Before I Forget
By (Author) Jacqueline Fahey
Auckland University Press
Auckland University Press
1st August 2012
New Zealand
General
Fiction
759.993
Paperback
240
Before I Forget is the second volume of memoirs by well-known painter, feminist and writer Jacqueline Fahey. In her first volume, Something for the Birds (AUP, 2006), Fahey described her childhood in Timaru and bohemian life as an art student. 'With this richly detailed and warm-toned memoir, Fahey looks set to be Timaru's Turgenev - with a sprinkling of Irish pepper,' Michael Morrissey wrote. Before I Forget kicks off after her marriage to the celebrated psychiatrist Fraser McDonald and recounts Fahey's battles against conventional society to shape a life as an artist as well as a wife, a writer as well as a mother. She describes life in New Zealand and Australian mental hospitals and art schools; friendships with Rita Angus and Eric McCormick; an account of the art scene in New York in 1980; and a run-in with Titewhai Harawira at Carrington Hospital. Hilarious, opinionated, fiery, the book is held together by the inimitable voice of a fiercely original and nonconformist storyteller.
Unusual, creative, intellectual, funny, wise and true, Jacqueline Fahey takes her readers through a fascinating set of memories. Carroll du Chateau, NZ Herald
Jacqueline Fahey was born in Timaru in 1929. A distinguished artist, especially known for her paintings of domestic and suburban life, she is also a writer. Fahey was one of the first New Zealand artists to work explicitly from a womans perspective and in the late 1980s she became an influential lecturer at Elam School of Fine Arts at Auckland University. Fahey was selected to represent New Zealand at the 1985 Sydney Perspecta and her work was included in the 2007 exhibition 100 Feminist Painters at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art.