Elizabeth Presa (born 1956) is an Australian visual artist and academic based in Melbourne.
Working with sculpture her work uses a range of materials and processes, including sericulture, apiculture and casting. Some of her installations use plaster as a forensic tool to examine traces of the psyche, biological life and the environment.[1] She is an academic, an author and has also worked as a curator and gallery director.[2][1]
Presa is the mother of Australian contemporary artist Anastasia Klose with whom she occasionally collaborates.[1]
Academic career
Presa studied at the Victorian College of the Arts of the University of Melbourne, graduating with a Diploma of Sculpture in 1977. She studied at the Phillip Institute, Post Graduate Sculpture, 1980, University of Melbourne; 1978, 83–85. She has a Masters in Critical Theory and Comparative Literature and a PhD in Critical Theory and Comparative Literature both undertaken at Monash University.[2]
She tutored in art philosophy at Riverina College of Advanced Education during 1980–81, and as part of the Sculpture department of the Melbourne Centre for Adult Education from 1984 to 1985, and following this in the Sculpture department of the Victoria College Prahran.[3]
From 1993 she taught in the School of Art at the Victorian College of the Arts, in 2003 she was appointed Head of the interdisciplinary Victorian College of the Arts Centre for Ideas, where she focussed on interdisciplinary curriculum and research design in the visual and performing arts.[2] Additionally, she has been a visiting artist and guest lecturer at a number of international universities and has undertaken multiple international artist residencies. A notable fellowship Presa undertook was entitled "Interior Castle: St Teresa of Avila, architectures of space", at the Five College's Women's Research Centre, Mt Holyoke, Massachusetts.[2]
Curation
Presa was Director of Wagga Wagga Regional Gallery in 1978–79.[3]
Her work on a series of beehive projects titled ‘Apian Utopias: Small Architecture for Bees’ involves projects and exhibitions in Tokyo, the US, Beijing, New Zealand and Australia.[2] Her ongoing interest is in the interrelationship between philosophy and art.[2]
Selected exhibitions
Selected shows include
Garden of small nuptials, sculpture installation for Aberrant Nuptials International Deleuze Studies conference, Orpheus Institute Ghent, Belgium, (2017)[4]
Of Martyrium and Reliquary, with Mireille Eid, Articulate Project Space, Gallery, Sydney (2017)[5]
Views for the Future Vol. 16 (bricolage), curator and master printer M. Matsumara, October, (2016) Gallery TEN, Tokyo-Yanaka[1]
^"Morris, Desmond John, (born 24 Jan. 1928), writer on animal and human behaviour; artist", Who's Who, Oxford University Press, 1 December 2007, doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u28164
^Ruggieri, Dominique G.; Leebron, Elizabeth J. (2010). "Situation Comedies Imitate Life: Jewish and Italian-American Women on Prime Time". The Journal of Popular Culture. 43 (6): 1266–1281. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5931.2010.00799.x. ISSN0022-3840.
^Presa, Elizabeth (1 May 2018), "Ways of being: transitional objects and the work of art", The Winnicott Tradition, Routledge, pp. 315–326, doi:10.4324/9780429483769-28, ISBN978-0429483769
^Backhouse, R. E. (1 January 2014). "MIT and the Other Cambridge". History of Political Economy. 46 (Supplement 1): 252–271. doi:10.1215/00182702-2716190. ISSN0018-2702.
^Ammar, Doreid; Savinien, Jean; Radisson, Lionel (2019). "The Makers' Beehives". Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on the Internet of Things. New York: ACM Press. pp. 1–4. doi:10.1145/3365871.3365887. ISBN978-1450372077. S2CID207955934.