Watson has had numerous solo and group exhibitions in both New Zealand and Australia, with some exhibitions in Germany and the United States. She has worked in sculpture, photography, installation art and painting[2] and began working with cartographic imagery while an undergraduate in the early 1980s. Issues concerning the representation of the world have been a main focus of her work since that time. Her work has been included in several exhibitions and publications relating to art and cartography. Group exhibitions include the 9th Sydney Biennale The Boundary Rider (1992), Headlands: Thinking Through New Zealand Art (1992), Cultural Safety, Frankfurter Kunstverein and Ludwig Forum Aachen (1995 / 1996), The World Over, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (1996), Living Here Now: Art and Politics (1999),[3] Paradise Now, Asia Society Museum, New York (2004), Better Places at the Perth Institute of Contemporary Art (2008), Unnerved: The New Zealand Project Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane (2010),[3] SCAPE Biennale of Public Art (2011), grenzūberschreitend/across boundaries, Draiflessen Collection, Mettingen Germany (2018).
The same year, she collaborated with the ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics and created the largest map of the universe at that time.[4] She joined the staff of Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland in 2006. In the summer of 2010-2011, Watson travelled to Antarctica as part of a science-based course run by Gateway Antarctica at the University of Canterbury. She subsequently produced artworks based on her experiences.[5] She occasionally publishes writings on other artists' work.[6]
Harmon, Katharine, "The Map As Art: Contemporary Artists Explore Cartography", New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2009 ISBN978-1-56898-762-0
Pound, Francis, "The Invention of New Zealand: Art & National Identity 1930-1970", AUP, 2009 ISBN978-1-86940-414-7
Cosgrove, Denis, "Maps, mapping, modernity: Art and cartography in the twentieth century." Imago Mundi 57,1 2005. JSTOR40233956
Chiu, Melissa, "Tikis, Torches and Beachside Barbeques” in Paradise Now? Contemporary Art from the Pacific", 2004 ISBN978-1-86953-584-1
Curnow, Wystan, "Mapping and the expanded field of contemporary art”, in Cosgrove, Denis (ed) “Mappings”, London: Reaktion Books, 1999 ISBN978-1-86189-021-4
References
^"Ruth Watson". Headlands Center for the Arts. Retrieved 2022-01-28.