Vernon ah kee biography of nancy

Vernon Ah Kee

Indigenous Australian artist

Vernon Ah Kee (born ) is a contemporary Australian artist, political activist and founding member of ProppaNOW. Based primarily in Brisbane, Queensland, Ah Kee is an Aboriginal Australian man with ties to the Kuku Yalandji, Waanji, Yidinji and Gugu Yimithirr peoples in Queensland.

Vernon ah kee biography of nancy sinatra: During his studies, he had two solo exhibitions hosted at his college's art gallery as part of his postgraduate work — whitefella normal blackfella me in and con Text in Ah Kee suffered a heart attack in but managed to recover in time for his exhibition Not an animal or a plant. In other projects. Reception [ edit ].

His art practice typically focuses on his Aboriginal Australian identity and place within a modern Australian framework, and is concerned with themes of skin, skin colour, race, privilege and racism. Ah Kee has exhibited his art at numerous galleries across Australia, including the Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW) and the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, and has also exhibited internationally, most notably representing Australia at the Venice Biennale and the Istanbul Biennial.

Ah Kee has a very diverse art practice, using a broad range of techniques and media such as painting, installation, photography and text-based art. He is particularly renowned for his manipulation of colonial language and imagery to highlight racial issues in Australia. His works are hosted in both public and private collections around the world.

In , Ah Kee, along with other Indigenous Australian artists Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd and Joshua Herd, created ProppaNOW – an organisation dedicated to supporting urban Indigenous artists in Brisbane and combating cultural stereotypes.

Personal life and education

Vernon Ah Kee was born in Innisfail, Queensland, in to Merv and Margaret Ah Kee, who were Indigenous rights activists.[1] Like most other Indigenous people in Australia, the family was not included in the population census until [2] As well as his Aboriginal heritage, he also has some Chinese ancestry from his great-grandfather, but Ah Kee has stated that he identifies more with his Indigenous heritage,[1] saying "I think of myself as a Rainforest Aboriginal, a Buma".[3]

His family moved to Cairns when he was 12 years old,[3] and Ah Kee sketched avidly at this time.[1] He attended only Catholic schools, in Cairns going to St Augustine's College[3] (a Marist Brothers school[4]).

After attending Cairns TAFE where he learned screen printing,[3] Ah Kee started his Bachelor of Visual Art at Queensland College of Art in Brisbane in He majored in Contemporary Indigenous Australian art and earned his degree in He then went on to do honours in fine art from to , and then completed a doctorate in fine art from to During his studies, he had two solo exhibitions hosted at his college's art gallery as part of his postgraduate work – whitefella normal blackfella me in and con Text in [5]

In , his father died in a car accident.

In Ah Kee drew Portrait of My Father, a task that he described as a "labour of love".[6]

Ah Kee suffered a heart attack in but managed to recover in time for his exhibition Not an animal or a plant.[1][7]

Career

Art practice

While Ah Kee incorporates a broad range of different art mediums, from life drawings to video installations, a consistent theme across all of his artworks is his examination of racism in Australia.[8][9][10][11][12][6][13] Ah Kee has said that his art practice has been influenced by a wide range of artists and styles, but most significantly by other Indigenous artists such as Kevin Gilbert, Trevor Nickolls, Richard Bell and Gordon Bennett, stating that "I can see my own life and history"[14] in their artworks.

In particular, Bell and Bennett's manipulation of colonial text and images encouraged him to broaden his art practice and experiment with media beyond drawing - the text art, in particular, is a common technique among ProppaNOW artists.[15] He also credits the politics of Malcolm X and James Baldwin, two prominent African American activists, as early inspirations for both his art practice and personal activism, as well as Barbara Kruger's propaganda-inspired art.[16]

Many of his text-based artworks ("word art") contain colonial language that have been manipulated and rewritten to create a secondary meaning, such as his austracism being a play on the word "ostracism",[12] and becauseitisbitter appropriating a poem from American poet Stephen Crane to portray an Indigenous experience of contemporary Australia.

It has been suggested that the black and white text introduces the concept of racial relations in Australia[10] and that the word play makes the audience think more deeply on the issues represented.[17] The Museum of Contemporary Art Australia described his text-based art as "point[ing] to prejudices and agendas embedded in Australian society and politics.

