Destiny Deacon
Destiny Deacon is a descendant of the KuKu (Far North Queensland) and Erub/Mer (Torres Strait) people. Since the 1990s Deacon's work has been primarily involved with performative photography, exploring Indigenous identity with often provocative and humorous imagery that mocks and satirises clichéd and racist stereotypes. Partly autobiographical and partly fictitious, Deacon’s work is an insightful comedy that is effective in establishing a discourse about political, Indigenous and feminist concerns.
Destiny Deacon
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2024
Ten Thousand Suns
24th Biennale of Sydney, 2024
Group Show, The First 40 Years
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2024
Group Show, The Winter Bride
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2023
Thinking Historically in the Present
Sharjah Biennial 15, 2023
Destiny Deacon DESTINY
The Ian Potter Centre, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2020-21
Group Show, Workshop
University of Queensland Art Museum, Brisbane, 2019
Destiny Deacon Not Just Fun and Games
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2017
Destiny Deacon RACE
Wyndham Art Gallery, Werribee, VIC, 2016
Group Show, Melbourne Noir
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2014-15
Destiny Deacon Snap out of it
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2014
Destiny Deacon Going Strait
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2012
Destiny Deacon pose-a-rama
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2011
Group Show, Head On Photography Festival
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2011
Group Show
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2009-10
Destiny Deacon Clemenger Prize
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2009
Destiny Deacon Gazette
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2009
Destiny Deacon Home Security
10th Havana Biennial, 2009
Destiny Deacon Whacked
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2007
Group Show, STOLEN RITUAL
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2006-07
Destiny Deacon Totemistical
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2006
Destiny Deacon Colour Blinded
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2005
Destiny Deacon Walk & don't look blak
Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, Sydney, 2004-05
Destiny Deacon d-tour
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2003
Destiny Deacon Postcards from Mummy
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2003
Group Show, Dirty Dozen
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2002
Group Show, The First 20 Years
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2002
Destiny Deacon Forced Into Images
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2001
DESTINY DEACON
b. 1957, G’ua G’ua & Erub/Mer peoples
Maryborough, Queensland
Lives and works Melbourne, Victoria. KuKu (Cape York) and Erub/Mer (Torres Strait) people
EDUCATION
BA [politics], University of Melbourne
Dip. Ed., La Trobe University
Media: photography, video, installation, performance
SOLO EXHIBITIONS
Destiny Deacon, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Destiny - The art of Destiny Deacon, Australian Embassy, Paris, France
Destiny Deacon: Forced into Images, Murray Art Museum Albury, Albury
DESTINY, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Not Just Fun and Games, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Snap out of it, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Going Strait, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Pose-a-rama, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery,Sydney
Doing Time.., Spare Room Gallery, R.M.I.T. University Gallery, Melbourne
It's Playblak Time, ArtSpace Pro Art, Hallein, Salzburg Festival, Austria
Gazette, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery,Sydney
Clandestine, Destiny Deacon, Tandanya - National Aboriginal Cultural Insitute, Adelaide
Whacked, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Destiny Deacon: Walk and don't look blak, Ian Potter Museum of Art at Melbourne University, Melbourne
Totemistical, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Destiny Deacon: Walk and don't look blak, Metropolitan Museum of Photography Tokyo, Japan
Destiny Deacon: Walk and don't look blak, ADAM Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
A date with Destiny, (cabaret performance), MCA, Sydney, Australia
Walk and don't look blak, Tjibao Cultural Centre, Noumea, New Caledonia
Walk and don't look blak, Wellington City Gallery, Wellington, New Zealand
Walk and don’t look blak, MCA, Sydney, Australia
d-coy: Destiny Deacon, curators Gary Lee and Maurice O’Riordan, 24HR Art, Northern Territory Centre for Contemporary Art, Darwin, Australia
Destiny Deacon, Künstlerhaus, Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg, Austria
d-tour, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, Australia
Destiny Deacon, Gallerie Raphaella Cortese, Milan, Italy
Postcards from Mummy, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, Australia
Forced into Images, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, Australia
The Thin Line, Platform Space, Spencer Street Station on Subway, (collaboration with Virginia Fraser) Crossing the Line, Gabriel Gallery, Footscray Community Arts Centre, Melbourne
Postcards from Mummy, Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney and toured nationally in Australia
It Won't Rub Off, Baby, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne, Australia
Inya Dreams (Festival of the Dreaming, Olympic Arts Festival) project with children from Redfern Public School, Performance Space, Sydney
No Fixed Dress (Melbourne International Fashion Festival), Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne
We Iri - We Homeborn, NAIDOC exhibition (concurrent with shows by Lisa Bellear and Ellen Jose), Linden Gallery, Melbourne
