'Skin Deep' Exhibition
- Authors: Button, Loris , Miller, Sally
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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- Description: Exhibition held at Space 22 Gallery, Ballarat,25th November -12th December This exhibition aimed to consider the ways in which we experience and inhabit our skin. The visual expression of that experience, premised in my case on place, memory and ageing, provided a key thematic link between two individual bodies of work. My works were triggered by a visit to a Korean Buddhist Temple in 2010. The drawings were intended to give visual expression to my continuting meditation on ageing in contemporary culture, and were therefore strongly influenced by that brief encounter with the spiritual strength and beauty of age old Buddhist artistic and spiritual practice at a critical time in my life.
Cultural heritage meets contemporary practice in a regional context
- Authors: Button, Loris , Gervasoni, Clare
- Date: 2005
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Rhapsody 21: The future of university museums and art galleries in the new century Conference, Launceston, Australia : 25th - 28th May, 2005
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003001472
Drawn to print: Recent works on paper
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Facing time : The evocation of time in visual and literary forms of autobiography
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: Word, image, text : Studies in literary and visual culture Chapter 13 p. 152-159
- Full Text: false
- Description: 2003008141
From the Bower : Patterns of collecting
- Authors: Button, Loris , Klein, Deborah , Saxton, Louise , Wilson, Carole
- Date: 2017
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Exhibition at Art Gallery of Ballarat, 29th July-19th September 2017. This exhibition presenting artwork and items from the unique personal collections of four contemporary Victorian artists: Loris Button, Deborah Klein, Louise Saxton and Carole Wilson. The artists are linked by their studio practice, their regional locations and connections, and their love of gleaning. Their studio collections range from curiosities, natural history specimens, memorabilia, discarded books and china, domestic textiles, carpet and linoleum, and old tools of trade.
Gathering Time
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Unique state linoprints on handmade plant fibre & cotton rag papers with enamelled insect pins. 30 sheets, each 14.0 x 20.0 cm, installation size 102.0 x 115.0 cm. Included in exhibition 'Recent Acquisitions 2009' at Potter Gallery, 2nd May - 28th June 2009.
In a Mughal garden, Vanitas series
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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New Acquisitions
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2016
- Type: Text , Catalog
- Full Text: false
New Acquisitions
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2014
- Type: Text , Catalog
- Full Text: false
Plus
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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- Description: Exhibition of painting
Prospect Portrait Prize
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2002
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
Regarding history
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2002
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Exhibition held 2nd-19th April, 2003, Goya Galleries cnr Spring and Latrobe St , Melbourne
Scope 16 Exhibition
- Authors: Anderson, Lisa , Button, Loris , Hill, Debbie , Lofts, Debbie , Mah, Paul , Mangan, Ben , Orr, Jill , Pasakos, James , Pilven, Peter , Smith, Chrissy , Wilson, Carole
- Date: 2016
- Type: Text
- Full Text: false
- Description: 3rd February - 5th March 2016 SCOPE, FedUni's Arts Academy important annual exhibition showcases an inspired and rich mix of accomplished work by visual arts staff, research associates and associate and adjunct professors. The exhibition highlights the staff's ongoing commitment to a sustained, rigorous art practice across a broad range of approaches and media including ceramics, painting, photography, design, drawing and printmaking. While the exhibition offers a great opportunity for staff to present their more recent works, which extend notions of contemporary art, new and returning visual arts students are able to view work created by key visual arts lecturers. Image: Peter Pilven Psycho Santa, 2015 digital print on paper 600 x 700mm Courtesy the artist
SCOPE 20 Exhibition
- Authors: Button, Loris , Horrocks, Lucinda , Nemo, Jary , Wind & Sky Productions , Mah, Paul , Orr, Jill , Pasakos, Jimmy , Percy, Kim , Pilven, Peter , Fellas, Pitcha Makin , Laxton, Ted , Edgeley, Trudy , Rigney, Adrian , Varga, Elke , Williams, Morgan , Wilson, Carole
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: SCOPE20: ARTS ACADEMY VISUAL ARTS LECTURERS, TEACHERS AND HONORARIES FRI 21 FEB – SAT 7 MAR 2020 Please join us for the exhibition opening, with remarks by Associate Professor Rick Chew, Director, Arts Academy, Federation University Australia @ 5:30 for 6pm on Thu 20 Feb 2020. All welcome! Loris BUTTON, Lucinda HORROCKS & Jary NEMO, Paul MAH, Jill ORR, Jimmy PASAKOS, Kim PERCY, Peter PILVEN, PITCHA MAKIN FELLAS, Elke VARGA, Morgan WILLIAMS, Carole WILSON In the Arts Academy’s important annual exhibition, SCOPE presents a diverse selection of works on paper, video, ceramics, printmaking, painting and design, by Visual Arts lecturers, teachers, Research Associates, Associate and Adjunct Professors and Research Fellows who, as artists, also sustain a rigorous artistic research and/or teaching practice at Federation University's School of Arts. Participating artists present work across disciplines including drawing, painting, photography, performance art, video, ceramics, textiles and printmaking. Presenting works of beauty and contemplation alongside the real and unsettling, participating artists express complex ideas related to fact and fiction, identity, empathy, politics and global unrest, as well as climate change, Indigenous art and cultural appropriation. Image: Wind & Sky Productions & Chris Hayward, Collections and Climate Change, 2019 Video: 9.01 mins. Courtesy the artists
Self portraits
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2003
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Exhibition of paintings held at the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat.
Small Gathering
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Submitted for '10:30 Graduate Works 1999-2009 Exhibition' held at the Post Office Gallery, University of Ballarat, 2009
Small Vanitas in Five Parts
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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The art of Daniel Moynihan : Printmaking 1966 - 2016
- Authors: Moynihan, Daniel , Button, Loris , Wach, Kenneth
- Date: 2016
- Type: Exhibition , Text
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- Reviewed:
- Description: 9 April–19 June, 2016
The Larger Gathering
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Artwork submitted for St Patrick's Prize exhibition, St Patrick's College, Ballarat
Underpinning practice-based creative research with quality supervision
- Authors: Mann, Allan , Button, Loris , Sillitoe, Jim
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Thinking the future: Art, design and creativity Conference, Melbourne : 26th - 29th September, 2006
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- Reviewed:
- Description: In the past few years, there has been some interestingdebate on the notion of postgraduate research by the exegesis route, which is currently the most favoured approach to higher degree qualification in the creative arts arena. The production of an artwork, which is accompanied by scholarly written exposition, has become a well-accepted way in which cultural and social knowledge is generated within the creative disciplines. Some problems, however, still remain with the quality supervision of creative arts postgraduate students because of the concurrent requirements of having a supervisor with a significant reputation in the student's field of creative endeavour and the skills to advise on the preparation of the scholarly document that expounds on the creative work. In addition, because of the recent history of the exegesis route to higher degrees, there are relatively few experienced research staff in creative arts departments. At the University of Ballarat's Arts Academy, we have been developing an approachto the supervisionof creative Masters and Doctoral exegeses in the context of small staff numbers, a wide variety of practice areas, and a relatively large number of enrolled students. Results to date have been encouraging, and this paper will report on the way in which we are attempting to provide each studnet with the best educational experience possible and produce world-class creative higher degree graduates within a school that has a limited financial and personnel resource base
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003002054