These puns and words-within-words fuse the history and language of colonisation with contemporary experiences and issues".[18]

Ah Kee has also engaged with drawing and painting mediums to highlight the modern Indigenous experience. fantasies of the good () is a series of 13 detailed charcoal life drawings of different members of Ah Kee's family, who are all identified by name.

The series uses a mug-shot style and is suggested to reference the documentation of Indigenous Australians by some anthropologists in the twentieth century; the Indigenous people who were documented were unnamed and the works were rather referred to by numbers. Ah Kee wanted to convey Australia's history of racism and has stated that "These drawings and what they represent are my evidence".[19] His portrait, I see deadly people: Lex Wotton, depicted the titular man through bold paint strokes.[20] Ah Kee explained that Wotton's actions during the Palm Island Riots led to him being negatively misrepresented in the media, and the artist decided that "Lex should look bold and brave" in his portrait.[20] His exhibition of large, detailed charcoal and crayon portraits featured in the exhibition Transforming Tindale at the State Library of Queensland[21] was based on that library's collection of anthropological photographs taken by Norman Tindale,[22] and included some of Ah Kee's relatives.[21]

Ah Kee has used video installation art, most notably in his exhibition Tall Man, to create confronting reflections of Australian racism.

In Tall Man, Ah Kee collected and edited, alongside filmmaker and producer Alex Barnes, footage from the Palm Island riots, an event that occurred after the death of Indigenous man Cameron Doomadgee in police custody, and retold the controversial story from an Indigenous perspective.[23][24] The installation played across four screens and juxtaposed a peaceful representation of Palm Island with the chaos of the riots, concluding with footage of protesters holding up signs with Christian-related statements such as "Thou shalt not covet the land no more".[25] Maura Reilly suggests this was to reference the hypocrisy of white Australian Christians in their treatment of Indigenous peoples.[23] In , Tall Man was included in Tate Modern's exhibition A Year in Art: Australia , an exhibition dedicated to Indigenous art relating to land rights and the Eddie Mabo High Court Decision.[26][27]

His recent work, the island, also features a video installation, in which Ah Kee highlights Australia's "brutal" immigration system through the recounting of an Afghan refugee couple's story, rather than wholly focusing on the experiences of Indigenous Australians.[28]

proppaNOW

Main article: ProppaNOW

Along with Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd and Joshua Herd, all artists based in Brisbane, Ah Kee is a founding member of proppaNOW.[15] Bell had stated in "Aboriginal art – its a white thing", saying that the industry was controlled by white people,[29] a sentiment echoed by Ah Kee.[16] The ProppaNOW artists seek to refute the white belief that remote Indigenous Australians are the only true Aboriginal people, and to re-establish the presence of urban Indigenous people in society.

The founding members created the organisation after the government's Queensland Indigenous Artists Marketing Export Agency (QIAMEA) appeared to focus more on Indigenous artists from rural communities than on those from urban areas.[15]

At a Canberra proppaNOW exhibition in , Ah Kee displayed his artwork You Deicide.

Senior Curator at the National Museum of Australia, Margo Neale, suggested that the work's deliberate misuse of deicide was a comment on the role of Christian-based religions in the "cultural terrorism" of Aboriginal people, and that the manipulation of colonial language in the work was a common "tactical device used by the proppaNOW artists".[15]

Dark + Disturbing

Dark + Disturbing is a curatorial project by Ah Kee.[30] In August , he mounted the exhibition Dark + Disturbing: Gordon Hookey for proppaNOW at the Cairns Indigenous Art Fair, featuring the work of fellow collaborator in proppaNow, Gordon Hookey.[31]

Reception

Reviews and criticisms of his art

Ah Kee has generally received positive reviews of his art, often being praised for his clever reinventions of colonial language to highlight racism in Australia and noted for the dual personal and political nature of his art.[13][20][11][32] His Tall Man exhibition, a video and text installation of the Palm Island Riots, was called a "smartly composed yet painful examination of racial relations in Australia" by Art Asia Pacific Magazine.[23]

Art critic and broadcaster Andrew Frost reviewed some of Ah Kee's works at the Sydney Festival and quotes the artist: "this is not history, this is my life" and "this is not political, it's personal".

Frost gave particular praise for the artist's charcoal drawings of his family, the form referencing the documentation of Indigenous peoples by 20th century anthropologists, finding that Ah Kee was personalising a traditionally impersonal genre.[11]

When Ah Kee was awarded the Redlands Konica Minolta Art Prize, one of the judges, National Art School curator Judith Blackall, also noted the dual political and personal nature of Ah Kee's work and how it impacts the audience.

