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  1. Fiona Clark is a photographer who creates projects that explore social and environmental issues. View her work and get in touch with her on her website.

    • About Who I am

      Fiona Clark is one of New Zealand’s best known art...

    • Who's That Girl

      Fiona Clark is an artist with a seasoned record of obloquy....

  2. Fiona Clark is one of New Zealand's best known art photographers, working in a social documentary style. She has photographed transgender, gay and lesbian communities, body-builders, AIDS sufferers, and local Māori, among other subjects.

  3. Jan 19, 2022 · Fiona's work, be it documenting the burgeoning queer scene, environmental efforts in Taranaki or the realities of the AIDS pandemic in Aotearoa, is all centred around community - a legacy and body of work that is explored in the new documentary Fiona Clark: Unafraid, directed by Lula Cucchiara.

  4. Learn how Fiona Clark, one of Aotearoa's most notable photographers, overcame censorship, homophobia and sexism to capture the history of marginalised communities. The film explores her work on queer liberation, environmental activism and bodybuilding in 1970s New Zealand.

    • Lula Cucchiara
  5. Fiona Clark is an artist with a seasoned record of obloquy. The best known train of events took place early in her career, when she staged a series of exhibitions in New Zealand around 1975. The subject matter was deemed offensive enough to warrant censorship; the captions on the photographs were covered up, then the works themselves were removed.

  6. Oct 31, 2021 · Her remarkable body of work is captured by the new documentary Fiona Clark: Unafraid, which premieres at this year’s New Zealand International Film Festival (NZIFF). In it, Fiona explores how scandalised the country was by her photographs of the early gay liberation movement in the 1970s.

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  8. Sep 14, 2023 · Fiona Clark is a Laureate of the Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi, recognised for her photography of marginalised communities and environmental issues. She has been documenting the Taranaki region, drag and trans cultures, and body-builders for over four decades.