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Sue Ford Sold at Auction Prices

Painter, Photographer, b. 1943 - d. 2009

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    • SUE FORD (1943-2009), Metamorphosis 2003
      Jul. 24, 2023

      SUE FORD (1943-2009), Metamorphosis 2003

      Est: $1,500 - $2,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Metamorphosis 2003 pegasus photographic print on archival Fuji paper 47 x 72cm © Sue Ford/Copyright Agency, 2023

      Gibson's
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Gestation 2003 c-type photograph, ed. 3/10
      Sep. 01, 2022

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Gestation 2003 c-type photograph, ed. 3/10

      Est: $1,500 - $2,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Gestation 2003 c-type photograph, ed. 3/10 editioned, signed and dated below image 96 x 137cm (sheet) PROVENANCE: Private collection, Melbourne EXHIBITIONS: Sue Ford Retrospective, Ian Potter Centre: National Gallery of Victoria, 17 April - 24 August 2014 (another example) OTHER NOTES: "Balancing beauty and gravity, Ford manages to capture a visual poetry...and translate it into a gently provocative narrative about the ongoing frisson in Australia's elusive self-portrait." (Anna Clabburn, 2003). Another example of this work is held in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria.

      Leonard Joel
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Gestation 2003 c-type photograph, ed. 3/10
      Jul. 27, 2022

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Gestation 2003 c-type photograph, ed. 3/10

      Est: $2,000 - $3,000

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Gestation 2003 c-type photograph, ed. 3/10 editioned, signed and dated below image 96 x 137cm (sheet) PROVENANCE: Private collection, Melbourne EXHIBITIONS: Sue Ford Retrospective, Ian Potter Centre: National Gallery of Victoria, 17 April - 24 August 2014 (another example) OTHER NOTES: "Balancing beauty and gravity, Ford manages to capture a visual poetry...and translate it into a gently provocative narrative about the ongoing frisson in Australia's elusive self-portrait." (Anna Clabburn, 2003). Another example of this work is held in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria.

      Leonard Joel
    • Sue Ford (1943-2009)
      Feb. 15, 2022

      Sue Ford (1943-2009)

      Est: $2,000 - $3,000

      Lajamunu Women holding discussion with Hazel Hawke at Barrunga, Northern Territory, 1988 gelatin print edition: 3/5

      Shapiro Auctioneers
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait II 2002 pegasus print
      Apr. 15, 2021

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait II 2002 pegasus print

      Est: $800 - $1,200

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait II 2002 pegasus print 73 x 50cm, frame size: 99 x 71cm PROVENANCE: Arc One Gallery, Melbourne, 2007 Private collection, Melbourne OTHER NOTES: © Courtesy of the artist Pegasus refers to the Kodak printer that was used in the 1990s. Today they are referred to as photographic prints on lustre and sometimes as C-Prints. The paper they were printed on, Fuji archival paper, is still in use today. "Sue Ford was a pioneer of Australian photography, and one of the most important practitioners to emerge in the wave of 1970s feminist photographers... Ford's work was both personal and political, and shows a fascination with private, shared and forgotten histories." Text courtesy of the National Gallery of Victoria

      Leonard Joel
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait IV 2002 pegasus print
      Mar. 31, 2021

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait IV 2002 pegasus print

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait IV 2002 pegasus print 78 x 48cm, frame size: 102 x 70cm PROVENANCE: Arc One Gallery, Melbourne, 2007 Private collection, Melbourne OTHER NOTES: © Courtesy of the artist Pegasus refers to the Kodak printer that was used in the 1990s. Today they are referred to as photographic prints on lustre and sometimes as C-Prints. The paper they were printed on, Fuji archival paper, is still in use today. "Sue Ford was a pioneer of Australian photography, and one of the most important practitioners to emerge in the wave of 1970s feminist photographers... Ford's work was both personal and political, and shows a fascination with private, shared and forgotten histories." Text courtesy of the National Gallery of Victoria

      Leonard Joel
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait V 2002 pegasus print
      Mar. 31, 2021