  • Vernon Ah Kee: Legacy of Tindale Symposium
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  • In regard to his portrait of Lex Wotton, she stated that “Vernon’s masterful drawing technique of charcoal and acrylic paint on canvas goes from strength to strength. This portrait is particularly powerful as it shows Lex Wotton – who the artist knows well as he is married to Vernon’s cousin – in profile, with an intense gaze. Importantly, the story behind the portrait is of great significance, both personally for the artist and politically for Australia".[32]

    In Ah Kee's exhibition, The Island, Andrew Brooks suggested that the show was criticising the romanticised, white settler mythology of Australia and was trying to remind the audience of Australia's indigenous presence.

    Unlike Frost, Brooks determined the inclusion of the Yuendumu doors to be "a powerful statement about the continuity of Indigenous sovereignty in this country", especially in their juxtaposition with the Walpiri Dreamtime paintings. Brooks judged that the contrast between the racist graffiti of Yuendumu doors and the "vibrant" Dreamtime paintings indicated that indigenous culture was more than what white Australian culture limited it to be.[33]

    Awards

    In , Ah Kee was a finalist for the Art Gallery of New South Wales' Archibald Prize with his portrait I see deadly people: Lex Wotton.

    Wootton man is Ah Kee's cousin-in-law and was a key figure in the Palm Island Riots of [20] In the same year, Ah Kee was also awarded Visual Artist of the Year in the Deadly Awards, the National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Music, Sport, Entertainment & Community Awards.[34]

    In , the A$25,Redlands Konika Minolta established artist prize was awarded to Ah Kee for his charcoal rendition of Lex Wotton.[32]

    In , Ah Kee was awarded a Visual Arts Fellowship by the Australia Council for the Arts.

    The fellowship is worth up to A$80, and awarded to prominent artists in mid-career. Ah Kee planned to use his fellowship grant to exhibit his work in England and at other galleries abroad, as well as to produce new artworks.[35]

    Media

    In Ah Kee featured as one of six Indigenous artists in the ABC TV series This Place: Artist Series.

    The series is a partnership between the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and the National Gallery of Australia, in which the producers travelled to the countries of "some of Australia's greatest Indigenous artists to share stories about their work, their country, and their communities".[36][37]

    In Ah Kee was also featured in the ABC Arts documentary "Not A Willing Participant" directed by Alex Barnes and Produced by Justin Morrissey, which followed his exhibition at the Venice Biennale.

    [38]

    Exhibitions

    As of 31&#;December&#;[update], Ah Kee had displayed his art at 30 solo exhibitions and group exhibitions, all around the world.[5] He continues to create and exhibit his art in ,[8] with plans to exhibit more of his work abroad.[35] His exhibitions include:[5][8][33]

    Year Exhibition Exhibition Type Gallery Place Country
    If I was WhiteSolo Metro Arts CentreBrisbane Australia
    The Which WaySolo Queensland College of Art Gallery Brisbane Australia
    whitefella normal blackfella meSolo (Postgraduate) Queensland College of Art Gallery Brisbane Australia
    non-PeopleSolo Bellas Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Transit NarrativesGroup Centro per la Arti Visive LE VENEZIE TrevisoItaly
    Salone espositivo Auronzo di CadoreItaly
    MunicipioGroup Queensland College of Art Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Victorian College of the ArtsMelbourneAustralia
    consentSolo Gallery 1 of the Institute of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    Places That Name UsGroup Ian Potter Museum of ArtMelbourne Australia
    1 Square Mile, Brisbane BoundariesGroup Museum of BrisbaneBrisbane Australia
    AbstractionsGroup The Drill Hall Canberra, ACT Australia
    This Is Not AmericaGroup (unmentioned) DüsseldorfGermany
    Queensland College of Art Brisbane Australia
    Story Place: Indigenous Art of Cape York and the RainforestGroup Queensland Art Gallery Brisbane Australia
    4 x 4Group Institute of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    5 White CubesGroup Forum Kunst Art Residency RottweilGermany
    Feedback: Art, Social Consciousness and ResistanceGroup Museum of Art Melbourne Australia
    fantasies of the goodSolo Bellas Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    skinGroup Long Gallery, Salamanca Arts CentreHobart, Tas.