Abstracts, New Aboriginalities (concurrent with show by Brenda Croft), Watershed Media Centre, Bristol; Cambridge Darkroom; and MAC, Birmingham (all UK)
Beauty's Back on Duty, Hogarth Galleries, Sydney
Welcome to Never-Never, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne
Destiny Deacon, Rebecca Hossack Gallery, London, UK
My Boomerang Won't Come Back, Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia, Adelaide; Artspace, Auckland, New Zealand; CSA Gallery, Christchurch, New Zealand
Smiling Dangerously, Hogarth Gallery, Sydney
Caste Offs (concurrent with show by Brenda Croft), Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
Octopus 24: Ricochet, Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne
The Land is Us: Stories, Place & Connection, Shepparton Art Museum, Victoria
The First 40 Years, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
The Winter Bride, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Single Channel, touring exhibition with National Gallery of Australia, Geraldton Regional Art Gallery, Australia
Australiana: Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery in partnership with the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
Mirror: New views on photography, State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
Home, Murray Art Museum Albury, Albury, Australia
Thinking Historically in the Present, conceived by the late Okwui Enwezor and curated by Hoor Al Qasimi, Sharjah Biennial 15, Sharjah Art Foundation, United Arab Emirates (forthcoming)
I didn't vote for this, 99% Gallery, Melbourne, Australia
Australiana: Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery, Bendigo, Australia
Sydney Road Blaks, Counihan Gallery, Melbourne, Victoria
Destination Sydney: the natural world, S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney
FACELESS: Transforming Identity, Cairns Art Gallery, Cairns
Queer: Stories from the NGV Collection, NGV International, Melbourne, Australia
Queer, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Cairns Indigenous Art Fair 2021, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Cairns
Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
AUSTRALIA. ANTIPODEAN STORY, Padiglione D'Arte Contemporanea, Milan
Caught Stealing, National Art School, Sydney
Workshop, University of Queensland Art Museum, Brisbane
Dark Rooms: Women Directing the Lens 1978 - 98, Griffith University Art Museuem
Wall Power: Contemporary Australian Photography, Michael Reid and Department of Foreign Affairs, Berlin, Paris, London
Red Green Blue: A History of Australian Video Art, Griffith University Gallery, Queensland
Unfinished Business: Perspectives on art and feminism, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Under the Sun. Reimagining Max Dupain's Sunbaker, Monash Gallery of Art, Victoria; Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney
Who's Afraid of Colour?, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
The documentary take, curated by Naomi Cass, Centre for Contemporary Photography, Melbourne
Over the fence: Contemporary Indigenous photography fom the Corrigan Collection, UQ Art Museum, Brisbane.
Sixth Sense, National Art School Gallery, Sydney
RACE, Wynham Art Gallery, Victoria
The Waiting Room,curated by Daniel Mudie Cunningham, Artbank Gallery, Sydney
My Country, I Still Call Australia Home, GOMA, Brisbane and travelling
Over the Fence, UQ Art Museum, University of Queensland, Brisbane
Australian Exotica, Monash Gallery of Art, Melbourne
Brutal Truths, Griffith University Art Gallery, South Bank, Brisbane
Donggang International Photo Festival, Donggang Museum of Photography, South Korea
2014 Tarrawarra Biennale, Tarrawarra (curated by Natalie King and Djon Mundine)
Remain In Light: Photogrpahy from the MCA Collections,Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, touring exhibition
Direct Democracy, Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne
Every day I am a day older: Portraiture from the Griffith University Art Collection, Griffith University Art Gallery, Brisbane.
Dark Nights, Maroondah Art Gallery, Ringwood, Victoria.
My Country: I Still Call Australia Home, Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
Shadowlife, Bendigo Art Gallery, Bendigo
Under My Skin: Contemporary Australian Photography from the Corrigan Collection, Rockhampton Art Gallery, Rockhampton
Melbourne Now, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Crossing Cultures: The Owen and Wagner Collectionn of Contemporary Aboriginal Australian Art, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth.
Land, Sea and Sky: Contemporary Art of the Torres Strait Islands, Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
THE PHANTASM, Foxy Production, New York
Destiny Deacon, Fiona Hall, Bill Henson, Tracey Moffatt, TV Moore, Julie Rrap, Anne Zahalka, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Change Has Come, UTS Gallery, Sydney
Art + Soul, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Change, Monash University Museum of Modern Art, Caulfield, Victoria
Bite, Flinders University Gallery, Adelaide
Suburbia, Redcliffe Art Gallery, Queensland
Clemenger Contemporary Art Award, Ian Potter Gallery, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Half Light: Portraits From Black Australia, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Integracion Y Resistencia En La Era Global, The Tenth Habana Bienal, Havana, Cuba
Terra Nullius, ACC Gallery Weimer, Germany
Rising Tide: Film and Video Works from the MCA Collection, Sydney, Museum of Contemporary Art
San Diego, U.S.A.
Revolutions - Forms That Turn, Biennale of Sydney, Sydney, curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev
Latitudes, Tjibao Cultural Centre, Noumea, New Caledonia
Culture Warriors: The National Indigenous Art Triennial ’07, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra,
And touring: Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth; Gallery of Modern Art at Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane and The Katzen Arts Center at American University, Washington D.C., U.S.A.
