Digby Moran
Digby Moran | |
---|---|
Born | Albert Digby Moran 1948 |
Died | January 14, 2020 | (aged 71–72)
Nationality | Australian |
Education | New South Wales TAFE |
Known for | Painting |
Notable work |
|
Movement | Australian Aboriginal Art |
Albert Digby Moran (1948–2020) was an Australian Aboriginal artist. His work derived inspiration from his Bundjalung ancestors in the north of New South Wales, Australia, where he remains one of the Northern Rivers' most recognised artists.
Life
[edit]Digby Moran grew up on Cabbage Tree Island on the Richmond River in New South Wales, Australia.[1] His father was a member of the Dunghutti race and his mother a Bundjalung. His grandfather, Robert Moran, was a wood carver and from an early age Digby worked with him, making boomerangs and walking sticks. In his early adult years he worked as an agricultural cane cutter and also as a boxer with Jimmy Sharman's touring troupe. Eventually Moran returned to that first love of his people's art and completed a TAFE arts course in 1991. After a nationally and internationally recognised career as a visual artist,[2] Moran died in Lismore in January 2020.[3]
Work
[edit]An early work, 'Lizard and Snake' was made for the Lismore branch of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission, depicting the creation story of the Goanna headland at Evans Head.[4] In 2006, Moran held an exhibition Memories of the island exhibited at the Tweed River Art Gallery.[5] Moran's work was represented in the I saw the sun - east coast exhibition at the Lismore Regional Gallery in 2007 together with Jenny Fraser, Frances Belle Parker, Fiona Foley, Ian Abdulla and Vincent Serico.[6]
Most of Moran's work was lost in the Lismore floods of 2017. However in 2018 the Lismore Art Gallery presented an exhibition of his work, 'Growing Up on the Island'[7] which enhanced his reputation as one of Australia's foremost Indigenous artists. He was commissioned to paint murals by Woolworths in River Street, Ballina, in 2014; and at St Joseph's School, Woodburn, in 2019.[8] He was granted a solo exhibition at the New South Wales Parliament in 2010.
Internationally, Digby Moran exhibited at:
- Berlin Aboriginal Art Gallery (2001/2)
- Vienna New Media Gallery (2003)
- Museum Hamelyn, Germany: 'Energy of the Earth' (2004)
- Duisburg, Germany (2009)
- Emmerich, Germany (2009)
Digby was a frequent guest at schools, working with children in art education. In later years he worked in a support role at the Namatjira Haven, a drug and alcohol rehabilitation centre.
Awards
[edit]- People's Choice Award, National Aboriginal and Islander Telstra Art Award , Northern Territory Art Gallery, Darwin (2000)
- Finalist, The New South Wales Parliament Aboriginal Art Prize 2011[9] and 2012
References
[edit]- ^ "Albert (Digby) Moran in conversation with Brett Adlington". Lismore Regional Gallery. 20 September 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
- ^ Williams, Alison; Gallery (N.S.W.), Grafton Regional (2008). Identity : Indigenous art of the North Coast : showcasing leading Indigenous artists of North Coast NSW. Grafton, N.S.W. : Grafton Regional Gallery. ISBN 978-0-9802876-4-6.
- ^ Farrow-Smith, Elloise (14 January 2020). "World famous Bundjalung artist Digby Moran dies". ABC News. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
- ^ "Dot painting of a lizard and snake by Albert (Digby) Moran". National Museum of Australia. 1996.
- ^ Tweed River Art Gallery (2006). Digby Moran : memories of the island. Murwillumbah, N.S.W. : Tweed River Art Gallery. ISBN 978-0-9756704-7-7.
- ^ Mundine, Djon; Gallery, Lismore Regional (2007). I saw the sun - east coast : Jenny Fraser, Digby Moran, Frances Belle Parker, Fiona Foley, Ian Abdulla, Vincent Serico. [Lismore, N.S.W.] : Lismore Regional Gallery.
- ^ Wolff, Sharne (2014). "Lismore Regional Gallery: Past, present, future". Art Monthly Australia. 272: 19–23.
- ^ "'Devastated': Community Mourns Death of Bundjalung artist". January 2020.
- ^ Dagostino, Michael; New South Wales. Parliament, publisher. (2011). Parliament of New South Wales Aboriginal Art Prize 2011. [Sydney, N.S.W.] : Parliament of New South Wales. ISBN 978-1-875199-86-0.