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait V 2002 pegasus print

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait V 2002 pegasus print 84.5 x 55cm, frame size: 109 x 79cm PROVENANCE: Arc One Gallery, Melbourne, 2007 Private collection, Melbourne OTHER NOTES: © Courtesy of the artist Pegasus refers to the Kodak printer that was used in the 1990s. Today they are referred to as photographic prints on lustre and sometimes as C-Prints. The paper they were printed on, Fuji archival paper, is still in use today. "Sue Ford was a pioneer of Australian photography, and one of the most important practitioners to emerge in the wave of 1970s feminist photographers... Ford's work was both personal and political, and shows a fascination with private, shared and forgotten histories." Text courtesy of the National Gallery of Victoria

      Leonard Joel
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait VI 2002 pegasus print
      Mar. 31, 2021

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait VI 2002 pegasus print

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait VI 2002 pegasus print 94 x 55.5cm, frame size: 109 x 79cm PROVENANCE: Arc One Gallery, Melbourne, 2007 Private collection, Melbourne OTHER NOTES: © Courtesy of the artist Pegasus refers to the Kodak printer that was used in the 1990s. Today they are referred to as photographic prints on lustre and sometimes as C-Prints. The paper they were printed on, Fuji archival paper, is still in use today. "Sue Ford was a pioneer of Australian photography, and one of the most important practitioners to emerge in the wave of 1970s feminist photographers... Ford's work was both personal and political, and shows a fascination with private, shared and forgotten histories." Text courtesy of the National Gallery of Victoria

      Leonard Joel
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait II 2002 pegasus print
      Mar. 31, 2021

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait II 2002 pegasus print

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait II 2002 pegasus print 73 x 50cm, frame size: 99 x 71cm PROVENANCE: Arc One Gallery, Melbourne, 2007 Private collection, Melbourne OTHER NOTES: © Courtesy of the artist Pegasus refers to the Kodak printer that was used in the 1990s. Today they are referred to as photographic prints on lustre and sometimes as C-Prints. The paper they were printed on, Fuji archival paper, is still in use today. "Sue Ford was a pioneer of Australian photography, and one of the most important practitioners to emerge in the wave of 1970s feminist photographers... Ford's work was both personal and political, and shows a fascination with private, shared and forgotten histories." Text courtesy of the National Gallery of Victoria

      Leonard Joel
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait III 2002 pegasus print
      Mar. 31, 2021

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait III 2002 pegasus print

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait III 2002 pegasus print 77 x 48cm, frame size: 102 x 70cm PROVENANCE: Arc One Gallery, Melbourne, 2007 Private collection, Melbourne OTHER NOTES: © Courtesy of the artist Pegasus refers to the Kodak printer that was used in the 1990s. Today they are referred to as photographic prints on lustre and sometimes as C-Prints. The paper they were printed on, Fuji archival paper, is still in use today. "Sue Ford was a pioneer of Australian photography, and one of the most important practitioners to emerge in the wave of 1970s feminist photographers... Ford's work was both personal and political, and shows a fascination with private, shared and forgotten histories." Text courtesy of the National Gallery of Victoria

      Leonard Joel
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait I 2002 pegasus print
      Mar. 31, 2021

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait I 2002 pegasus print

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      SUE FORD (1943-2009) Shadow Portrait I 2002 pegasus print 79 x 48cm, frame size: 103 x 70cm PROVENANCE: Arc One Gallery, Melbourne, 2007 Private collection, Melbourne OTHER NOTES: © Courtesy of the artist Pegasus refers to the Kodak printer that was used in the 1990s. Today they are referred to as photographic prints on lustre and sometimes as C-Prints. The paper they were printed on, Fuji archival paper, is still in use today. "Sue Ford was a pioneer of Australian photography, and one of the most important practitioners to emerge in the wave of 1970s feminist photographers... Ford's work was both personal and political, and shows a fascination with private, shared and forgotten histories." Text courtesy of the National Gallery of Victoria

      Leonard Joel
    • Sue Ford (1943 - 2009) - Untitled, 2003 61 x 91.5cm
      Apr. 12, 2018

      Sue Ford (1943 - 2009) - Untitled, 2003 61 x 91.5cm

      Est: $400 - $600

      Sue Ford (1943 - 2009) Untitled, 2003 photograph, ed. 1/10 61 x 91.5cm signed lower right

