Jennifer McCamley
Jennifer McCamley is an Australian artist who lives and works in Melbourne, Victoria. She was born in Brisbane in 1957, and is known for her work across multiple disciplines, and her collaborations with Janet Burchill since the mid-1980s. In 2013 she was included in the major survey of contemporary art-making in Melbourne, Melbourne Now organised by the National Gallery of Victoria.
Collaboration with Janet Burchill
McCamley began a working partnership with artist Janet Burchill in the mid-1980s, with numerous individual and collaborative solo exhibitions both in Australia and internationally. Their art practice interlaces feminist, psychoanalytic, filmic, semiotic and spatial concerns, with language, and the language of art, film and popular culture, central to their work.McCamley's training in film, semiotics and philosophy, supplemented Burchill’s experience in sculpture and film. Drawing broadly on the histories of art and design, film and literature, feminism and cultural theory, Burchill and McCamley’s art is vitally engaged with the issues of our time. Their collaborative practice, sustained now for thirty five years, reveals to us a wide range of responses to making art now.
Their works have been included in major survey exhibitions including Australian Perspecta, Sydney, 1989; Virtual Reality, National Gallery of Australia, 1994; and Poolshoogte: Contemporary photography from Holland, Belgium and Germany, Nederlands Foto Institute, Rotterdam, 1996. A major survey of their collaborative works, Tip of the Iceberg: Selected works 1985–2001, was held in 2001 at the University Art Museum, University of Queensland, and at the Ian Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne.
They undertook a residency over 2009 to 2010, in order to research new solar technologies to develop their temporary public artwork Light From Light, displayed at the State Library Queensland and the Shanghai Library, National Art Museum of China and the Hangzhou Public Library in China. As part of their residency, Burchill and McCamley visited MAAP in Brisbane in early 2009 to help scope the Light from Light exhibition concept and design.
Their interest in solar technologies has seen them undertake artist residencies at The International Art Space Kellerberrin Australia and the University of Wollongong to develop art and research in this area.