`Where is Mummy?’ Destiny Deacon, Masterpieces from the Essl Collection and Bank Austria Collection, Galerie Theodor von Hörmann, Austria
Artist Makes Video, Art Rage Survey 1994-1998, Griffith University, Queensland College of Art, Brisbane
Dolls, Galleria Raffaella Cortese, (City Of Melbourne, Cultural Exchange) Milan, Italy
Stolen Ritual, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Yours, Mine & Ours: 50 years of ABC TV, Penrith Regional Gallery, Emu Plains
Why Pictures Now, Museum Moderner Kunst (MUMOK), Stifting Ludwig Wien, Vienna, Austria
Image & Imagination, Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal, Canada
Talking Territory and Trauma, Golden Thread Gallery, Ulster, Ireland
High Tide: Currents in Contemporary Australian Art, Zacheta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Poland and Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius, Lithuania
Points of view: Australian photography 1985-95, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Brescia International Photography Biennale, Museo di Santa Giuliam, Brescia, Italy
Latitudes 2005, Hotel de Ville, Paris
MCA Collection: New Acquisitions in Context, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
I thought I knew but I was wrong, curated by Alexie Glass and Sarah Tutton, Ssamzie Space, Seoul, South Korea
Blackspot: Contemporary Indigenous Photography from the Monash University Collection, Switchback Gallery, Gippsland Centre for Art & Design, Monash University, Gippsland, Australia
New 05, curated by Max Delaney, ACCA, Southbank, Victoria
Prepossession, curated by Jill Bennett, Felicity Fenner and Liam Kelly, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, The University of New South Wales, College of Arts, Sydney, Australia
Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Museum of Contemporary Art, Belgrade MoCAB, Belgrade
Minority report, Århus Festival for Samtidskunst, Århus unstbygning, Århus, Denmark
SENI Singapore 2004: Art & the Contemporary, Singapore
Cromosoma X, Joyce & Co, Galleria Artistico, Letteraria, Genova, Galleria d’arte Sabrina Raffaghello, Ovada, Italy
Tradition Today: Indigenous Art in Australia, curated by Hetti Perkins, Ken Watson and Jonathan Jones, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
In a New Light: Australian Photography 1930s-2000, National Library of Australia, Canberra
Faces in the Crowd, curated by Iwona Blazwick and Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, Whitechapel, London and Castello di Rivoli, Turin, Italy
Blackspot: Contemporary Indigenous Photography from the Monash University Collection, Monash University Museum of Art, Victoria
Spirit and Vision, Kunst der Gegenwart, Sammlung Essl, Austria
I thought I knew but I was wrong: New video art from Australia, an Asialink and Australian Centre for the Moving Image touring exhibition, Melbourne
New View: Indigenous Photographic Perspectives, from the Monash Gallery, Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria
Sydney Indigenous Arts Festival, Parramatta City Council, New South Wales
neighbours (the remix), part of 2004 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Contemporary Photo-media, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
One Square Mile: Brisbane Boundaries, Museum of Brisbane, Brisbane
The Year in Art, S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney
Art Australia: Zeitigenössishe Kunst, Galerie Seippel Köln and touring Kunst:Raum Sylt-Quelle, Städtische Galerie Delmenhorst, Kulturstiftung Schloss Agathenburg 2003 – 2004, Germany
Meeting Point NBK, Neuer Berliner Kustverein, Berlin
Home & Away: Place and identity in recent Australian art, Monash University Museum of Art touring exhibition; Customs House Art Gallery, University of Queensland, Brisbane; Faculty of Art and Design Gallery, Monash University, Victoria
Traffic: Crossing Currents in Indigenous Photomedia, Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney
Play, Academy Gallery, School of Visual and Performing Arts, University of Tasmania
This is not America, Bei Horst Schuler, Dusseldorf, Germany
New View: Indigenous Photographic Perspectives, Monash Gallery of Art, Melbourne, touring Mildura, Gippsland, Bendigo, Adelaide and Horsham through to 2005
It’s hard to be human, The Ian Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne, 2003
2nd Sight Australian Photography in the National Gallery of Victoria, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2002
High Tide: Contemporary Indigenous Photography, Linden - St. Kilda Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Disturbance/Perturbamento, Raffaella Cortese, Milan, Italy
Dirty Dozen, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Documenta 11, curated by Okwui Enwezor, Kassel, Germany
Exposed! (part of the Message Sticks programme), Sydney Opera House, 13 May - 2 June, Sydney
The First Twenty Years, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Yokohama Triennale: MEGA WAVE - Towards a New Synthesis, curated by Akira Tatehata, PacificoYokohama Exhibition Hall, Japan
