An Artful Calling - The Age, April 2005, Louise Bellamy
ANNETTE Larkin has a lot to thank rats for. It was her inability to dissect them and her loathing at having to tie their aortas with string that persuaded the Christie's art specialist of 10 years to drop biology and take up fine arts.
While those early days in the lab at the University of NSW may have been tough, Larkin's career since changing direction has blossomed. Her curriculum vitae is a straight line heading due north: eight years at Sydney's Macquarie Galleries; a year as curator at Newcastle Regional Gallery, then Christie's where, for the past five years, she has been an associate director and headed the only art department in the art auction arena that holds exclusive yearly sales of contemporary art.
No, she wasn't dragged around to galleries as a child; and no, her parents didn't paint. Her dad was a businessman, her mother a mum and the only art on her bedroom walls was a couple of Degas ballerina prints, dwarfed by posters of her favourite band, Sherbet. At school she always wanted to be a biologist; at university she discovered art was also about history, literature and politics; but after her degree she didn't know what she wanted to do. It was the job at Macquarie, she says, which set her on a track...
