JULIE RRAP’s collaborative curation of Switch with Cherine Fahd is now open at Sydney College of the Arts and runs until 11 April.
'Switch is an exhibition in which five artists and five writers collaborate by stepping into unfamiliar modes of practice. Artists write; writers make art. This displacement is intended to test what happens when practice is loosened from its usual forms. From this starting point, each pair develops their work through ongoing response: writing, making, or shifting approach as their dialogue unfolds.' - Exhibition text.
Artists: Debra Phillips & Anthony Gardner; Patrick Pound & Daniel Palmer; Julie Rrap & Anne Marsh; Cherine Fahd & George Alexander; Karla Dickens & Daniel Browning.
JULIE RRAP features in the Sydney Morning Herald article
JULIE RRAP features in the Sydney Morning Herald article " What is it like to become friends in your 70s? Very different to when you are in your 20s".
Author Drusilla Modjeska and Julie discuss their journey of being mutual acquaintances for years before finally becoming friends in 2018.
DRUSILLA MODJESKA is one of Australia’s most acclaimed writers. Her books include the award-winning Poppy and the bestselling The Orchard and Stravinsky’s Lunch, which won the New South Wales Premier’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction.
JACKY REDGATE & JULIE RRAP feature in Women photographers 1853–2018 at The National Gallery of Australia
JACKY REDGATE and JULIE RRAP will be featured in the National Gallery of Australia's major upcoming exhibition Women photographers 1853–2018, showing from 11 October 2025 to 15 March 2026.
Her striking work Light throw (mirrors) #8 2011 will feature in the exhibition. Redgate’s Light throw (mirrors) series is a landmark exploration of light, reflection, and perception, critically expanding the language of photographic abstraction.
Rrap's powerful Persona and Shadow series will be on display for the exhibition - a powerful nine-part photo-media series which parodies the way women have been portrayed in art history.
Women photographers 1853–2018 is a Know My Name project, the National Gallery initiative celebrating the work of women artists to further understanding of their contribution to Australia’s cultural life.
Spanning over 160 years of image-making, this exhibition highlights how women have transformed photography and how photography has empowered women to transform the world around them.
Women photographers 1853–2018 is part of the gallery’s Know My Name initiative, celebrating the vital contributions of women artists to Australia’s cultural history and how photography has been both a tool and a force for transformation.
MECCA Bourke St VIP Opening
Such a pleasure to attend the VIP opening of MECCA Bourke Street and experience the incredible collection of artworks now on display, including powerful pieces by PAT BRASSINGTON and JULIE RRAP.
Huge congratulations to Founder and Co-CEO Jo Horgan, curator Charlotte Day (Director of Potter Museum of Art and Buxton Contemporary), and the brilliant team including Kelly Semmler, Annabel Brown, and many others, for assembling such a striking celebration of contemporary female artists. A truly inspiring commitment to supporting and showcasing their vital work.
IMAGE: Arc One Director Fran Clark and Charlotte Day in front of Julie Rrap’s ’Sister’ and ‘Conception’ from her seminal 1984 Persona and Shadow series
ANNE ZAHALKA & JULIE RRAP Feature in Exhibition 'Collecting the Future' at Griffith University Art Museum
Anne Zahalka and Julie Rrap's iconic works are currently on display in 'Collecting the Future', now showing at Griffith University Art Museum.
This exhibition celebrates the Griffith University Art Collection through powerful works of feminist self-representation and photographic performance.
More information can be found here.
JULIE RRAP at MCA – Behind the exhibition 'Past Continuous'
Delve deeper into the making of Julie Rrap's major solo exhibition 'Past Continuous' with
this wonderful short video from the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. In this clip, we go behind the scenes with Rrap as she discusses her recent performance piece Drawn In (2024), and reflects on its connection to Disclosures: A Photographic Construct from 1982.
Watch the full video here. Courtesy of the artist and the MCA Australia.
Julie Rrap: Past Continuous
📅 27 July 2024, 2–2.30pm
📍Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
@mca_australia #MCAAustralia #JulieRrap #PastContinuous
JULIE RRAP: Past Continuous @ MCA
"At the beginning, my work was critiqued through self-conscious feminism. Now, I don’t know how it will be received. And when I have used a body it’s been my own, but you don’t find out much about me in that personal sense. You just see a body moving through time. I also think that this show is as much about time as it is about a body. I show a body through time."
Head to Art Guide to read a fantastic interview with Julie Rrap by Lauren Carroll Harris. In a conversation Rrap discusses her current survey ‘Past Continuous’ at the MCA, which exhibits ‘Disclosures’ with newer works that consider the cultural invisibility of the ageing female body.
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Read the full interview here >
Julie Rrap: Past Continuous
📅 28 June 2024 – 16 February 2025
📍Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
JULIE RRAP to be interviewed on ABC Radio Sydney
TUNE IN
Turn on ABC Radio Sydney to hear Julie Rrap being interviewed by Sarah Macdonald on Sydney Mornings.
Rrap will be live at 10.30am (Monday, 2 September 2024), to discuss her 40 years of arts practice, as her exhibition Past Continuous continues at MCA.
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JULIE RRAP featured in Artist Profile
Ahead of the artist's solo exhibition ‘Past Continuous’, opening in June at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, ARTIST PROFILE has devoted a cover story to the astounding 40-year career of JULIE RRAP.
"Julie Rrap was in her late teens and living in a share house in South Brisbane when she and a group of friends took magic mushrooms. An image she hallucinated while studying her reflection in a glass windowpane at night has never left her. It was the face of an older woman she understood to be her her future self..."
Read more of Lilian Cameron’s cover story, accompanied by Anna Kučera’s exclusive portraits, in Issue 67 of Artist Profile.
JULIE RRAP Interviewed by Jennifer Higgie
Julie Rrap interviewed in Ocular by Jennifer Higgie. In the interview Rrap discusses the evolution of her latest commission - a double cast of her body in bronze - and evaluates its place amongst four decades of feminist practice.
Rrap is the recipient of the 2024 Melbourne Art Foundation Commission. Her work, titled 'SOMOS (Standing On My Own Shoulders)', is a life-sized bronze sculpture that will be unveiled at Melbourne Art Fair next week, before travelling to the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA) where it will be included in Rrap's solo show, 'Past Continuous', opening in June 2024, and later to its permanent home in the collection of the Art Gallery of Western Australia.
JULIE RRAP & JANET LAURENCE Feature in Artists' Artists Podcast
JULIE RRAP & JANET LAURENCE were interviewed by Jennifer Higgie for the National Gallery of Australia's podcast 'Artists’ Artists', a five-part series connecting audiences with works of art from the national collection through the lens of contemporary artists.
The podcast invites audiences to learn more about some of the treasures and lesser-known works in the national collection, as well as gain insight into the personal life experiences and stories of Australian and international artists.
Episode 1: Julie Rrap
Julie Rrap is an Australian artist who was born in 1950 and lives in Warrang/Sydney. She has 15 works in the national collection, including multiple works from her monumental Persona and shadow series 1984. In this episode, she speaks about works of art by Sol Wiener, Sarah Lucas, Tracey Moffatt and Yukultji Napangati.
Episode 4: Janet Laurence
Janet Laurence is an Australian artist who was born in 1947 and lives in Warrang/Sydney. In 2020-21, her work was included in National Gallery exhibition Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now: Part One. Laurence has nine works in the national collection, including the large-scale installation Requiem 2020. In this episode, she speaks about works of art by Eva Hesse, Robert Smithson, Rosalie Gascoigne and Nyapanyapa Yunupingu.
JULIE RRAP in 'Suppose You Are Not' at Arter in Istanbul, Turkey
JULIE RRAP is part of 'Suppose You Are Not' a group exhibition at Arter in Istanbul, Turkey. The exhibition, drawn from the Ömer Koç Collection is curated by Selen Ansen, will be on view at Arter between 19 January–29 December 2024.
Suppose You Are Not, the first private collection exhibition held at Arter, spans a wide and deep territory not only in terms of the artworks and objects it encompasses but also the diverse mediums and themes that these artefacts are concerned with. Titled with inspiration from a line in Omar Khayyam’s Rubaiyat [Quatrains], the exhibition which brings together over 600 works, functional objects, rarities, furniture, and books produced in different periods explores the relations that emerge through the juxtapositions formed by a collection.
Suppose You Are Not delves into the passionate striving to collect and preserve the traces of humanity, the good and the evil, the ephemeral gestures, states, allusions and movements ranging from the most sublime to the most mundane, from the most permanent to the most ephemeral, which manage to persist by being conveyed from the dead to the living.
PAT BRASSINGTON, JULIE RRAP, HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT on display in 'In the Arms of Unconsciousness: Women, Feminism & the Surreal' at Hazelhurst Arts Centre
In the Arms of Unconsciousness: Women, Feminism & the Surreal features a selection of works including Pat Brassington, Julie Rrap, Honey Long & Prue Stent, among other significant contemporary Australian artists on display at Hazelhurst Arts Centre from 1 July 2023 to 10 September 2023.
Sitting within a renewed global interest in women artists and Surrealism, this ambitious exhibition explores ideas of feminism and the surreal, proposing an intrinsic between the two, particularly in contemporary Australian art practice over the decades.
JULIE RRAP work 'Drawn Out' acquired by the National Gallery of Australia
Drawn out (2022) is one of Julie Rrap’s most recent performative self-portraits, the latest in a performative project that began almost fifty years ago.
The work, which is in effect a life drawing, comprises a video-performance of Rrap – shot from above, naked and holding a stick of Conté crayon – drawing on a large sheet of paper, moving under instruction of an unseen supervisor. Over a 12-minute period, Rrap’s body and the sheet of paper become covered in black marks as artist, body, sheet and drawing merge in a neat riposte to the way the genre of the nude, and life drawing in particular, usually position the artist and the naked subject. Together, the drawing and the video-performance produce a compelling, feminist self-portrait that is at once poetic and full of pathos. Key to the work’s disruptive power is the fact that this is the body of a 72-year-old woman, whose body we have looked at in the process of making art and ageing since the late 1970s.
JULIE RRAP finalist in the 2023 Dobell Drawing Prize
Congratulations to JULIE RRAP, who is a finalist in the Dobell Drawing Prize 2023.
National Art School presents the Dobell prize, which celebrates contemporary drawing.
Rrap’s video work ‘DRAW OUT’ is a brilliant investigation of drawing ‘the nude’:
“The drawing is a kind of haptic expression as a naked Julie Rrap rolls back and forth over paper secured to the floor. Here she marks the parameters of her body in charcoal. She can’t actually see her body as one entity in this process, it is not an object of her gaze. What we see is the writing and erasing of a body in pieces, a fragmented body, a body that wears the erasure of the drawing on its skin.” @annemarsh56, 2022
All finalists will be on show at the NAS Gallery until 10th June 2023.
JULIE RRAP, ‘Drawn Out’, 2022, video, 12 min.
JANET LAURENCE Artist Talk 'Artists on the Ice: Interpreting the Poetics of Antartica'
ARTISTS' TALK
Across an evening of storytelling, performance and conversation, JANET LAURENCE will join a panel of four exceptional artists who have documented the power and beauty of Antarctica.
Moderated by the wonderful JULIE RRAP, in her role as Director of Sydney College of the Arts, this talk at the University of Sydney is not to be missed! Other panellists include Alice Giles AM, Professor Jean McNeil, and Dr Diana Chester.
Thursday, 20 April 2023, 6PM. This is a free event, but registration is essential, and seats are going fast! Register on the @sydney_uni website.
JULIE RRAP features in Harper's Bazaar Australia
"[There] is this invisibility around the ageing female body, and it almost sends the message that a post-reproduction body doesn’t have any purpose.”
Early in 2022, Rrap exhibited her new video series DRAWN OUT at ARC ONE for the first time. This significant body of work halted audiences in their tracks:
“I think it’s the first show I’ve done where people, both male and female, were just completely absorbed by watching these videos,” she says. “It was almost like they were hungry to see this footage of an older woman drawing herself naked.”
Visit ARC ONE Gallery today to see this powerful piece in our Viewing Rooms.
JULIE RRAP 'Hairline Crack' Installed at AGNSW
Julie Rrap, 'Hairline crack', 1992, acrylic glass and hair, Installation dimensions variable.
It is fantastic to see JULIE RRAP'S key work 'Hairline Crack', 1992, installed among the permanent collection display at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
Rrap first presented 'Hairline crack' in the 9th Biennale of Sydney. From a distance, the artwork resembles a black line drawn on the wall, evoking, perhaps, the work of Sol LeWitt, Mel Bochner or other artists associated with minimalism. On closer inspection, however, it is quickly discovered that the line is in fact made from an unruly excess of human hair.
The work might be seen to meditate on the tension between the organic and the synthetic or between order and chaos. The perfectly straight, level line reveals itself to be disrupted by something organic and unpredictable; a part of our bodies associated with beauty that is also cut and discarded.
SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY 2022
Welcome to ARC ONE at SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY
From today will be showing a selection of major artworks from some of Australia's most significant contemporary practitioners, including PAT BRASSINGTON, LYNDELL BROWN / CHARLES GREEN, PETER DAVERINGTON, MURRAY FREDERICKS, JANET LAURENCE, HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT, DANI MARTI, JULIE RRAP, IMANTS TILLERS, GUAN WEI, CATHERINE WOO, and JOHN YOUNG. We are also proud to be presenting, for the first time, the work of internationally acclaimed artist DESMOND LAZARO.
Our booth is showcasing brand new artworks, alongside some of the most iconic works from ARC ONE Gallery, in celebration of these artists and their significant contribution to contemporary art in this country.
JULIE RRAP and Director Fran Clark featured in ART COLLECTOR
Artist JULIE RRAP and Director Fran Clark feature in the current issue of Art Collector, talking about the longevity of their friendship and professional relationship.
"Artists need to believe in their own vision of the world and a gallerist needs to be able to come on for the ride, but their input can provide invaluable guidance when the ride gets a bit bumpy." - Julie Rrap
"We share a respect that is underpinned by a great care for each other's way of working. Julie has always supported me with solid counsel." - Director Fran Clark
