Joan Grounds
Joan Grounds (born 31 August 1939)[1] is an American-born artist. She has been exhibiting in Australia and internationally from 1967. Her solo and collaborative art work is held in the National Gallery of Australia (ceramics), the National Gallery of Victoria ( both film and ceramics) and in the Powerhouse Museum of Arts and Applied Sciences (ceramics). Her hybrid practice incorporated ceramics, sculpture, sound art, film and performance art. Early life and educationGrounds was born in Atlanta, United States, in 1939. She obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Tulane University in 1962 and a Master of Arts from the University of California, Berkeley in 1964.[2][3] After meeting and marrying American/Australian artist Marr Grounds, she lived in Ghana for two years while he lectured in architecture at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi.[3] She exhibited in Ghana and the US before coming to Australia[citation needed] in 1968.[3] CareerGrounds's first major installation work was a fire sculpture on a beach in Ghana in 1968, later repeated on deserted beaches in New South Wales.[2] She would continue to engage with nature in later site-specific installation work, including the "Four Quartets" in 1987-1988. Grounds was the director of the Tin Sheds at Sydney University from 1976 to 1979, after co-founding the art workshop with her husband and Donald Brook. Grounds fostered the Tin Sheds as a vibrant hub for a diversity of politically active artists, students and the broader community and it supported many sub-groups.[3][4][5] She taught at East Sydney Technical College[6] (later the National Art School) at that time, and later taught at the College of Fine Arts, UNSW.[citation needed] Art practiceThe Watter Gallery in Sydney has represented her work.[6] CollaborationsGrounds collaborated with Aleks Danko on several performance and film projects and had a ten-year collaboration with Sherre Delys, producing sound sculpture and public art installation. Other collaborators were N.S. Harsha, Rik Rue, Margaret Dodd, Stevie Wishhart, and Jane Finlay.[citation needed] Themes"Joan Grounds' work...engages with nature, with the placement of women, with the body of women, with memory and with ways of exploring all of these." (Julie Ewington, 2001)[7] "The installations are as formal and elusive as music. And you are the music while the music lasts." (George Alexander, 1989)[8] Recognition
Selected exhibitionsSolo exhibitions
Others
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References
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