    Australia
    Cultural Copy: Visual Conversations on Indigenous Art and Cultural AppropriationGroup Fowler Museum of Cultural HistoryLos AngelesUSA
    blak insights: Contemporary Indigenous Art from the Queensland Art GalleryGroup Queensland Art GalleryBrisbane Australia
    ART TV Australian Culture NowGroup Australian Centre for the Moving ImageMelbourne Australia
    Spirit and Vision: Aboriginal ArtGroup Sammlung Essl—Kunsthaus KlosterneuburgAustria
    you must hitSolo Bellas Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    mythunderstandingSolo Contemporary Art Centre of South AustraliaAdelaideAustralia
    ARC ArtGroup Design & Craft Biennial, Brisbane City HallBrisbane Australia
    Thick and FastGroup The PowerhouseBrisbane Australia
    Art Urbain du PacificGroup Diff’ Art Pacific, The Castle of St-Auvent Saint AuventFrance
    The Grey VoiceGroup Tin Sheds Gallery SydneyAustralia
    UntitledGroup The Lane Gallery Auckland New Zealand
    Face Value: Video portraiture from the PacificGroup Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney Australia
    Museum of Brisbane Brisbane Australia
    not an animal or a plantSolo Bellas Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Yours, Mine, Ours: The ABC of EverythingGroup Campbelltown Arts CentreSydney Australia
    There Goes the NeighbourhoodGroup Ambleside Street Studio Brisbane Australia
    Colonial to ContemporaryGroup Dell Gallery Brisbane Australia
    The Sixth Drawing BiennaleGroup Drill Hall Gallery, ANUCanberra Australia
    MCA Collection: New Acquisitions Group Museum of Contemporary ArtSydney Australia
    Radical Regionalism: The Empire of ShadowsGroup Museum of LondonLondonUnited Kingdom
    (unmentioned) OntarioCanada
    Queensland LiveGroup (tour) Queensland Art Gallery Brisbane Australia
    (unmentioned) Gladstone, Qld Australia
    (unmentioned) Logan, Vic.

    Australia
    (unmentioned) BundabergAustralia
    (unmentioned) Cairns Australia
    (unmentioned) Ipswich, Qld Australia
    (unmentioned) Cleveland, Qld Australia
    (unmentioned) Mackay, Qld Australia
    (unmentioned) Toowoomba, Qld Australia
    DancelinesGroup George Adams Gallery, The Arts CentreMelbourne Australia
    cant chantSolo Institute of Modern Art (IMA) Brisbane Australia
    unwrittenSolo Bellas Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    conTextSolo (Postgraduate) Queensland College of Art Gallery Brisbane Australia
    DrawingsSolo Brisbane State High SchoolBrisbane Australia
    Power & Beauty: Indigenous Art NowGroup Heide Museum of Modern ArtMelbourne Australia
    RegionalismsGroup University of Queensland Art MuseumBrisbane Australia
    National Indigenous Art Triennial: Culture WarriorsGroup National Gallery of ArtCanberra Australia
    The Amersham TrophyGroup Ambleside Street Studio, West End Brisbane Australia
    Sunshine StateGroup Smart State, Campbelltown Arts Centre Sydney Australia
    Friendly FireGroup (ProppaNOW) George Petelin Gallery Gold Coast, Qld Australia
    Thresholds of ToleranceGroup School of Art Gallery Canberra Australia
    Raised by WolvesGroup Art Gallery of Western AustraliaPerthAustralia
    belief suspensionSolo Artspace Sydney Australia
    borninthisskinSolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Revolutions: Forms that TurnGroup Biennale of SydneySydney Australia
    In the space of elsewhereGroup Stanley Picker Gallery London England
    New MillenniumGroup Lismore Regional Gallery Lismore, NSW Australia
    On PaperGroup Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    OptimismGroup Gallery of Modern ArtBrisbane Australia
    Once RemovedGroup 53rd Venice Biennale of Art Venice, Italy Australia
    Terra Nullius: Contemporary Art from AustraliaGroup ACC Galerie WeimarGermany
    I walk the line: new Australian drawingGroup Museum of Contemporary Art Sydney Australia
    Avoiding myth and message: Australian artists & the literary worldGroup Museum of Contemporary Art Sydney Australia
    Tall ManSolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Vernon Ah KeeSolo City GalleryWellingtonNew Zealand
    WaruSolo Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    Kick Arts, Contemporary Arts Cairns, Qld Australia
    Blow your house inSolo Mackenzie Art GalleryReginaCanada
    becauseitisbitterSolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    roundabout.

