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Title

Bunny boy 12, from the series Bunny boy

1995

Artist

Justene Williams

Australia

1970 –

  • Details

    Date
    1995
    Media category
    Photograph
    Materials used
    type C photograph mounted on aluminium
    Dimensions
    75.0 x 50.0 cm image/sheet
    Signature & date

    Not signed. Not dated.

    Credit
    Purchased with funds provided by John Swainston, Sydney 2000
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    159.2000.3
    Copyright
    © Justene Williams

    Reproduction requests

    Artist information
    Justene Williams

    Works in the collection

    11

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  • About

    Justene Williams’s early photographs and installations from the 1990s engaged with the mundane and everyday. They included stark realist shots of suburban places and people and blurred, painterly shots, often the result of using the limited technology of cheap disposable cameras and the developing facilities of one-hour photo labs. As part of her process she allowed for photographic mistakes, making the transformations – the distortions, uneven light and bad focus – a strong and continuing theme. Her reflection: ‘There is no such thing as a bad picture’, typifies her approach.1 Williams has talked of her enjoyment of poring over photos, saying of the results: ‘the less accurate or more amateur the camera, the better in a way.’2 In a recent work, ‘Eye spy with my little eye’ 2006, she has shared her obession with these processes by distributing or ‘gifting’ books of her images as part of its public event, with one effect being their prompting for consideration ‘what we spend our time looking at and why’.3

    ‘Bunny boy 12’ is from a series of 13 unique photographs of a man, made-up and partly costumed and performing for the camera. Alternatively mock and serious, his masculinity is in uneasy relationship to his attire. He appears, in his soft pink ears, painted face and nails and with arms crossed, to exude a resigned pathos, sadly self-aware in his half-dressed state of the complexities of identity and its sometimes problematic processes of construction, negotiation and performance. In its symbolism the bunny costume is often associated with a highly sexualised objectification of femininity, however here the signs are less clear. Bunny boy’s makeshift costume and vulnerable pose highlights an uncertain embrace of identity. His obvious ambivalence, particularly between a seemingly dumb acceptance and considered intention is strongly engaging; a dynamic which also marks the wider processes of Williams’s work.

    1. Michael L ed 1997, ‘Photography is dead! Long live photography!’, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney p 36
    2. Palmer D 2006, ‘Eye spy with my little eye – a gift from Justene Williams’, ‘+ plus factors’, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne p 58
    3. ibid p 59

    © Art Gallery of New South Wales Photography Collection Handbook, 2007

  • Exhibition history

    Shown in 1 exhibition

    • Space YZ, Campbelltown Arts Centre, Campbelltown, 07 Jan 2021–14 Mar 2021

  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 1 publication

Other works by Justene Williams

See all 11 works