Deborah Halpern


Deborah Halpern is an Australian sculptor, mosaic artist and ceramic artist, notable for her public artworks in Melbourne.

Life

Born in 1957, Halpern's parents - Sylvia and Arthur Halpern - were ceramists and artists and two of the founding members of Potters cottage in Warrandyte. She began work in ceramics as an apprentice in 1975. She studied painting, printmaking and sculpture at the Caulfield Institute of Technology in 1979. In 1981 she had her first solo exhibition at the Blackwood Street Gallery and her work was selected to be shown at Meat Market Craft Centre; Gryphon Gallery; apart from having her work showcased at numerous other group exhibitions. She was then represented by the Christine Abrahams Gallery in Melbourne, Victoria, for the next 25 years; and Arthouse Gallery in Sydney, NSW. In 1987–89, she Graduated with a Diploma of Visual Arts, from the Gippsland Institute of Advanced Education.

Work

Inspired by the free spirit of Pablo Picasso, and Niki de Saint Phalle, Halpern's famous works include the surreal sculpture Angel, commissioned by the National Gallery of Victoria to stand in the south moat of the gallery, and now relocated to Birrarung Marr and Ophelia commissioned by the Southgate development project and situated in the riverside promenade in front of the main Yarra river entrance. Ophelia was named as the official Face of Melbourne by Tourism Victoria during the 1990s. She did printmaking with master printer Bill Young, which was published by Chrysalis Publishing. In 2006, the National Gallery of Victoria's Ian Potter Gallery at Federation Square held a survey exhibition of Halpern's career to coincide with the relocation of Angel to Birrarung Marr. In 2012 Halpern was invited to participate in the JingAn International Sculpture Project, in Shanghai, China.

Notable works