Juno gemes biography channel wikipedia

Juno Gemes

Australian photographer

Juno Gemes (born ) is a Hungarian-born Australian activist and photographer, best known for her photography of Aboriginal Australians.[1] A performer, theatre director, writer and publisher, Gemes was one of the founders of Australia's first experimental theatre group The Human Body.

Early life

Juno Gemes was born in in Budapest, emigrating to Australia with her parents Alex and Lucy Gemes[2] in [3]

Career

Theatre

Gemes studied at the University of Sydney and the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) and graduated in [4] In Gemes directed The Human Body Australia's first experimental theatre group, established with Johnny Allen and Clem Gorman.[5][6] Some of The Human Body Performances at the Powerhouse warehouse in Haymarket, featured a geodesic light dome built by Jacky Joy Jacobson and Michael Glasheen from 5, light bulbs.[7] Gemes worked in theatre and film, and worked in London sporadically in the late s and s, where she wrote for the London-based underground newspaper International Times.

While in London, Gemes performed in some of Yoko Ono's work including the avant-garde film Bottoms and a performance piece The scream at the Perfumed Garden.[8]

Photography

Gemes began exhibiting her photography in Australia in , and held her first solo exhibition, "We Wait No More", in [9] In , Gemes became involved with the Yellow House Artist Collective in Potts Point, Sydney.[3] Collaborating with another member of the Collective, landscape artist Mick Glasheen, to document traditional stories about Uluru.[7] They stayed in the Central Desert for six months in a geodesic dome seeking out the Pitjantjara elders in the area.[7]

Gemes is known for her photographs depicting the cultural and political struggle of indigenous peoples in Australia,[10][11] including land rights, the handing back of Uluru to the traditional owners, and the National Apology to the Stolen Generations in the Federal Parliament.[12] Gemes describes Nothing Personal by James Baldwin and Richard Avedon, which examines American culture including civil rights and the rise of black nationalism,[13] as an early influence in her work.[14] In , Gemes photographed American civil rights leader James Baldwin on the rooftop of the Athenaeum Hotel in London.[15][10][16]

Under Another Sky, Juno Gemes Photography –, a survey of Gemes work from over twenty years was exhibited in Budapest and Paris in the late s.[1]

In , Gemes told The Sydney Morning Herald her reason for taking up photography: "It was because I saw that Aboriginal people were invisible that I took up the camera." Much of her work has documented the Aboriginal rights and land rights movements,[14] from the Aboriginal Tent Embassy to when she was one of ten photographers selected to officially document the Apology to Australia's Indigenous peoples.[17]

Gemes has thirty works in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery in Australia.[18] Her papers are held at the National Library of Australia and the Mitchell Library of the State Library of New South Wales.[19]

Publishing

In Gemes and her partner Australian poet Robert Adamson[17] co-founded, with writer Michael Wilding, independent publishing company Paper Bark Press (sometimes spelt Paperbark[20]), which published Australian poetry.

Wilding left the company in , and Gemes and Adamson continued to run the company[21] until [20]

In Adamson and Gemes collaborated on the publication The Language of Oysters.[22] In January Gemes published Until Justice Comes: Fifty Years of The Movement for Indigenous Rights.

PHOTOGRAPHS - , through Upswell Press.

Juno gemes biography channel Juno Gemes (born ) is a Hungarian-born Australian activist and photographer, best known for her photography of Aboriginal Australians. [1] A performer, theatre director, writer and publisher, Gemes was one of the founders of Australia's first experimental theatre group The Human Body.

[23]

Personal life

Gemes' son, Orlando Gemes, born in London in , is pictured with Essie Coffey OAM in a portrait at the National Portrait Gallery. He travelled with his mother as she documented Aboriginal people and activism.[24]

Selected exhibitions

  • , 5 – 26 November: We wait no more Hogarth Gallery & Apmira[9]
  • , 26 October: Gemes created a visual document of the historic Uluru Handback Ceremony at Uluru NT.[25]
  • , from 19 December: Literary Images, Jacqueline Mitelman, Virginia Wallace-Crabbe and Juno Gemes.

    Special collections section, library of the Australian Defence Force Academy, launched by Robin Wallace-Crabbe[26]

  • , 30 June to 30 November: Our Community exhibition, National Museum of Australia, Canberra[27]
  • , 12 July – 10 September: PROOF: Portraits from The Movement –National Portrait Gallery and Macquarie University Gallery 10 March – 10 May [28][29]
  • , November–December: Gemes' work was included in an exhibition at Carriageworks in Redfern, Sydney, celebrating the 40th anniversary of NAISDA Dance College, called Naya Wa Yugali ("We Dance" in Darkinyung language).[30][31]
  • Juno Gemes: The Quiet Activist, A Survey Exhibition –[10][16]
  • , 17 – 29 September: group show entitled Three Women Artists In Country, Maunsel Wickes at Barry Stern Galleries[32]

References

  1. ^ abJuno Gemes b.

    , Design & Art Australia Online.

  2. ^"Juno Gemes: The Movement for Civil Rights in Australia, to ". Rochford Street Review. 25 November Retrieved 6 February
  3. ^ abJuno Gemes, National Portrait Gallery.
  4. ^"All alumni". National Institute of Dramatic Art.

    23 September Retrieved 5 February

  5. ^Gorman, Clem. "Before The Fringe". Stage Whispers. Retrieved 5 February
  6. ^Maxwell, Ian (October ). "Mayakovsky's hammer: Experimental theatre as romantic modernism, Sydney, –". Australasian Drama Studies (71): – ISSN&#;
  7. ^ abcGlasheen, Michael (10 June ).

