Tania Ferrier

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Tania Ferrier
Born1958
NationalityAustralian
EducationWestern Australian College of Advanced Education, W.A.I.T (now Curtin University)
Known forPainting

Installation Art

Feminist Fashion
Notable workANGRY UNDERWEAR, HUMMANINSIDE, THE QUOD PROJECT, TALKBACK
Websitetaniaferrier.com.au

Tania Ferrier is a contemporary Australian artist. She was born in 1958 in Perth, Western Australia. She moved to New York and worked there as an artist between 1988 and 1992. In 1992 she returned to Perth. She moved to Melbourne in 2012 and returned to Perth in 2019.

Angry Underwear, a feminist fashion project began in 1988 when Ferrier witnessed the sexual assault of a stripper in Brooklyn, New York. Ferrier created a range of fabric painted cotton underwear, featuring vicious animal faces, for the strippers to wear on stage as a performative intervention in retaliation – Art as a weapon. The project went onto to garner international media attention when famous celebrities wore her underwear, including Madonna.[1]

The project became the subject of a feature film script, titled Angry Underwear, which is in development through funding from the Australian government. Ferrier co-wrote the script with Kelly Lefever. The script was optioned by Feisty Dame Productions in Perth, Western Australia.[2]

Artist career[edit]

Angry Underwear. Photograph by Tania Ferrier.

Ferrier developed an art practice primarily as a painter on themes of social justice, feminism and the history of the places she has lived. Between 1990 and 2020 Ferrier worked in the Film & TV industry in New York and Australia as a production designer on Clean, Shaven and as set dresser, continuing this work concurrent with her art practice. In Ferrier’s earlier career she produced a series of large scale charcoal illustrations from texts in the Battye Library about colonial frontier massacres titled The Bicentennial Series. Three of these works are now held in the Murdoch University, Edith Cowan University and Albany art collections.[3][4]

In 1998 Ferrier travelled to New York and squatted in an abandoned building in Manhattan. She began her feminist fashion project Angry Underwear after witnessing the sexual assault of a stripper at Club Wild Fyre in Brooklyn where Ferrier worked as a bartender. An exclusive lingerie store in Manhattan, Enelra Lingerie, began selling Angry Underwear and International media covered the story. Ferrier returned to Perth in 1989 for a funded exhibition of Angry Underwear at Artemis Gallery in Perth. The shadow minister for the arts, Mr. Phillip Pendal, deemed the exhibition obscene and an inappropriate use of government funding on a Channel 7 news report on April 1, 1989. The media attention brought hundreds of people to the exhibition and two of Ferrier’s paintings were bought by the Art Gallery of Western Australia. Ferrier returned to New York and continued the underwear project until she returned to live in Perth again in 1992.[5][6]

Ferrier began developing a figurative expressionist style of painting for several solo exhibitions and received numerous awards and artist residencies.[citation needed] In 2007 Ferrier began an exploration of a multi-disciplinary art practice which was influenced by her work in film and television. She introduced photography, set building and consultation with local Aboriginal Elders in The Quod Project in 2011,[7] exploring her family history at Rottnest Island as a layer that obscured the Aboriginal history as a penal colony.[8][9][10][11][12]

In the follow-on exhibition, Hummaninside in 2013 at the Fremantle Prison gallery Ferrier consulted with local Aboriginal people about their family histories of incarceration and collaborated with photographer James Kerr and Aboriginal film maker Glen Stasiuk in the production of the work.[13][14][15]

In 2012 Ferrier was awarded The Go-Anywhere Residency through Artsource[16] and travelled extensively in the United States of America in 2013 researching for Talkback,[17] an exhibition that explored race relations and identity through photography and video interviews. This project grew into a collaboration with USA artists Yulissa Morales, Mirla Jackson, US and Australian artist Laura Mitchell and Australian artist Leslie Morgan. Talkback was exhibited in Perth in 2014, Melbourne in 2015, Lynchburg USA in 2015 and in New York USA in 2016.[18][19][20][21][22]

Ferrier moved to live in Melbourne in 2013 and continued her art practice as well as working as a set dresser in the film and television industry.[23]

She exhibited regularly in Melbourne and Perth during this time and began writing a feature film script based on her own life. This script is currently in development and has received funding from Screen Australia and Screen West as well as reaching second round, Sundance Film Labs in 2018 and 2019.[24][25]

Education[edit]

  • Western Australian College of Advanced Education
  • Bachelor of Fine Arts, Western Australian Institute of Technology (now Curtin University), Bentley, Western Australia.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sofia, Zoe (2018). Weston, Gemma (ed.). Remembering Artemis. Crawley, Western Australia: UWA Press. pp. 126–131. ISBN 9781760800154.
  2. ^ "Funding Approvals 2017–2018 development funding". Screen Australia. Scr. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  3. ^ "The Artist And Her Work". Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery. UWA. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  4. ^ AMERICAN DREAMS catalogue. Perth, Western Australia: Art Gallery of Western Australia. 1999.
  5. ^ "Angry Underwear". Salamanca Arts Centre. 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  6. ^ "Away exhibition". ABC TV. STATELINE. 24 February 2007.
  7. ^ "Tania Ferrier: The Quod Project". www.taniaferrier.com.au. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  8. ^ Jorgensen, Darren (20 October 2012). "A Sad History Comes Alive". The West Australian.
  9. ^ Murray, Elizabeth. "Rottnest Revealed". No. 23 Feb 2011. The Koori Mail.
  10. ^ Fitzpatrick, Donal (11 February 2011). "Unveiling a sorry past". The West Australian.
  11. ^ Lacy, Bridget (21 January 2011). "Rotto secrets put in perspective". The West Australian.
  12. ^ Spencer, Ric (2011). "The Quod Project". Artlink. 31 (1): 86.
  13. ^ Georgatos, Gerry (27 June 2011). "Humaninside". The National Indigenous Times.
  14. ^ Lipbscombe, Andre (2011). "Recent Photography". Fremantle Art Centre.
  15. ^ Murray, Elizabeth (April 2011). "False Beliefs". Artsource Newsletter.
  16. ^ Ferrier, Tania. "Go Anywhere - Residency in New York". Artsource. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  17. ^ "TALKBACK « Tania Ferrier Artist". Tania Ferrier Artist. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  18. ^ Phillips, Perdita (2012). "Talk Black USA". Art Monthly Australia Artnotes. 248.
  19. ^ Gillis, Casey. "'Talkback' exhibit explores identity, race in America, Australia". The News and Advance. Lee BHM Corp. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  20. ^ Morgan, Leslie. "Tania Ferrier's Talkback". Artsource. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  21. ^ "Tania Ferrier, artist". Les Femmes Folles Women in Art. Les Femmes Folles. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  22. ^ Di Cireo, Lyn (20 August 2014). "A new canvas for social justice". The West Australian.
  23. ^ "Tania Ferrier". IMDB. IMDb.com. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  24. ^ D’Cruz, Rushil (18 March 2020). "Flux Gallery Review: EMBEDDED 2020". Pelican Magazine. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  25. ^ "Inspector Sorrow, White Dresses and Angry Underwear". Art World Women. 7 February 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2020.

External links[edit]