      Lawsons
    • SUE FORD (1943-2009)
      Sep. 16, 2014

      SUE FORD (1943-2009)

      Est: $4,000 - $6,000

      Bob Hawke and Gerry Hand receiving a painting, Barungh, Northern Territory,June 12, 1988. Meeting/Baunga Treaty, 1988. Sue Ford.  photograph PROVENANCE: The artist Private collection, Melbourne titled, dated and signed on reverse in pencil: MENS (sic) 50.5 X 61CM LITERATURE: Maggie Finch (Ed), Sue Ford, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2014, CAT. p. 165, ILLUSTRATION p. 118. In 1988, Bob Hawke, the Prime Minister of Australia (1983-1991), was invited to attend the Barunga Festival in a small Indigenous community south of Katherine by Wenten Rubuntja, chairman of the Central Lands Council, and Galarrwuy Yunupingu, AM, chairman of the Northern Lands Council. 1988 was the Bicentennial Year, marking 200 hundred years since European settlement, and it prompted widespread response and activism by Aboriginal people. At Barunga, in two separate ceremonies, Mr Hawke was presented by Mr Rubuntja and Mr Yunupingu with paintings. Ford took photographs at each ceremony. This photograph records what Bob Hawke describes as 'the gift-giving ceremony' where he and Gerry Hand were presented with bark paintings. (1) Hawke is seen shaking the hand of Mr Rubuntja. In front of Mr Hawke is a bark painting. Mr Yunupingu is kneeling next to Mr Rubuntja, holding the painting upright, and Gerry Hand, Minister for Aboriginal Affairs (1987-1990), is on Hawke's left. Will Stubbs, Co-ordinator, Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre, Yirrkala, Northern Territory, comments on the painting: "The painting is a Yirritja fire painting from the Gumatj clan (Mr Yunupingu's clan). Elders have previously allowed public revelation of some limited details of the outside interpretation of such a painting. The white central section (which cannot be seen in this photograph) represents the white beach of Biranybirany. Baru the Ancestral Crocodile is associated with fire for the Madarrpa clan on Blue Mud Bay and the Gumatj people who have several homeland areas that were affected by the same Ancestral fires including Biranybirany. "Biranybirany is a coastal outstation on Caledon Bay which faces the Gulf of Carpentaria. The bay is protected and shallow with vast sandy areas covered with a sacred weed that waves with the currents of tide and the mixing of freshwaters with the sea. A river running through a paperbark swamp is an area where Baru goes to breed and is thus associated with fertility for the members of this Gumatj clan. The river empties its special water into the sea at Biranybirany. These are grazing grounds for the totemic dugong who is also associated with the fire and these two Yirritja clan groups. Roundrels either side of a white central area represent the areas already grazed by the dugong and the (camp) fires of the ancestral past. "The crosshatched design is the sacred clan signature for Gumatj Ancestral Fire. The diamonds are representative of the scarring Baru received from handling the fire and the elements of fire and the Gumatj themselves. Black charcoal and skin, red flame and blood, yellow dust and fat, and white ash and bone." (2) Respectfully, Ford takes her photograph at some distance from the ceremony. Ford was given permission from the Northern Lands Council and the Barunga Festival to take photographs and to show them in an exhibition at Melbourne Contemporary Art Gallery, 1989. To another painting was adhered the Barunga Statement, written by Indigenous people, which called on the Australian Government to recognise the rights of Indigenous land owners and to formalise a Treaty with them. The Barunga Statement painting nows hangs in Parliament House, Canberra. (3) Professor Marcia Langton comments that it was a time when 'Aboriginal people were rarely taken as the subjects of fine art photography' and that in Ford's photographs 'the spectacular ceremonies at the Barunga Festival appear sublime.' (4) Dr Janine Burke 1. Bob Hawke, The Hawke Memoirs, William Heinemann, Melbourne, 1994. p.435. 2. Email information from Will Stubbs. 1 July; 8 July 2014. 3. See www.sueford.com.au. Exhibitions. A Different Landscape (1989). Image No. 12. This photograph shows Bob Hawke with the Barunga Statement painting. 4. Marcia Langton, "A Record of Humanity: Sue Ford's Photographs of Aboriginal People," in Maggie Finch (ed.) Sue Ford, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2014, p. 116.

      Leonard Joel
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