    "Drawing on the land: Garigal country (exhibition catalogue)". Issuu. Retrieved 5 February

  8. ^McIntyre, Iain, (), Tomorrow is today&#;: Australia in the psychedelic era, –, Wakefield Press, ISBN&#;: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ abGemes, Juno (), "1 poster&#;: colour; x cm", We wait no more, Hogarth Gallery & Apmira November 5 to 26 , Sydney, , retrieved 5 February &#; via Trove
  10. ^ abc"Juno Gemes – The Quiet Activist&#;: Survey exhibition | Head On Photo Festival".

    . Retrieved 5 February

  11. ^Adair, Linda (25 June ). "Haunting and luminous 'Juno Gemes: The Quiet Activist – A Survey Exhibition –' a response by Linda Adair". Rochford Street Review. Retrieved 6 February
  12. ^Gemes, Juno (January ).

    Biography channel ghost kit To celebrate Juno Gemes’ appointment as Photographer-in-Residence to the Sydney Writers’ Festival, the Festival will be presenting an exhibition of projected images from The Literary Life at the Heritage Pier on Thursday 21 May at pm. Gemes was a Director of Paper Bark Press with Robert Adamson and she.

    "Witnessing the Apology". Australian Aboriginal Studies. 1: –

  13. ^Als, Hilton. "Richard Avedon and James Baldwin's Joint Examination of American Identity". The New Yorker. Retrieved 17 May
  14. ^ abGemes, Juno. "The Political and the Personal Process in Portraiture: Juno Gemes in Conversation - National Portrait Gallery, August " Australian Aboriginal Studies (Canberra, A.C.T.&#;: ) ():
  15. ^"Notebook Revelations: Juno Gemes' portrait of James Baldwin".

    Rochford Street Review. 9 November Retrieved 6 February

  16. ^ abFairley, Gina (27 June ).

  17. Settings
  18. Exhibitions - Juno Gemes
  19. Juno Gemes: Photographer
  20. Juno Gemes - AustralianPhotographers.org
  21. Juno Gemes, National Portrait Gallery
  22. "Review: The Quiet Activist: Juno Gemes Survey, Macquarie University Art Gallery". ArtsHub Australia. Retrieved 5 February

  23. ^ abBaker, Candida (4 May ). "Life on the Hawkesbury: A photographer, a poet and a bowerbird called Spinoza".

    Juno gemes biography channel 6

    Juno Gemes (born ) is a Hungarian-born Australian activist and photographer, best known for her photography of Aboriginal Australians. [1] A performer, theatre director, writer and publisher, Gemes was one of the founders of Australia's first experimental theatre group The Human Body.

    The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 March

  24. ^"Juno Gemes, b. ". National Portrait Gallery people. Retrieved 29 November
  25. ^"Guide to the Papers of Robert Adamson | Academy Library | UNSW Canberra". .

    Juno gemes biography channel 7 Juno Gemes has had 20 solo exhibitions in Sydney, London, Budapest, Paris, and at St. Louis University, USA, where during the Evidence exhibition, she was The Kristin Peterson Speaker on Photography in Between and , Juno Gemes and her partner poet Robert Adamson were Co-Directors of Paper Bark Press.

    Retrieved 5 February

  26. ^ abLea, Bronwyn (14 May ). "Poetry publishing in Australia". Bronwyn Lea. Retrieved 27 August
  27. ^"Paper Bark Press".

    Juno gemes biography channel youtube: Photographer and social justice activist Juno Gemes (b. ) has spent much of her long career documenting the lives and struggles of First Nations people. Born in Budapest, Gemes moved to Australia with her family in

    AustLit. 10 March Retrieved 27 August

  28. ^Adamson, Robert; Gemes, Juno, , (photographer.) (), The language of oysters, Craftsman House, ISBN&#;: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  29. ^Until Justice Comes, Upswell Press, , ISBN:
  30. ^"Essie Coffey (Bush Queen) and Orlando Gemes, (printed )".

    National Portrait Gallery collection. Retrieved 19 March

  31. ^ "Under Another Sky. Uluru Handback Ceremony, Sir Ninian Stephens, Hon. Barry Cohen With Traditional Owners And Their Children by Juno Gemes, b Aust on Josef Lebovic Gallery". Josef Lebovic Gallery. Retrieved 6 February
  32. ^"Guide to antiquarian books now available".

    Canberra Times. 17 December Retrieved 24 March

  33. ^Hinkson, Melinda (). "Review Our Community exhibition, National Museum of Australia, Canberra"(PDF). Aboriginal History. 30: ISSN&#;
  34. ^De Lorenzo, Catherine; Isaacs, Jennifer (), "Photographic proof: Portraits from the Movement – by Juno Gemes", Art Monthly Australia (): 11–13, ISSN&#;
  35. ^Bennie, Angela (9 July ).

    "Charting the moves for justice". Sydney Morning Herald.

  36. ^"NAISDA celebrates 40 years". The Dictionary of Sydney.

  37. Juno gemes biography channel youtube
  38. Biography channel caddyshack
  39. Juno gemes biography channel wikipedia
  40. 24 November Retrieved 26 August

  41. ^"Naya Wa Yugali - We Dance". Carriageworks. Retrieved 26 August
  42. ^Adair, Linda (14 September ). "Gemes, Crispin & Pollak: Exhibition Preview". Rochford Street Review. Retrieved 6 February

External links