Lightness of Being, Contemporary Photographic Art from Australia, curated by Bernice Murphy Monash University Gallery, Monash University, Melbourne
L'art dans le monde, Paris Musees, Pont Alexandre III, Paris, France
Zeitgenossische Fotokunst Aus Australie, Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin, Germany, and touring throughout Germany
Das Lied von der Erde, Museum Fridericianum, Kassel, Germany
Biennale of Sydney 2000, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
Beyond the Pale - Contemporary lndigenous Art, 2000 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
State of my country, Hogarth Gallery, Sydney
Some Time at the VCA, Victorian College of the Arts Gallery, Melbourne
Talking Together, University Gallery, Launceston
Some Time In Hong Kong (ARX 5), The Exposition Centre, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology
Life Right Now – Perspecta 1999 Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney (collaboration with Michael Riley)
Some Time in Perth (ARX5), Perth Institute of Contemporary Art, Perth
Signs of Life, Mebourne International Biennial, Melbourne
Beyond Myth, Private Garden Palazzo Papadopoli, Venice
Oldies but Goodies, Port Phillip Arts Festival, Linden Gallery, Melbourne
Global Arts Link, Ipswich Regional Arts Gallery, Ipswich
Utopias and Dystopias: Photographic and Fibre Works, FCA Gallery, University of Wollongong
Luna Park and the Art of Mass Delirium, Museum of Modern Art at Heide, Melbourne
Re-Take: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Photography, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, and touring nationally
RAKA Award, Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne
Close Quarters: Art from Australia and New Zealand, Australian Centre of Contemporary Art, Melbourne and touring Australia and New Zealand
Some Time in Singapore/ARX5 Processes, Singapore Art Museum, Singaporeâ¨
Everyday, Glen Eira Gallery, Melbourne
City Provoked, RMIT Gallery, Melbourne
Verve (Sydney Writer's Festival), SH Ervin Gallery, Sydney
Ceremony, Identity and Community (Adelaide Arts Festival), Flinders Art Museum, Adelaide
Facing It, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, New Zealand
Blackroots (Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Festival), Boomalli, Sydney
Lawyers, Guns and Money, Experimental Art Foundation, Adelaide
A Face in the Crowd, National Portrait Gallery, Canberra
The Second Asia-Pacific Triennial, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane
Monash University Art Prize, Monash University Gallery, Melbourne
Re-collection - the Griffith University Art Collection - 25 Years, Brisbane City Gallery
Photography is Dead! Long Live Photography! Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
Inheritance, Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney
Mistaken Identities: Africus - the 1st Johannesburg Biennale, Museum Africa, Johannesburg, South Africa
In the Picture - Creative Australians from the National Library's Portrait Collection, National Portrait Gallery, Canberra
National Women's Art Exhibition, Hogarth Gallery, Sydney
Octette: The Critic's Choice, Eva Breuer Gallery, Sydney
Tyerabarrbowaryaou 2, The 5th Havana Bienial, Havana, Cuba; Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
Bad Toys, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Life Works: Aboriginal Women Photographed in Action and At Work by Aboriginal Women Photographers, Tandanya, Adelaide
An Eccentric Orbit: Electronic Media Art From Australia, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
Urban Focus: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art from the Urban Areas of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
Blakness - Blak City Culture!, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne and touring nationally
Knowing the Sensorium, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane
Descriptions (Next Wave Festival), 200 Gertrude Street, Melbourne
True Colours: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Artists Raise the Flag, Bluecoat Gallery, Liverpool; South London Gallery, London; City Gallery, Leicester (all UK) and touring Australia 1995
Lookin' Good: Koori Gay and Lesbian Artists (Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Festival), Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative, Sydney
Australian Perspecta, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Flowers, Human Sweat and Animal Breath, Long Gallery, Wollongong
Can't See for Looking: Koori Women Artists Educating, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Yanada: New Moon, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, Sydney
Kitch'en Koori (Melbourne Fringe Festival), Fringe Festival Gallery, Melbourne
Aboriginal Women's Exhibition, Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney, and touring nationally
Kudjeris (with Lisa Bellear & Brenda Croft), Boomalli Gallery, Sydney
Pitcha Mi Koori (Melbourne Fringe Festival) Friends of the Earth Gallery, Melbourne
RESIDENCIES AND PUBLIC ART PROJECTS
Where I am, Laneway Commissions, City of Melbourne, Melbourne
Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne (residency)
ARX, Hong Kong, Perth and Singapore (three-part residency)
City Provoked, Melbourne (public art project for Melbourne International Arts Festival)
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Miriam Cosic, 'Destiny Calls', Weekend Australian, 6 February 2021
Emma-Kate Wilson, 'Looking Through the Viewpoint- Australian Contemporary Photography', Mutual Art, 3 Feb 2021
Andrew Stephens, 'Blak like me- how Destiny Deacon used art to shout back at racists', The Age, 15 January 2021
Talia Smith, 'Destiny Deacon A Laugh and a Tear', VAULT, Issue 30, May 2020
Sophie Knezic, 'Destiny Deacon Exhumes Australia’s Histories of Racism and Genocide', Frieze, Issue 214, 24 August 2020
Rose Vickers, 'On Collaboration', Art Collector, 24 July 2020
Myles Russell-Cook, 'Exploring the work of Destiny Deacon, one of Australia’s leading contemporary Indigenous artists', Vogue, 2 June 2020
Claire Coleman, 'Destiny Deacon - Showing colour', Art Monthly, 21 July 2020
ArtReview, '‘Blak’- Destiny Deacon Uncovers the Histories of Indigenous Trauma', Art Review, 20 October 2020
Andrew Stephens, 'The Uncanny Humour of Destiny Deacon', Art Guide, 26 March 2020
Andrew Stephens, 'Destiny Deacon turns racism on its head in first retrospective at NGV', Sydney Morning Herald, 20 March 2020
'Southbank contemporary,' Art Monthly Australia, March 2015, Number 277, p. 10
Dan Rule, 'Destiny Deacon', Artist Profile, Issue 22, 2013, pp 65-72
Matthew Drummond, “Ghost Story”, Australian Financial Review, 13 April 2013
Djon Mundine and Natalie King, `Destiny Deacon and Virginia Fraser', Shadowlife Exhibition Catalogue, 2012-2013, pp24
Stephen Gilchrist, Crossing Cultures (Exhibition Catalogue), Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, (Hanover and London; University Press of New England, 2012) pp. 59-60
Land, Sea and Sky: Contemporary Art of the Torres Strait Islands, Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
Holland Cotter, THE PHANTASM, New York Times, 7 July 2011
Margaret Smith, “More outrageous stuff from Destiny Deacon”, Koori Mail, June 29, 2011, p.53
Destiny Deacon, `Neighbourhood Wathcing', Artlink, Issue 31 No. 3, pp. 49
Bronwyn Watson, Publics Works - Destiny Deacon, The Weekend Australian, June 26
Ashley Crawford, “Destiny Deacon - 50 of Australia's Most Collectable Artists”, Australian Art Collector, issue 51
Khadija La, `Culture Warriors', Artlink, Vol. 30 No. 1, http://www.artlink.com.au/articles/3379/culture-warriors/
Blair French and Daniel Palmer, Twelve Australian Photo Artists, Piper Press, Sydney
John McDonald, “Where glitz meets grunge”, Sydney Morning Herald, 31 February 2009, p. 16
Natalie King, `The Collective Hallucination', Australian Aboriginal Art, Issue 1, March/April/May 20+09, pp56-65
Current, Contemporary Art from Australia and New Zealand, Art & Australia (eds.), Sydney
Hetti Perkins & Jonathon Jones, eds. Half Light - Portraits from Black Australia, exh. cat.
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Djon Mundine, Deacon-structing Destiny, catalogue essay for Transitions exhibition at Tandanya
Brenda Croft et. al., Culture Warriors - The National Indigenous Art Triennial '07, exh. cat. National Gallery of Australia, pp. 88-93
Sebastian Smee, 'Beyond the Frame' The Weekend Australian, November 3-4, pp18-19
Hannah Fink, Queensland Art Gallery Collection Catalogue
Jo Higgins, “Destiny Deacon - “50 of Australia's Most Collectable Artists”, Australian Art Collector, issue 39
Geraldine Barlow, ‘Destiny Deacon: Reading Across Spaces', Eyeline, no. 62, Summer 2006/2007, pp. 52-5
Robert Nelson, ‘Deacon's photos and videos are a mixture of the morbid and the hilarious', The Age, September 20, 2006
Megan Backhouse, ‘Destiny wants her baby blak', The Age, August 22, 2006
High Tide: new currents in art from Australia and New Zealand, exhibition catalogue, Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius and Poland, Warsaw’
Hildegund Amanshauser, ‘Destiny Deacon', photo feature in ‘Quer' Photos for Free Press, 2006, Berlin, Germany pp. 76 – 83
Destiny Deacon: Walk & don't look blak (exhibition catalogue), Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Art, Japan
Renee Martha Langford, ed, Image and Imagination, Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal, Montreal, Canada
Djon Mundine, ‘Destiny Deacon, Walk & don't look blak' in ‘ART iT PICKS, Tokyo', ART iT, 11
Spring/Summer . 4 No. 2 pp. 6-7
Diana Simmonds, ‘Two artists showcase latest work', Inside Entertainment, THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH,
June 18, 2006 p. 3
Sunanda Creagh, Review of Totemistical and Intelligent Design, ‘Open Gallery', The Sydney Morning Herald, June 10-11 2006 p. 16
Latitudes 2005, Hotel de Ville, Paris catalogue pp. 18 - 21
MCA Collection: New Acquisitions in Context, exhibition catalogue, Sydney, 2005 p. 8, 43
Von Hildegund Amanshauser, 'Destiny Deacon', Camera Austria, 90/2005. pg 25 - 36.
The Art Newspaper, 'Today's suggestions: nothing more than €5,000', pg 6, weekend edition, 18,19,20 June 2005.
