Destiny Deacon - Whacked, 2007
25 October 2007
Destiny Deacon, Totemistical, 2006
1 June 2006
Destiny Deacon - Colour Blinded
28 April 2005
Destiny Deacon – d-tour
14 August 2003
Destiny Deacon – Postcards from Mummy
19 March 2003
Destiny Deacon (Kuku/Erub/Mer) - Forced Into Images
6 September 2001
Destiny Deacon, Totemistical, 2006
1 June 2006
“…You create make-believe landscapes out of horrible situations, looking for some reality out of disappointments, and marvels in the images and issues that surround you.” (Destiny Deacon)
“Destiny Deacon’s dolls are “the same but different”. Whether as self-portraiture or cathartic psychodrama, Destiny has always used dolls of all kinds in her “blak” humor photographic narrative compositions. Dolls are normally seen as life’s positive travelling companions, but they also carry a shadowy insidious Chucky-type character not so initially visible.” (Djon Mundine)
“Humour cuts deep. I like to think that there’s a laugh and a tear in each picture.” (Destiny Deacon)
Taken from: Djon Mundine, ‘Destiny Deacon, Walk & don’t look blak’ in ‘ART iT PICKS, Tokyo’, ART iT, 11 Spring/ Summer 2006 Vol. 4 No. 2 pp. 6-7
Destiny Deacon’s retrospective exhibition, Walk & don’t look blak is currently exhibiting at the Metropolitan Museum of Photography in
In 2002 Deacon was the only Australian artist to be chosen for Documenta II, perhaps the most important survey of international contemporary art, held only once every five years in Kassel, Germany. Deacon has been included in numerous important survey exhibitions including in the Yokohama Triennale in 2001 (curated by Akira Tatehata), the Biennale of Sydney in 2000, the Adelaide Biennial in 2000 and the Australian Perspecta in 1999 and 1993. Her work is held by the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the National Gallery of Victoria, the
Exhibition opening:
Exhibition dates: 1 June –
