biography
Fiona Vaughan is a visual artist and writer living on Dharug and Gundungurra Country in the Blue Mountains. Her art practice mainly includes digital photography and alternative photographic processes and began in analogue black and white photography. Fiona is inspired by the beauty and intricacy of ‘nature’ and a sense of kinship. Learning about ecosystems through observation, conversations and 'desk' research is an integral part of her creative practice, as is the process of walking in the Blue Mountains National Park. Fiona recently exhibited in the environmental art show ‘Disruptor: for all that matters’ at the Blue Mountains Cultural Centre. Previously, her photographs have appeared in group exhibitions at Articulate Project Space, Leichhardt, Point Light Gallery in Surry Hills, the Blue Mountains Heritage Centre in Blackheath, and in the #everydayclimatecrisis Visual Petition at Climarte Gallery, Richmond. They have also been shown in award finalist exhibitions, including the Olive Cotton Award for Photographic Portraiture and the Hazelhurst Art On Paper Award. Fiona took part in the post-bushfire ‘Recovery’ arts & ecology project and her photos and poems appear in the resulting online exhibition at ecoart.space/recovery. Her poems have been published in anthologies and one was broadcast on national radio in a documentary called 'Trees I've Loved'.