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Alexis Hunter : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexis Hunter

Alexis Jan Atthill Hunter (4 November 1948 – 24 February 2014) was a contemporary New Zealand painter and photographer, who used feminist theory in her work.〔Gifford, Adam. ("Feminist art buys a fight" ), ''The New Zealand Herald'', 4 April 2007. Retrieved 26 February 2008.〕 She lived in London. Hunter was also a member of Stuckism.〔("Alexis Hunter" ), stuckism.com. Retrieved 10 March 2008.〕
==Life and career==
Hunter was born in Epsom, Auckland, one of twins. Her twin sister is the print maker and photographer Alyson Hunter. Her parents had emigrated from Sydney in 1947. She was raised in Titirangi in the Waitakere Ranges in Auckland. From 1966 to 1969, she studied at Elam School of Fine Arts, where she was influenced by a tutor Colin McCahon's ethics that the artist has responsibility as a member of society.〔 In 1970, she lived in a commune in Cairns. In 1971, she took a teaching diploma in art and history.〔Buckman, David, ''Dictionary of Artists in Britain since 1945'', p. 790. Art Dictionaries, Bristol, 2006. ISBN 0-9532609-5-X〕
In 1972 she moved to London and worked in film animation. She was a member of the Women's Workshop of the Artists Union (1972–1975) and the Woman's Free Arts Alliance. She has said that during this time of her feminist stance, "We were ridiculed in the press. We couldn't get work", and that she also found it difficult to get photo labs to print her work.〔
She started to study European tattoos, after listening to a lecture at the Royal Academy, which described them in a belittling way; she said, "I was angry because I know from New Zealand culture that tattooing was a very important part of Maori social structure."〔 She took photos in the street of men with tattoos and received sexist accusations, which she rejected.〔
She used the image of hands in her work. A series, ''Approach to Fear II: Change – Decisive Action'' (1977), depicts red nail varnish being taken off and fingernails being cut with a razor blade.〔Battista, Kathy. ("Alexis Hunter" ), ''frieze'', March 2007. Retrieved 26 February 2008.〕 ''Sexual Warfare'' (1975) is a grid of photographs with text, where her own hands show different methods of killing a male partner, such as a pair of scissors being clutched and the text "Castrate, dedicated to Delilah".〔 Threat and humour combine, and the word "Compete" is hand with the book, ''How to Make it in a Man's World''.〔 Images in the series, ''The Marxist Housewife (Still Does the Housework)'' (1978), show a manicured hand cleaning a poster of Karl Marx, referencing both class issues and Marx's lack of recognition of domestic labour in his writing.〔 The series ''Identity Crisis'' consists of six photographs of Hunter, each taken by a different person over a two-week period, showing how they saw her, ranging from the feminity of wearing a pearl necklace to a defiant stance wearing a hard hat.〔
She also photographed men, in common with feminist practice of the 1970s, to reverse the traditional position of men's visualization of women.〔 Her ''Sexual Rapport'' series (1972–1976) consists of image of men, whom she had photographed in the street in Hoxton, London and Little Italy in New York: they include workers on lunch break and policemen, who are shown in a friendly and good-natured fashion. Hunter then marked the photographs, "Yes", "No" or "Maybe", to indicate the level of sexual rapport she felt existed with the subjects.〔
In 1978 her photographic exhibition ''Approaches to Fear'' was staged by Sarah Kent, who was then Exhibitions Director at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London.〔Buck, Louisa (2000). ''Moving Targets 2: A User's Guide to British Art Now''. Tate Gallery Publishing. ISBN 1-85437-316-1〕 That year she showed at the Hayward Annual, in 1979 at the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, and in 1981 at the ''Summer Show 2'' at the Serpentine Gallery, London.〔 She was in ''Contemporary Acquisitions'' (The Imperial War Museum, London, 1981), ''Mythic Landscapes and Memory Series'' (Totah Gallery, New York, 1984), ''Whitechapel Open'' (Whitechapel Gallery, London, 1987), ''Fantasy'' (Touring: United Arab Emirates and England, 1994), and ''Technomyths'' (Whitespace Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand, 2002). She showed work in group shows at the Stuckism International Gallery in 2003. In an interview with Lisa Sabbage, she explained how she returned to painting in the early 1980s to explore the political difficulties of the medium, using it to examine psychology and fantasy from a feminist perspective.〔''Fears, dreams, desires''. Broadsheet (NZ) No. 172, Oct 1989, p.20.〕
A revival of interest in early feminist art led her in 2007 to stage a show of older work, ''Alexis Hunter: Radical Feminism in the 1970s'', shown at the Norwich Gallery, England,〔 and at the Whitespace Gallery in New Zealand.〔 Kathy Battista in Frieze said the show, "situated her practice as an important contribution to Britain’s feminist movement within the visual arts." Hunter said:
The black-and-white image used for the exhibition catalogue cover from her 1970s ''Sexual Rapport'' series, showed a man's bare torso, wearing leather trousers, with the twin towers of the World Trade Center in the background as the "ultimate phallic symbols",〔 while he holds a smoking cigarette at the level of his penis.〔 The image sums up her "combination of intellectual inquiry into desire and subjectivity, but handled with tongue-in-cheek humour and ease."〔
In 2007, her work was also included in ''WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution''〔 (Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA), Los Angeles, and the Stuckist show, ''I Won't Have Sex with You as long as We're Married'', at the A Gallery in London.〔("I Won't Have Sex with You as long as We're Married" ), stuckism.com. Retrieved 26 February 2008.〕 In 2008, she founded the Camden Stuckist group in Camden, London.〔
She lectured at art schools in the United Kingdom and other countries and in 1986 was visiting Associate Professor of Painting and Photography at University of Houston, Texas. She was married to ex-rugby player Baxter Mitchell, who owned The Falcon Theatre and Jazz Bar in Camden, which supported independent bands such as Blur in the 1980s.

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