    Group City Gallery WellingtonWellington New Zealand
    Basil Sellers Art Prize, Group Ian Potter Museum of Art Melbourne Australia
    National Works on Paper AwardGroup Mornington Peninsula Regional GalleryMelbourne Australia
    Jus’ Drawn, Group Linden Contemporary Arts Centre Melbourne Australia
    PUTSCH proppaNOWGroup (proppaNOW Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural InstituteAdelaideAustralia
    Tall ManSolo Gertrude ContemporaryMelbourne Australia
    Bad SignSolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Barack CommissionsGroup National Gallery of VictoriaMelbourne Australia
    The Black Sea.

    Group Kickarts Contemporary Arts Cairns, Qld Australia
    Counting Coup, Group Museum of Contemporary Native ArtNew MexicoUSA
    Evolving Identities: Contemporary Indigenous ArtGroup John Curtin GalleryPerth, WA Australia
    Erased: Contemporary Australian DrawingGroup (Asialink) Nanwang Academy of Fine Arts Gallery (NAFA) (unmentioned) Singapore
    PSG Art Gallery, Silpakorn UniversityBangkokThailand
    Chiang Mai University Faculty of Fine Art GalleryChiang MaiThailand
    Khon Kaen University Art Gallery Khon KaenThailand
    National Art School Sydney Australia
    Ten Years of Contemporary Art: The James Sourris CollectionGroup Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    Hallmarks of the HungrySolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Everything Falls ApartGroup ArtspaceSydney Australia
    Propositions Part 2Group Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Negotiating this World: Contemporary Australian ArtGroup National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne Australia
    unDisclosed: 2nd National Indigenous Art TriennialGroup National Gallery of Australia Canberra Australia
    The Future’s Not What it Used to BeGroup Touring Chapter Gallery Cardiff, WalesAustralia
    Newlyn Art Gallery and ExchangeCornwallEngland
    Making Change: Celebrating the 40 Years of Australia-China Diplomatic RelationsGroup NAMOC BeijingChina
    COFA Sydney Australia
    Transforming Tindale[21]Solo State Library of QueenslandBrisbane Queensland
    Invasion PaintingsSolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    My Country: I Still Call Australia HomeGroup Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    Voice and ReasonGroup Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    Sakahan: 1st International Quinquennial of New Indigenous ArtGroup National Gallery of CanadaOttawa Canada
    ShadowlifeGroup Bendigo Art GalleryBendigo, Vic.

    Australia
    BrutalitiesSolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Saltwater CountryGroup Gold Coast City Gallery Gold Coast, Qld Australia
    Subject to RuinGroup Casula Power HouseCasula, NSW Australia
    Four RoomsGroup Adelaide FestivalAdelaide Australia
    EncountersGroup National Museum of AustraliaCanberra Australia
    Propositions ThreeGroup Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    When Silence FallsGroup Art Gallery of New South Wales Sydney Australia
    Brutal Truths,Group Griffith University Art Museum Brisbane Australia
    The 14th Istanbul Biennial SALTWATER: A Theory of Thought FormsGroup (multiple venues)[39]IstanbulTurkey
    GOMA QGroup Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    Imaginary AccordGroup Institute of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    BlackoutGroup Sydney College of the Arts Sydney Australia
    See You at the BarricadesGroup Art Gallery of New South Wales Sydney Australia
    Sugar Spin: You, me, art and everythingGroup Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane Australia

    Everywhen: The Eternal Present in Indigenous Art from Australia,

    Group Harvard Art MuseumsCambridge, MassachusettsUSA
    With Secrecy and DespatchGroup Campbelltown Arts CentreSydney Australia
    Frontier ImaginariesGroup Institute of Modern Art and QUT Art Museum Brisbane Australia
    Black,White & RestiveGroup Newcastle Art Gallery Newcastle, NSW Australia
    Endless Circulation: Tarrawarra Biennial, Group TarraWarra Museum of ArtTarraWarra, Victoria Australia
    Over the FenceGroup UQ Art Museum Brisbane Australia
    On the Origin of ArtGroup Museum of Old and New Art Hobart, Tas.

    Australia
    Shut Up and PaintGroup National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne Australia
    OdeSolo Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    Will I LiveSolo Apartment der Kunst MunichGermany
    Not a plant or an animalSolo National Art School Gallery Sydney Australia
    A Change Is Gonna ComeGroup National Museum of Australia Canberra Australia
    Australian CollectionGroup Permanent Hang, Queensland Art Gallery Brisbane Australia
    BOARD: Surf and Skate Cultures Meet Contemporary ArtGroup Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery Lake Macquarie, NSW Australia
    Boundary LinesGroup Griffith University Art Museum Brisbane Australia
    Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Divided WorldsGroup Art Gallery of South Australia Adelaide Australia
    Riots: Slow Cancellation of the FutureGroup ifa-Galerie Berlin Germany
    Playback, Dobell Group Australian Drawing Biennial, Art Gallery of NSW Sydney Australia
    Hunter Red: CorpusGroup Newcastle Gallery Newcastle, NSWAustralia
    Shadow LightGroup Milani Gallery Brisbane Australia
    cantchantGroup Art Gallery of AlbertaAlbertaCanada
    Body LanguageGroup National Gallery of Australia Canberra Australia
    I, ObjectGroup Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane Australia
    Hope Dies Last: Art at the End of Optimism, Group Gertrude ContemporaryMelbourne Australia
    Australia.

    Antipodean Stories

    Group Padiglione D'Arte Contemporanea Milano MilanItaly
    The Island[40]Solo Campbelltown Arts Centre Sydney Australia

    In Vernon Ah Kee was interviewed in a digital story and oral history for the State Library of Queensland's James C Sourris AM Collection.[41] In the interview Ah Kee talks to journalist Daniel Browning about his art, his family, the artist group proppaNOW, and being an Aboriginal artist.[42]

    References

    1. ^ abcd"Vernon Ah Kee at the National Art School Gallery".

      Art Guide Australia. 10 January Retrieved 5 February

    2. ^"'Not an animal or a plant': Putting a human face to Referendum". NITV. Retrieved 21 February
    3. ^ abcdAh Kee, Vernon ().

      "Vernon Ah Kee digital story, educational interview and oral history" (Interview). James C. Sourris artist interview series Interviewed by Browning, Daniel. State Library of Queensland.

      Vernon ah kee biography of nancy pelosi Running Dog. Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information, and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia's inclusion policy. References [ edit ]. Retrieved 5 February

      Retrieved 16 May Transcript of interview with Vernon Ah Kee by Daniel Browning (6 December )] Video

    4. ^"St Augustine's Cairns". St Augustine's College. Retrieved 16 May
    5. ^ abc"Vernon Ah Kee". Milani Gallery.

      23 August Retrieved 28 April

    6. ^ ab"Portrait of my father – What's On – Exhibitions – Cairns Art Gallery". . Retrieved 6 February
    7. ^"Revisioning the Aborigine". ABC Radio National. 6 February Retrieved 10 February
    8. ^ abc"Vernon Ah Kee: The Island".

      Vernon ah kee biography of nancy wilson Ah Kee has used video installation art, most notably in his exhibition Tall Man , to create confronting reflections of Australian racism. Orders are processed within 72 hours from confirmed payment. What are you looking for? His works are shown internationally as well as domestically in both public and private collections.

      Sydney Festival. Retrieved 10 February

    9. ^"Indigenous art and culture on show at 14th Istanbul Biennial". Australia Council. Retrieved 21 February
    10. ^ ab"abhoriginal | MCA Australia". . Retrieved 21 February
    11. ^ abcFrost, Andrew (9 January ).

      "Vernon Ah Kee review – racism and politics dominate show that should not be dismissed".

      Vernon ah kee biography of nancy grace Ah Kee uses a broad range of techniques and media such as painting, installation photography, video and text-based art. Art critic and broadcaster Andrew Frost reviewed some of Ah Kee's works at the Sydney Festival and quotes the artist: "this is not history, this is my life" and "this is not political, it's personal". Artlink Magazine. University of Queensland Art Museum.

      The Guardian. ISSN&#; Retrieved 10 February

    12. ^ abAh Kee, Vernon. "Austracism". Item held by National Gallery of Australia. Retrieved 10 February
    13. ^ ab"Vernon Ah Kee".

      Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. Retrieved 10 February

    14. ^Ah Kee, Vernon; Art Gallery of New South Wales (27 April ). "The art that made me: Vernon Ah Kee". Art sets. Art Gallery of New South Wales. Retrieved 20 March
    15. ^ abcd"Learning to be proppa&#;: Aboriginal artists collective ProppaNOW".

      Artlink Magazine. March Retrieved 10 February

    16. ^ ab"Vernon Ah Kee – sovereign warrior". Artlink Magazine. Retrieved 6 February
    17. ^"becauseitisbitter, () by Vernon Ah Kee". Home. Retrieved 20 March
    18. ^"Vernon Ah Kee: abhoriginal, ".

      Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. Retrieved 20 March

    19. ^"Dennis Ah Kee (Uncle Dennis) from fantasies of the good". MCA Australia. Retrieved 21 February
    20. ^ abcd"Archibald Prize Archibald finalist: I see deadly people, Lex Wotton by Vernon Ah Kee".

      Art Gallery of New South Wales. Retrieved 3 April

    21. ^ abc"Transforming Tindale". State Library of Queensland. Retrieved 16 May
    22. ^" Tindale Genealogical Collection ". John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland.

      Retrieved 17 May

    23. ^ abcMaura Reilly, Vernon Ah Kee: Tall Man, Art and Asia Pacific Magazine, no. 73 May & June , pp.
    24. ^"tall man | MCA Australia". . Retrieved 21 February
    25. ^Tate.

      "'tall man', Vernon Ah Kee, ". Tate. Retrieved 16 April

    26. ^Cumming, Laura (13 June ). "A Year in Art: Australia, review – dreams and nightmares". The Observer. ISSN&#; Retrieved 16 April
    27. ^Tate. "A Year in Art: Australia | Tate Modern". Tate.

      Retrieved 16 April

    28. ^"Vernon Ah Kee's The Island". . Retrieved 21 February
    29. ^" Aboriginal art: is it a white thing? – University of Wollongong – UOW". . Retrieved 20 February
    30. ^"About". Dark and Disturbing. 21 June Retrieved 21 March
    31. ^Watego, Leesa; Ah Kee, Vernon (9 August ).

      "Dark+Disturbing features Gordon Hookey at Cairns Indigenous Art Fair ". Dark and Disturbing. Retrieved 21 March

    32. ^ abc" Redlands Konica Minolta Art Prize | Winners announced". Art Almanac. 15 April Retrieved 20 February
    33. ^ abRiddle, Naomi (5 February ).

    34. Vernon ah kee biography of nancy sinatra
    35. Vernon ah kee biography of nancy drew
    36. Vernon ah kee biography of nancy johnson
    37. "The Island (Part 1) – Vernon Ah Kee". Running Dog. Retrieved 21 February

    38. ^" Deadly Awards". The Deadlys. 20 May Retrieved 3 April
    39. ^ ab"Strong success for First Nations artists in Australia Council Fellowships". Australia Council. 13 September Retrieved 24 February
    40. ^Whitford, Maddie (13 April ).

      Vernon ah kee biography of nancy Sourris artist interview series Metro Arts Centre. Co-founder of Iscariot Media , Vernon Ah Kee, juggles between his own varied creative works and his highly successful business advising other Indigenous arts practitioners on how to grow and develop their ventures. Categories : births Living people Artists from Queensland 21st-century Australian male artists Australian Aboriginal artists.

      "Producers reflect on profound experience walking with Indigenous artists on country". ABC News. Retrieved 14 April

    41. ^"This Place: Artist Series". ABC iview. 6 March Retrieved 14 April
    42. ^"Not A Willing Participant Trailer". YouTube. Retrieved 14 May
    43. ^""SALTWATER: A Theory of Thought Forms"- 14th Istanbul Biennial •".

      Mousse Magazine (in Italian). 15 September Retrieved 20 February

    44. ^Reich, Hannah (22 February ). "Refugee and Indigenous Australian experiences drawn together in exhibition by artist Vernon Ah Kee - ABC News". ABC (ABC Arts). Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 28 April
    45. ^"James C Sourris AM Collection".

      State Library Of Queensland. Retrieved 18 May

    46. ^"Richard Bell digital story, educational interview and oral history". State Library of Queensland. Retrieved 18 May

    Further reading

    External links