fiction.wikisort.org - WriterFiona Kelly McGregor (born 1965) is an Australian writer, performance artist and art critic whose third novel, Indelible Ink, won the 2011 The Age Book of the Year award.
Australian writer and performance artist (born 1965)
Fiona Kelly McGregor |
---|
Born | 1965 Sydney, New South Wales |
---|
Occupation | Writer and performance artist |
---|
Language | English |
---|
Nationality | Australian |
---|
Years active | 1992– |
---|
Notable works | Indelible Ink (2010) |
---|
Notable awards | Age Book of the Year, Steele Rudd Award, Woollahra Digital Award (non-fiction). |
---|
Early life and education
McGregor was born in Sydney, New South Wales in 1965.[1]
Career
McGregor has written for a variety of publications including The Sydney Morning Herald, HEAT, Meanjin, Times Literary Supplement, The Age, The Monthly, The Saturday Paper and RealTime. At the beginning of 2021, she began publishing under her full name, Fiona Kelly McGregor. Following the publication of her first two books in 1993 and 1994, she was named one of the inaugural Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelists in 1997.[2]
As a performance artist McGregor has toured with You Have the Body, a meditation on unlawful detention, in 2008–09,[3] and she screened her 4-hour video Vertigo at the MOP gallery in Sydney in February 2011.[4] In November 2011, she presented a solo show at Artspace, Sydney, entitled Water Series. Her fourth book, Strange Museums, is a travel memoir about a performance art tour McGregor undertook through Poland in 2006.
Awards and nominations
- 1992 winner — John Morrison VFAW short story prize — "Dirt"[5]
- 1992 shortlisted The Australian/Vogel Literary Award (for an unpublished manuscript) — Au Pair[5]
- 1995 winner Steele Rudd Award — Suck My Toes[5]
- 1997 named one of the Best Young Australian Novelists by The Sydney Morning Herald[2]
- 2003 shortlisted New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards — Christina Stead Prize for Fiction — Chemical Palace[5]
- 2010 shortlisted Western Australian Premier's Book Awards — Fiction — Indelible Ink[5]
- 2011 shortlisted Indie Awards — Fiction — Indelible Ink[5]
- 2011 shortlisted Barbara Jefferis Award — Indelible Ink[5]
- 2011 winner The Age Book of the Year Award — Fiction Prize — Indelible Ink[5]
- 2011 winner The Age Book of the Year Award — Book of the Year — Indelible Ink[1]
- 2019 winner Woollahra Digital Literary Award — non-fiction — The Hot Desk[5]
- 2022 shortlisted Victorian Premier's Prize for Nonfiction — Buried Not Dead[6]
Selected works
Novels
- Au Pair (1993)
- Chemical Palace (2002)
- Indelible Ink (2010)
- Iris (2022)
Short story collection
Non-fiction
- Strange Museums: A Journey Through Poland (2008) (travel memoir, performance art critique)
- A Novel Idea (2019) (photoessay)
- Buried Not Dead (2021) (essay collection)
References
External links
Authority control  |
---|
General | |
---|
National libraries | |
---|
Other | |
---|
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии