G.W.Bot

 
 

G.W. Bot is the artist’s name for the leading Australian artist Christine Grishin, who has been practicing as a full-time artist for more than 30 years.  GW Bot is a printmaker, painter, sculptor and graphic artist who has exhibited extensively nationally and internationally.  She has had held over 50 solo exhibitions, including shows in Sydney, Canberra, Melbourne, London, Paris, New York and Los Angeles.  She has participated in over 200 group and invitational exhibitions.  She is the recipient of numerous commissions and has been awarded residencies in Europe, Asia and Australia. 

Her work was represented in the Australia exhibition, at the Royal Academy, London (2013).  Out of Australia: prints and drawings from Sidney Nolan to Rover Thomas, British Museum, London (2011) and in The story of Australian printmaking 1803-2005, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra (2007).  Her survey exhibition GW Bot: The Long Paddock: A 30 year survey, toured nationally from 2010 to 2013.  GW Bot’s work is held in over a hundred public art collections nationally and internationally, including: National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Albertina, Vienna, Austria; British Museum, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Fogg Museum of Fine Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA; Kharkiv Art Gallery, Ukraine; Lublin Museum, Poland; Museum of Modern Art, Osaka, Japan; Queensland Art Gallery; Art Gallery of South Australia; Art Gallery of NSW; Mornington Peninsula Art Gallery Collection; Parliament House Art Collection, Canberra; Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Launceston; National Library of Australia, Canberra; Mitchell Library, Sydney; State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Araluen Art Centre, Alice Springs; Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, Peoples Republic of China and Artbank, Australia.

The artist explains the choice of her exhibiting name, a choice she made some 40 years ago.  “According to Aboriginal totemic belief, each member of a clan inherits a totemic relationship with a particular plant or animal of the region.  I like this idea of oneness with the environment.  Where I live wombats are especially prevalent and they have become my totemic animal.  The earliest written reference to a wombat occurs in a French source where it is called ‘le grand Wam Bot,’ and hence my exhibiting name – G.W. Bot.”

She was born in Quetta, Pakistan, of Australian parents, and studied art in London, Paris and Australia and graduated from the Australian National University in 1982.  Her drawings were first published as illustrations in a book in London in 1980 and since 1985 she had worked as a full-time artist maintaining an independent studio practice.

She is represented by Australian Galleries in Melbourne and Sydney, in Canberra by Beaver Galleries, in Brisbane by Noreen Grahame Galleries, in Paris by Arts d’Australie and in New York by 5+5 Gallery.  In 2005, 2006 and 2009 she was voted as one of the 50 most collectable artists in the Australian Art Collector.

www.gwbot.net

Previous
Previous

Emina Adriaans

Next
Next

Kathleen Potts