Exhibitions

  • Shadowlife

    Shadowlife is a significant exhibition that will assist in developing a deeper understanding of contemporary Australian art and the multiplicities of…

  • Press Release 2012 – Shadow Life

    The Australian Embassy Bangkok and Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (BACC) proudly present Shadowlife, an exhibition of photography and moving image works by…

  • Kate Daw, “Civil Twilight End”

    Civil Twilight End is a permanent public art project by Melbourne-based artists Kate Daw and Stewart Russell, that brings a sense of community, reverie and natural rhythm to the Docklands precinct.

  • Utopia presents Intimate Publics

    As social, geo-social and mobile media render the intimate public and the public intimate, what is the impact on art practice and politics? Curated by Utopia—a roving visual arts project for the…

  • Up Close – Heide Museum of Modern Art

    Up Close traces the significant legacy of Australian photographer Carol Jerrems (1949–1980) and situates her work alongside that of other photo-based artists…

  • Tracey Moffatt Other 2009

    Tracey Moffatt’s practice deals with the human condition in all its complexity. Drawing on the histories of cinema, art and photography, as well as popular culture…

  • Dolls, 2007

    Dolls, mannequins, masks, wigs and costumes are just some of the accoutrements that feature in the unsettling work of Destiny Deacon, Zoe Leonard, Maria Marshall…

  • Destiny Deacon – Walk & don’t look blak

    Destiny Deacon: Walk&don’t look blak is the first survey by this leading Australian Indigenous artist to be shown in Japan. Deacon’s international profile includes participating in the Yokohama Triennale…

  • Destiny Deacon: Walk & don’t look blak

    Destiny Deacon: Walk & don’t look blak was the first museum survey exhibition of the work of the Aboriginal Australian artist Destiny Deacon. Spanning 15 years…

  • Supernatural Artificial

    Presenting the work of nine leading Australian artists working in photography and video, Supernatural Artificial was a highly charged and moody exhibition that…

  • Painting: an arcane technology

    Is painting a critique of a disembodied, fractured view of the world? Is painting a symptom of a nostalgic, even regressive approach that yearns…

  • Rosemary Laing: Aero-Zone

    In Aero-zone Laing offered the viewer the opportunity to rethink conventional notions of space and time by presenting the possibility that, rather than existing as fixed…

  • YOIN: Reverberations between Australia & Japan

    The exhibition involves the work of four Melbourne-based artists who have all been residents of the Australia Council Tokyo studio.

  • Rapport: Eight Artists from Singapore and Australia

    Rapport was a very early joint exhibition created by leading young curators in Australia and Singapore, inviting four artists from each place to exhibit in a major exhibition…

  • Swoon

    Swoon brings together the work of Kate Daw and Maria Griffin around the idea of rapture and romance. Their respective practices take up the emotional and the sentimental amidst …

  • Narelle Jubelin Soft and Slow

    The Monash University Gallery is pleased to present two recent works by Sydney based artist Narelle Jubelin which she originally created for Glasgow, Dead Slow (1992) and for Chicago and…

  • Bad Toys, ACCA

    Bad Toys used the toy as a departure point to examine our adult relationship to childhood and play.

  • Primavera 1994: Young Australian Artists

    Guest Curator Natalie King’s exhibition, investigated the way the MCA’s ensemble of art, architecture and installations orchestrates the visitor’s experience.

  • The Subversive Stitch

    In addressing the ideologies of modernism, particularly abstraction, the eleven artists included in ‘The Subversive Stitch’ exhibition at the Monash University Gallery expose and reframe the limits of modernism.