Karla Dickens b. 1967 Sydney, NSW

  • Artist (Painter)
Karla Dickens is a Wiradjuri artist whose work explores the themes of politics, love, sex and the environment. Karla trained at the National Art School in Darlinghurst and won the Bundjalung Art Award at Lismore Regional Gallery in 2006.
Name
Karla Dickens
Birth date
1967
Birth place
Sydney, NSW
Gender
Female
Roles
  • Artist (Painter)
Residence
  • 2003- Bangalow, NSW
  • 2000- 2003 Sydney, NSW
  • 1994- 2000 Wollombi, NSW
  • 1990- 1994 Sydney, NSW
  • 1989- 1990 Perth, WA
  • 1988- 1989 Hunter Valley, NSW
  • 1967- 1988 Sydney, NSW
Other Occupation
  • House painter
  • Hospitality worker
  • Teacher
Active Period
  • c.1980-
Languages
  • English
Training
  • Life Drawing Class at high school.,
  • Bachelor in Fine Arts, 2000 National Art School, Darlinghurst, Sydney, NSW
  • Diploma in Fine Arts, 1991- 1993 National Art School, Darlinghurst, Sydney, NSW
Is Indigenous
Yes
Initial Record Data Source
  • Storylines Project, COFA, UNSW
Copyright
  • Dickens, Karla
Writers:

staffcontributor
Date written:
Last updated:

Karla Dickens, Wiradjuri painter, was born in Sydney in 1967. Dickens enrolled in Life Drawing classes at high school where the female form was her main subject matter. She began her formal training as an artist when she enrolled at the National Art School in Darlinghurst, Sydney in 1991, obtaining a Fine Arts Diploma in 1993 and a Bachelor in Fine Arts in 2000.

After moving to Wollombi in the Hunter Valley, NSW Dickens says her work became “more detailed with a stronger Indigenous feel.” She also says that her work at this time was about finding “more acceptance with my sexuality”. Following the death of a close friend in 1997 crosses began appearing as motifs within her paintings and in 2000 Dickens began incorporating text into her work. Her work in 2003 changed dramatically when Dickens began beading onto painted canvasses, a strong contrast of fresh mark making and fine textured detail. Her inspirations as stated in a 2007 interview with the author are “politics, love, sex and the environment”.

Dickens has shown in many solo and group exhibitions including “The Art of Place” at Old Parliament House, Canberra in 1998, “Co-Existence” at Hogarth Galleries, Sydney in 1998, “Love Magic” at S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney for Perspecta 1999, “Aboriginal Ways of Knowing” at the Macy Gallery, Columbia University, USA in 2001, “Hung, Drawn and Quartered” at the Tin Sheds Gallery, University of Sydney in 2003, “Nice Coloured Dolls”, 24HR Art, Darwin, Northern Territory in 2004, “Our Spirit Our Country – Bundjalung Art Award” and “Chrysalis” both at Lismore Regional Art Gallery in 2006.

In his article, “Where Eagles Hover” (Artlink, Volume 18, No 1) Maurice O’Riordan writes of Dickens’ work in her 1997 solo exhibition “Jowalbinna” (home of the ancient ones), “Dickens’ paintings show that the spirituality powering Aboriginal art is well and truly alive. In her series’ title painting, Jowalbinna, a host of 'mother earth’ deities dominates the shelters and the full moon nightscape of Dickens’ passage to them. A wedge-tailed eagle hovers above a footprint, coming to signify the hovering circle of eagles over the Guugu-yalanji people’s historic handover ceremony at the nearby Laura Aboriginal Dance Festival that year”. O’Riordan continues, “for brevity’s sake, it is not possible to detail all of the works in “Jowalbinna”. Each one celebrates a dream-like revelation through country whose spiritual and natural heritage can only inspire profound awe and respect. There’s a kind of magic in the way that Dickens connects with this country, though she was, like a tourist, experiencing it for the first time.”

Dickens had a residency in Brewarrina in 1995 where she worked with 10 local children on a 16-metre mural. In 1997 she was the artist in residence at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Sydney and spent three months in Cape York, Queensland. In 1998 she had a two-month residency in Guardella, Italy. In 2006 Dickens was the recipient of the Bundjalung Art Award and the People’s Choice Award for her work in the “Our Spirit, Our Country” exhibition.

Writers:
Allas, Tess Note:
Date written:
2007
Last updated:
2010
Status:
peer-reviewed
associate of
Gary Philip Lee
1952
Artist (Performance Artist), Artist (Textile Artist / Fashion Designer), Artist (Photographer)
associate of
Ken Watson
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Gordon Syron
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Maurice O'Riordan
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Ace Bourke
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Melitta Firth
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Penny Evans
1966
Artist (Mixed Media Artist), Artist (Ceramist)
associate of
Bradley Greive
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Frances Belle Parker
1982
Artist (Installation Artist), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Iain Dawson Gallery, Paddington, NSW
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Black Fella's Dreaming Art Gallery
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Spirit
Date
2006
Winner of 2006 Bundjalung Art Award
Say No To Drugs
Date
1997
Public mural at Redfern Railway Station
Karla Dickens
10 September 2008
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Iain Dawson Gallery, Paddington, NSW
Chrysalis
2006
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Lismore Regional Gallery, Lismore, NSW
Our Spirit Our Country - Bundjalung Art Award
2006
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Lismore Regional Gallery, Lismore, NSW
Co-existence
2004
Exhibition ()
Ivan Dougherty & Kudos Gallery, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW
Hung, Drawn and Quartered
2003
Exhibition ()
Tin Sheds Gallery, Sydney
Aboriginal Ways of Knowing
2001
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Macy Gallery, Columbia University, New York, USA
Love Magic (Perspecta)
1999
Exhibition (exhibited at)
S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, NSW
The Art of Place
1998
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Old Parliament House, Canberra, ACT
Jowalbinna
1997
Exhibition (exhibited at)
DQ Gallery, Sydney, NSW
Recognitions
NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service Aboriginal Art Award
2007
Award
Past-Present-Future NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service Northern Rivers Region
Parliament of NSW Aboriginal Art Prize
2009
Award
Finalist
Note: Finalist
Citations:
  • (2000), Word Up, (Place: Like Art Magazine)
  • (1999), Indigenous Law Bulletin, (front cover image Place: Univeristy of New South Wales, Kensington, NSW)
  • O'Riordan, Maurice, (1998), Everyone's Business, (Place: National Aids Bulletin, Volume 12, No 3)
  • O'Riordan, Maurice, (1998), Where Eagles Hover, (Place: Artlink, Volume 18, No 1)
  • O'Riordan, Maurice, (1997), Walking Through Time, (Place: National Aids Bulletin)