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Virginia Grayson

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Known for
  
Drawing

Name
  
Virginia Grayson


Role
  
Artist

Awards
  
Virginia Grayson

Born
  
1967
Palmerston North, New Zealand

Notable work
  
No conclusions drawn – self portrait (2008)

Education
  

Virginia "Ginny" Grayson (born 1967) is a New Zealand-born Australian artist, and winner of the Dobell Prize for Drawing.

Virginia Grayson Melbourne artist Virginia Grayson stands next to her work No

Biography

Virginia Grayson Virginia Grayson Art Pinterest Drawings Portraits and Mark making

Grayson was born in 1967 in Palmerston North, New Zealand. She trained in film and media studies at Victoria University of Wellington. In the early 1990s she moved to New York for a period, before moving to Sydney, and later to Melbourne. She trained at the RMIT School of Art, and held an exhibition in the School's gallery in 2009.

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In 2008, Grayson was working in a studio in Melbourne. In September that year, it was announced that she had won that year's Dobell Prize for Drawing, displayed at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, in a competition that had 586 entries. The competition was judged by a former Queensland Art Gallery curator, Anne Kirker.

Grayson's work, in pencil, charcoal and watercolour, was titled No conclusions drawn – self portrait. It portrays the artist standing in her studio. Grayson observed that the work reflected her "state of uncertainty" about her artistic output at that time, during which she regularly destroyed her drawings in "fits of frustration". The Sydney Morning Herald arts writer Louise Schwartzkoff described the portrait as "sombre", where the subject "stares grimly into the distance". When asked what she would do with the AUS$20,000 money from the Dobell Prize, she responded that she "wouldn't mind getting my ute fixed".

Robert Nelson, writing for The Age, considered Grayson's drawing to be influenced by Alberto Giacometti, and "is curious and inquiring, as if always searching for the place, ratios and weight of her motif".

References

Virginia Grayson Wikipedia