Hany Armanious
Hany Armanious聽holds a聽from the City Art Institute (now known as UNSW Art & Design).
Born in Egypt and having migrated to Australia at the age of 6 with his family, Hany Armanious has been heavily influenced by the visual cultures of his place of birth and the country he would come to call home. In his 2005 exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Armanious' installation 'Turns in Arabba' (now held in the AGNSW Collection), incorporated a wonderfully strange undercurrent bringing together 1970s pop sensation ABBA blended with Middle Eastern and Scandinavian visual sensibilities. At the time Armanious said he was harking back to powerful influences from his youth 鈥 recalling his coming of age in Australia in the early 1970s while living as member of a newly arrived migrant family. 聽
Well known for his installations and distinctive sculptural forms, Armanious describes his work as 鈥渄uplicates of eclectic, everyday objects presented in a gallery, thereby turning them into fine art.鈥
Armanious鈥檚 artwork is widely exhibited and collected nationally and internationally. He represented Australia in聽The Golden Thread聽at the 54th International Art Exhibition at the Venice Biennale (2011). His selected solo exhibitions include聽Selflok, City Gallery Wellington, New Zealand (2014);聽we go outside, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney (2013);聽The Golden Thread, Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne (2012);聽Fountain,聽MCA Sculpture Terrace commission, Sydney (2012);聽Birth of Venus, Foxy Production, New York (2010);聽Uncanny Valley, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney (2009);聽The Oracle, Contemporary Art Museum, St Louis (2008); and聽Morphic Resonances, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane and City Gallery Wellington, New Zealand (2006鈥07). Selected group exhibitions include Busan Biennale, Korea (2007);聽National Sculpture Prize, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra (2006); and聽Selflok, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2003).