Sally Brand, Exhibit: Destiny Deacon, Colour Blind, www.theprogram.net.au/reviewsPrint.asp?id=2385
Jill Bennett, Felicity Fenner and Liam Kelly, Prepossession cat. 2005
Adam Geczy, 'Destiny Deacon, Walk and don't look blak', Art AsiaPacific, Spring 2005, pg. 76
Samela Harris, Addicted to art', Australian Art Collector, Issue 32, April `05, pg. 118
Natalie King, 'Profile: Destiny Deacon', Experimenta:Mesh17, March 2005
Gary Carsley, 'Destiny Deacon: Walk & Don't Look Blak', review, photofile, 74-Winter 2005, pg. 65
Jennifer Isaacs, Previews “Destiny Deacon: Walk and Don't Look Blak,” Australian Art Collector, Issue 31, January-March 2005, pg. 173
Julie Roberts, “D-Coy, Nice Coloured Dolls”, Contemporary Visual Arts + Culture broadsheet, December 2004 - February 2005, p. 51
Tracey Clement, “Critic's Picks: Destiny Deacon,” Sydney Morning Herald, Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 6, 2005, p. 19 (Metro)
Carey Lovelace. 'A Gallery of Dreaming', Ms Magazine, Spring 2005
'A date with Destiny', VIBE Australia, issue 95, January 2005 http://www.vibe.com.au/vibe/corporate/celebrity_vibe/showceleb.asp?id=39
Gerlich, 'Destiny Deacon: Walk and don't look blak', Salient, Issue 07, 2005, NZ HYPERLINK, "http://www.salient.org.nz/index.php?a=1104&c=29"
The Art Newspaper, `Destiny Deacon: Walk and don't look blak', What's on, No.152, pg. 16
Christine Nicholls, “'Aboriginalism' in Europe: on the way out?,” Artlink, `hybrid world', Volume 24, No.4, pg 70.
Destiny Deacon “Tradition Today: Indigenous Art in Australia” cat., AGNSW, pg. 44
Terry Ingram, “Production Values, Negative reaction hits prices,” The Australian Financial Review, 24th October 2004
Destiny Deacon: Walk and don't look blak, exhibition catalogue, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia; Cultural Centre Tjibaou, Noumea, New Caledonia
Robert McFarlane, “Uncomfortable routes to a black world,” Sydney Morning Herald (Metropolitan), Tuesday, December 14, p. 13
Rosalie Higson, “'Blak' dolls play with stereotypes,” The Australian, Thursday, November 25, 2004, p. 14
Hellen Ennis, Intersections: Photography, History and the National Library of Australia, National Library of Australia, Canberra, p. 10
Emma Muhlberger, “One Square Mile: Brisbane Boundaries, Museum of Brisbane,” Eyeline #54, Winter, p. 52, 53
Michele Helmrich, “This is not America: Austellung Bei, Dusseldorf, Germany and Dell Gallery, Griffith University, Brisbane,” Eyeline #54, Winter, p. 48
“Interview: Destiny Deacon in conversation with David Broker,” Photofile, issue #72, Spring 2004, p. 18 - 21
Margo Neale and Timothy Morell, “Who's Laughing: Humour in Indigenous Australian Photography,” Photofile, issue #72, Spring 2004, p. 54 - 57
Hannah Fink, “Destiny Deacon,” Spirit and Vision exh. cat., Kunst der Gegenwart, Sammlung Essl, Austria (exceprt from 2004 `Cracking Up,' in Australian Humanities Review), pp. 150-153
Michael Fitzgerald, “Not Dying, Changing,” TIME, March 22, 2004, p. 62, 63
Hannah Fink, “Cracking Up,” Australian Humanities Review http://www.lib.latrobe.edu.au/AHR/archive/Issue-July-1999/fink.html
Belinda Grace Gardiner, “Berlin: Australien im Blickpunkt,” Kunsteitung, No. 86, October 2003
Anke Brankamp, “Destiny Deacon,” Art Australia: Zeitigenössishe Kunst, exhibition catalogue, Seippel Verlag, Autoren und Künstler, Germany, 2003, p. 18 - 21
Elisa Fulco, “Destiny Deacon,” Flash Art, August – September, p. 116
Milovan Farronato, “Destiny Deacon: Galleria Raffaella Cortese,” Tema Celeste #99, September – October, p. 87
“Destiny Deacon: Galleria Raffaella Cortese,” Milano #21, 18 June 2003
Luigi Camporelli, “Destiny Deacon, aborigeno che fugge dall’arte tribale,” La Stampa, 17 June 2003
Bertrand Delux, “Destiny Deacon,” Zero2, June 2003
Hannah Fink, “Destiny Deacon,” See Here Now: Vizard Foundation Art Collection of the 1990s, editors Chris MacAuliffe and Sue Harvey, Ian Potter Museum of Art, Thames and Hudson (Australia) Pty Ltd, Victoria, p. 52 - 55
Emma Matthews, “New View: Indigenous Photographic Perspectives,” Artlink, vol. 23 no. 3, p. 20-22
Anne Loxley, “Awakening to death in the weighty intrigue of sleep,” Sydney Morning Herald (Metropolitan), Tuesday, August 24 2003, p. 14
Katrina Strickland, “Black lives viewed from the inside,” The Australian (Arts), Thursday May 29, p. 14
Anne Loxley, “Gems behind the verbiage,” Sydney Morning Herald (Metropolitan), Wednesday, April 9, p. 14
Daniel Palmer, ’Destiny Deacon: 50 Most Collectable Artists,’ Australian Art Collector, Issue 23, January – March
2nd Sight Australian Photography in the National Gallery of Victoria, exh. cat., National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2002, p. 109
Catriona Moore, “Photo-Documentary's Fluctuating Fortunes,” Value Added Goods: Essays on Contemporary Photography, ed. Stuart Koop, Contemporary Centre for Photography, Melbourne, 2002, p. 27 - 33
Documenta 11, exh. cat., “Destiny Deacon,” Hatje Cantz, Germany, pp. 240 - 244
Documenta 11 Short Guide, “Destiny Deacon,” Hatje Cantz, Germany, p. 60, 61
Manray Hsu, “In the wake of empire,” Tema Celeste, no. 92, July - August, pp. 32 - 35 Brenda Croft, “No need looking,” Photofile, no. 66, September, pp. 24 - 29
Other Views: an exhibition from the Griffith University Art Collection, exh. cat., Griffith University, Nathan, Queensland
Helen McDonald, Erotic Ambiguities, The Female Nude in Art, Routledge, London, England
Brook Andrew: “Remembering Jesus”, Artlink, Vol. 21 No. 2, pp.23
Destiny Deacon: Indigenous Law Bulletin, November-December, 2000, volume 5, issue 4 (cover and pictures)
“Not quite right, but interestingly queer: Virginia Fraser talks with Destiny Deacon,” Photofile, #61, December
“Destiny Deacon: Portfolio,” Photofile, #61, December
Lola Greeno, “Talking Together”, Talking Together (catalogue), University of Tasmania
Marcia Langton, “Destiny Deacon,” Sydney Biennale 2000, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, p.46, 47
Linda Michael, “Destiny Deacon,” Das Lied Von Der Erde, Museum Fridericianum, Kassel, Germany, p. 76,77
Vicki West and Lola Greeno, “Destiny Deacon”, Talking Together (catalogue), University of Tasmania
Nikos Papastergiadis “Destiny Deacon” Beyond the Pale, 2000 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art (catalogue)
Destiny Deacon, “3 Boiled Buns”, Artlink, Dec (Vol 19, rio 4)
Virginia Fraser, “Force-fed: Food in the Art of Destiny Deacon”, Artlink, Dec , Vol 19, no 4
Suzanne Spurner, “The 1999 Indigenous Arts Festival”, Real-Time, Oct/Nov
Clare Williamson, “Mirrors and Windows”, Art Monthly Australia, October
Destiny Deacon, picture, Real-Time, Aug/Sept.
Hannah Fink, “Cracking Up,” Australian Humanities Review, July issue, 1999
Destiny Deacon, ARX 5 - Perth catalogue, July
Hannah Fink, “Beyond Myth—Oltre II Mito,” (catalogue essay), Venice, June
Destiny Deacon, Exploring Culture and Community for the 21st Century, (picture), Global Artslink, Ipswich
Juliana Engberg, “Destiny Deacon”, Signs of Life , Melbourne International Biennial 1999 (catalogue),City of Melbourne
Virginia Fraser, “Destiny's Dollys”, Photo Files: An Australian Photography Reader, (Blair French, editor) Power Publications, Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney
Howard Morphy, Aboriginal Art, Phaidon Press Ltd., London.
Christina Barton, Zara Stanhope, and Clare Williamson, “Speaking of Strange Bedfellows”, Close Quarters: Contemporary Art from Australia and New Zealand (catalogue), Monash University Gallery/ Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Destiny Deacon, Processes ARX5 (catalogue) (Singapore Art Museum)
Robert Rooney, “Pursuing a minimal existence”, The Australian 23 October (review)
Paula Abood, “Landscapes of Loss and Memory”, Periphery, No 36, Spring
Kelly Gellatly, “Photography and family”. Art Monthly, September
Destiny Deacon, A Sea Change—Australian Writing and Photography, Adam Shoemaker, editor, (photograph), Sydney 2000, Olympic Arts Festival
Destiny Deacon, artist's statement, Postcards from Mummy (catalogue)
Diana Quillaen, “Verve and After the Masters”, Art Monthly, June
Destiny Deacon, artist's statement, City Provoked (catalogue)
Benjamin Genocchio, “Dreaming in Urban Areas: Activism and Audience in Urban Aboriginal Art”, Eyeline, no35
Dina Ross, “Disappearance and death, with humour”, The Age 18 March (feature story)
Doreen Mellor, Ceremony, Identity and Community (catalogue essay), Flinders Art Museum, SA
Destiny Deacon, “Soapbox: Cool and Naughty”, Lip March
John Harding, Inya Dreams by Destiny Deacon, (catalogue) September 1997, Peformance Space, Sydney
Hetti Perkins, “Dreams of the city”, The Australian's Review of Books, September
Marcia Langton, “The Valley of the Dolls: Black humour and the art of Destiny Deacon”, Art and Australia, Vol 35, no 1
Phip Murray, Milk magazine, July(August, [profile].
Destiny Deacon, Art Monthly, July, lback-cover].
