on the project was exhibited at Sherman Gallery Goodhope, Sydney, Australia.[16]


SWARM (2012)


SWARM is a series of photographic/installation works that involved imagining the flight of black ravens in high altitude habitats of central Iran, Mexico, U.S.A, India and Northern Cyprus: locations that are extreme in geopolitical, topographical or cultural terms. Roberts-Goodwin's images use "spatial aesthetics"; that is, "the complex entanglements between local and global ideas of place."[9] A digital photograph print from the series, called as the sky falls through five fingers #131 (the "five fingers" are the peaks of the Kyrenia Mountains), won the Hazelhurst Art Award in 2013.[17] Commenting the fact that she was working in very remote locations, the artist said she liked "dirty landscapes, not picturesque landscapes".[18]


Selected solo exhibitions



Collections


Roberts-Goodwin's work is held in the following public and private collections:[19][11]


Publications



Awards



Grants


Roberts-Goodwin received the following grants:[11]


References


  1. Ella Rubeli (6 November 2015). "Australian photographers reflect on the decisive moments of their careers at Contact Sheet gallery". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  2. Andrew Frost (7 November 2013). "Concerns around climate change are shaping new Australian art". Art and design. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  3. "Tankstream Into the head of the cove". City Art Sydney. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  4. "Lynne Roberts-Goodwin". Australian Photographers. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  5. "Artist: Lynne Roberts-Goodwin". Art Gallery NSW. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  6. Charles Green (2005). "Artist Project / Bad Birds". Cabinet Magazine. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  7. "2010 Josephine Ulrick and Win Schubert Photography Award". The Arts Centre Gold Coast. 10 April 2010. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
  8. "Extinct Extant". AirSpace Projects. March 2015. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
  9. Andrew Frost (11 August 2014). "More Than Ever". The Art Life. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  10. "Lynne Roberts-Goodwin". Sherman Galleries. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  11. "Senior lecturer Lynne Roberts-Goodwin". University of New South Wales. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
  12. Jens Korff (25 January 2015). "Tank Stream". Creative Spirits. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
  13. Maggie Finch (2012). "Lynne Roberts-Goodwin Al Hammadi Desert Saqar #1 and Al Hammadi Desert Saqar #3". Art Journal of the National Gallery of Victoria. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  14. Sharon Verghis (11 March 2003). "Catching the fastest predator on film". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  15. "Artist Project / Bad Birds". Cabinet Magazine. 2005. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  16. "Art on Paper: Hazelhurst Art Award 2013". Hazelhurst. 6 July 2013. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  17. Monica Heary (29 July 2013). "Photographer scales the heights to capture prize". The Leader. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  18. "Lynne Roberts-Goodwin". World Photo. Retrieved 8 January 2016.[permanent dead link]
  19. "T I M E S L I K E T H E S E . . . s w a r m (ebook)". Blurb. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  20. "More Than Ever : Lynne Roberts Goodwin". National Library of Australia: Trove. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  21. Roberts-Goodwin, Lynne (2005). Disapearing Act.
  22. Roberts-Goodwin, Lynne (2007). Random Acts. Retrieved 25 May 2016.





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