Megan Cope
Megan Cope (born 1982) is an Australian Aboriginal artist from the Quandamooka people of Stradbroke Island/Minjerribah. She is known for her sculptural installations, video art and paintings, in which she explores themes such as identity and colonialism. Cope is a member of the contemporary Indigenous art collective ProppaNOW in Brisbane. Early life and educationCope was born in Brisbane in 1982, of Quandamooka heritage.[1] She earned a Bachelor of Visual Arts (Visual Communication), at Deakin University in Victoria in 2006.[1] CareerCope has managed and curated many artist-run projects and events, including tinygold[2] and the BARI (Brisbane Artist Run Initiative) Festival.[3][4] Cope is also a member of the Brisbane-based contemporary Indigenous art collective ProppaNOW.[5] Cope creates video, installation, sculptures, and paintings which challenge notions of Aboriginality, and her work examines the Australian narrative and our sense of time and ownership in a settler colonial state.[6] A main focus of Cope's artwork is to shed light on colonialism and the myths and facts that come along with it.[7] Her work has been exhibited in the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the Melbourne Museum, as well as many other public and private collections throughout Australia.[8] In 2016–2017, Cope's work was exhibited along with that of Vincent Namatjira in the Tarnanthi Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art at the Art Gallery of South Australia.[9] In 2017, the Australian War Memorial commissioned Cope as official war artist (the first female Aboriginal woman in the role), to travel to the Middle East to accompany various Australian Defence Force units, in order to record and interpret topics relating to Australia's contribution to the international effort in the region. A series of works entitled Flight or fight was mounted on North Stradbroke Island blue gum.[10] In the 2020 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, titled Monster Theatres, Cope created an installation made of rocks, rusted steel drums, wire and huge drill bits that functions as an instrument designed to be played by musicians using modified bows and which mimics the sound of the bush stone-curlew, a native bird which is thriving on Minjerribah (now North Stradbroke Island), but endangered in New South Wales and Victoria.[11] Cope lives and works in Melbourne.[1] ProjectsVideo
Exhibitions
Sculptures
PaintingsCope's paintings use synthetic paint as well as Indian Ink.[13]
Awards
CollectionsThe Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane purchased Re Formation 2016–2019 in 2019,[20] and included it in the Water exhibition (7 December 2019 – 26 April 2020).[21] References
Further reading
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