Antonia Carver, “It's about time: Brenda L Croft and Destiny Deacon”, Make, the magazine of women's art, no 70, June-July
Stephanie Holt, “Images of Luna Park and St. Kilda”, Art and Australia, vol 34, no. 4, 1997
Jane Greville, “Brenda L Croft and Destiny Deacon”, Creative Camera, no 345, Apr-May
Rebecca Lancashire, The Age, 18 February, (Feature story]
Freida Freiberg, The Age, 18 February, review
Destiny Deacon, artist statement and colour plates, and Virginia Fraser, “Fashioned”, No fixed dress (catalogue), Melbourne
Clare Williamson, “Destiny Deacon”, The Second Asia-Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (catalogue), Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane
Joan Kerr, “Colonial Quotations”, Art and Australia, vol 33 no 3, Autumn
Andrew Dewdney, “Deliberate acts of cultural translation: Strange Fruit; Welcome to Never Never”, Third Text. no 35, Summer
Hetti Perkins, Abstracts: New Aboriginalities, (catalogue) SWAPP, England
Beth Jackson, re-collection; The Griffith University Art Collection - 25 Years, Griffith University, Brisbane
Destiny Deacon, artist's statement, colour plates, Photography is Dead! Long Live Photography! (catalogue), Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
Destiny Deacon, plates and captions, Artlink, vol 15 no 2-3 Winter-Spring
Kate Jones, “In her eyes”, Artlink vol 15 no 1, Autumn
Destiny Deacon, plates, Art and Australia vol 32 no 3 Autumn
Destiny Deacon, cover, Art Almanac, May
Roger Benjamin, “Blakness Blak City Culture”, Art + Text, no 50
Jo Holder, “Destiny Deacon”, Artlink, vol 15 no 4, Summer
Destiny Deacon, plate and article, Black Ei- White Magazine, February.
Djon Mundine, “La quinta bienial de Ia Habana” Art Asia Pacific vol 2 no 1 January
Natalie King, bad toys (catalogue), Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne, December
Cecelia Cmielewski, “My boomerang won't come back”, Photo file #42 June
Juliet Peers, “Nourishment for Hard Times: Bring a Plate Feminist Cultural Studies Conference”, Artlink, Vol 4, no 1, Autumn
Destiny Deacon and Virginia Fraser, My boomerang won't come back (catalogue), Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia, Adelaide, April
Catriona Moore, “Museum Hygiene”, Photo file, #41 March
True Colours: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists raise the flag (catalogue), Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative, Sydney
Virginia Fraser “Destiny's Dollys”, Photo file #40 November
Ann Stephen, Hetti Perkins, Et Avenel Mitchell, “Repatriation, Race, Representation”, Photo file #40 November
Brenda Croft, “Blak lik mi”, Art and Australia, vol 31 no 1, Spring
Catherine De Lorenzo, “Delayed Exposure: Contemporary Aboriginal Photography”, Art and Australia, vol 31 no 1, Spring
Destiny Deacon, artist's statement, Flowers, Herbs, Human Sweat &~ Animal Breath (catalogue), School of Creative Arts, University of Wollongong, NSW
Marcia Langton, Well I heard it on the radio, and I saw it on the television . Australian Film Commission, Sydney
Victoria Lynn and Hetti Perkins, Perspecta 1993 (catalogue essay), Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney
Hetti Perkins, Perspecta 1993 (catalogue essay), Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney
Joanna Mendelssohn, “New art unmasked”, The Bulletin, October 19
Yanada - New Moon (catalogue essay), Ivan Dougherty Gallery, UNSW, Sydney
Hetti Perkins, Kudjeris (catalogue essay), Boomalli Aboriginal Artists' Co-operative, Sydney
Hetti Perkins, “Introduction”, Aboriginal Women's Exhibition (catalogue), Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney
RESIDENCIES AND PUBLIC ART PROJECT
RMIT UNIVERSITY - Artist in residency
Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne - Artist in residency
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology - Cultural exchange
Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts - Homeless people and Balidu Primary School
Singapore, Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts - Cultural exchange
Performance Space, Sydney - Redfern Children's School
City Provoked, Melbourne (public art project for Melbourne International Arts Festival)
AWARDS
Photography Award of musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac
Centenary Medal, Royal Photographic Society Awards
The Red Ochre Award (Lifetime Achievement), First Nations Arts Awards
Yalingwa Fellowship, Yalingwa visual arts initiative
The Deadlys -15th National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islanders Awards 2009 - Visual Artist of the Year
COLLECTIONS
Art & Heritage Collections, City of Melbourne, Victoria
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth
Austcorp Management
Australian Museum
Banyule Art Collection
BHP Billiton
City of Port Phillip
Deloitte Services
Flinders University
Griffith University
La Trobe University Art Museum
Minter-Ellison
Monash University Museum of Art
Museum Moderner Kunst (MUMOK), Stifting Ludwig Wien, Vienna
Museum Sammlung Essl, Austria
Museum Victoria
Museum of Contemporary Art
National Gallery of Australia
National Gallery of Victoria
National Library of Australia
Plimsoll Gallery, Tasmanian School of Art at Hobart, University of Tasmania
Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art
State Library of Victoria
Sydney International Airport
University of Canberra
University of Wollongong
UQ Art Museum, The University of Queensland
Vizard Foundation/Ian Potter Museum of Art
Wyndham Art Gallery
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