Vivian Lynn

Vivian Lynn (born 1931) is a New Zealand artist.

Education

Lynn was born in Wellington in 1931[1] and attended Wellington Girl's College from 1945 to 1948.[2] She completed a Diploma of Fine Arts at the School of Fine Arts at Canterbury University majoring in painting in 1952, and a Diploma of Teaching at Auckland Teachers College in 1954.[3] At art school her lecturers included Rata Lovell-Smith, Bill Sutton and Russell Clark.[4] Lynn recalls the curriculum being focused on the history of Western art, with little attention to New Zealand or contemporary art, although she did meet artists such as Colin McCahon, Toss Woollaston, Doris Lusk and Rita Angus and see their work in The Group exhibitions.[4]

Support of the Women's Art Movement

Lynn was one of the first New Zealand artists to address feminist issues in their work, beginning in 1968.[3] She was an active supporter of the women's art movement in New Zealand and in 1983–84 was involved in setting up the Women's Art Archive.[5]

Lynn was featured in a special issue of the New Zealand feminist magazine Broadsheet published in 1983, focused on feminist art.[6]:189 In an interview Lynn discussed how during World War II she had seen both her parents working in jobs, raising their children and sharing family chores.[6]:189 She continued:

There was value placed on women’s work because it was politically expedient for it to be so in the early 1940s ... so I had formative years where I was conditioned to expect equality. But social values changed after the War as women were required to be wives and mothers again, rather than members of the paid workforce. A profession and marriage were again presented as mutually exclusive.[6]:189

Work

Lynn has worked across a wide range of media, including collages, drawings, paintings, prints, books, sculptures, photographs and installations.[7]

In 1972 Lynn spent a year in America where she developed her interest in printmaking; throughout the 1970s she worked with this medium, producing works such as Book of Forty Images (1973–1974) and Playground, which explore 'the reasons behind women's social and political oppression'.[5][8]

In 1977–1979 Lynn produced a series of works on paper, now held in the Christchurch Art Gallery, in which she reworked drawings and life studies made at art school, in a comment on 'the sexual politics of the Western art historical tradition'.[7]

Lynn is probably best known for her large installation works of the early 1980s. Guarden Gates (1982) (first shown at the Janne Land Gallery, now in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa) is a sculptural installation of seven cyclone-wire mesh gates, woven through with human hair and ribbon.[9] Each piece is titled to reflect cultural stages of a female life: Matrix; Daughter of the father; Sacrifice; Processual ground; Differentiation; Rebirth and Eyes of life, eyes of death.[10] Lynn said, "In my hair pieces of 1982 I have come closer to the toxic object image I need. I want a toxic image that physically shocks - the conscious levels are split open - not the safe anchorage." Another work using hair, Stain, which gives the illusion of a stream of human hair trickling down the cathedral's marble steps, was installed for the New Art in Dunedin project in 1984.

Art historian Priscilla Pitts notes that 'Lynn frequently sought equivalents or proxies for the female body, and this led to a particularly inventive use of materials'.[11]:30 In Guarden Gates, in one work, she set up a frisson by including a small amount of processed animal tissue as a metaphor for the human body. In Lamella/Lamina (1983), a sculptural installation of 15 fragile columns, Lynn used architectural drawing paper processed to create texture, the work itself being installed at Anzart in Hobart in response to threatened rain forest on the Franklin River. The artist said that the columns were, amongst other things, 'a metaphor for vulnerability, sensitivity, and how one toughens up as one gets older ... Lamella/Lamina reflects the layering and interconnectedness, of nature and culture, of skin surface, mind and the political.'[11]:31

Gates of the Goddess – a southern crossing attended by the Goddess (1986, first shown at the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery and now in the collection of the Auckland Art Gallery) consists of three large panels, two of which form a passageway for the viewer and the third being a focal point with the form of the goddess.[5][12] The work brings together many of Lynn's concerns particularly healing the abject as in the 1982 work Mantle. By recovering destroyed and damaged tapa, drawing attention to the low status (craft) assigned to women's production and by analogy to reproduction Lynn creates a work of simple beauty.

Between the late eighties and 2008 Lynn worked with her own DNA imagery in Drawing Connections and her interest in the mind and brain with Rorschach imagery titled Your Mental Set and Mind Field. In 1997 her large installation, showing nine images of her brain, titled Spin: versor versa was shown at City Gallery, Wellington.

A survey exhibition of Lynn’s work titled I, HERE, NOW: Vivian Lynn, curated by Christina Barton, was held at the Adam Art Gallery at Victoria University of Wellington in 2008–09.[13]

Lynn's work is held in public collections throughout New Zealand, including Auckland Art Gallery, the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and Christchurch Art Gallery.[14][15][16]

Exhibitions

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Vivian Lynn's solo exhibitions include:[17]

Group exhibitions in which Lynn has participated include:[17]

References

  1. "Lynn, Vivian". Find New Zealand Artists. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  2. "Vivian Lynn – Hall of Fame". Wellington Girl's College. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  3. 1 2 Brown, Warwick (1996). Another 100 New Zealand Artists. Auckland: Godwit Publishing. ISBN 0908877749.
  4. 1 2 "Interview with Vivian Lynn". Art School 125: 125 years of the School of Fine Arts at the University of Canterbury. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  5. 1 2 3 Eastmond, Elizabeth; Penfold, Merimeri (1986). Women and the arts in New Zealand – Forty Works: 1936–86. Auckland: Penguin Books. ISBN 014009234X.
  6. 1 2 3 Kirker, Anne (1993). New Zealand Women Artists: A Survey of 150 Years (2nd ed.). Tortola, B.V.I.: Craftsman House. ISBN 9768097302.
  7. 1 2 "50s Model Series by Vivian Lynn". Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu. 18 October 2013. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  8. Barton, Christina; Lawler-Dormer, Deborah (1993). Alter/image : feminism and representation in New Zealand art, 1973–1993. Auckland and Wellington: City Gallery Wellington and Auckland City Art Gallery. p. 14. ISBN 0908818149.
  9. Kirker, Anne (Autumn 1983). "Vivian Lynn's Garden Gates". Art New Zealand (26). Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  10. "Vivian Lynn talks about her work Guarden gates, 1982". Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. 29 October 2010. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  11. 1 2 Pitts, Priscilla (1998). Contemporary New Zealand sculpture : themes and issues. Auckland: David Bateman Ltd. ISBN 1869531698.
  12. Cook, Megan (16 October 2012). "'Women's movement – Arts and spirituality'". Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  13. "I, Here, Now: Vivian Lynn". Adam Art Gallery. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  14. "Vivian Lynn". Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  15. "Lynn, Vivian". Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  16. "Vivian Lynn". Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  17. 1 2 Barton, Christina (2008). I, here, now Vivian Lynn. Wellington: Adam Art Gallery. ISBN 1877309176.

Further reading


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