Involved in a series of innovative artist-led projects, Christopher LG Hill’s idiosyncratic art practice embraces anarchist ideas to find new ways to examine the relationsh…
Working across drawing, collage and sculpture, Matt Hinkley often uses humble materials and a DIY sensibility to explore new possibilities for abstraction, creating works t…
One-time housemates in a much-loved (if run-down) sharehouse in Hotham Street, Collingwood, Cassandra Chilton, Molly O’Shaughnessy, Sarah Parkes, Caroline Price and Lyndal …
Lou Hubbard’s EYE OPS comprises a series of video works that show the artist rolling, slicing and arranging a series of eyeballs created – in keeping with Hubbard’s absurdi…
A lecturer in Photography at RMIT University, Shane Hulbert’s photographs explore icons and myths that have helped define Australian identity. Featuring a combination of lo…
Brendan Huntley works across painting and sculpture. For Melbourne Now, Huntley is exhibiting his ceramic forms, which reconsider conventional notions of the vessel and als…
Eliza Hutchison’s practice interrogates the material, illusionistic and psychological properties of photography. Here, images appropriated from posters for the teen movie T…
Ricardo Idagi spent much of his early life on Mer (Murray Island) and his work often manifests deep reverence for Meriam culture as well as communicating the irrevocable lo…
Born in Scotland but based in Melbourne since 2003, Irvine creates expansive sculptural forms that are incrementally woven and secured by tiny cable-tie ‘stitches’. Spillin…
Helen Johnson’s paintings explore the political and cultural narratives that inform cultural identity. Drawing on both personal and official narratives, and using an aesthe…
In Melbourne Now Jess Johnson presents ten new drawings –which depict an imagined future civilization – and stepped podium, within an immersive wall painting and floor trea…
David Jolly’s paintings intimately chronicle the world around him. Beginning with photographic and video documentation of places, Jolly then paints selected scenes in a pre…
Paul Knight’s photographic works for Melbourne Now depict scenes of couples lying in bed. Their bodies are entwined, however a fold in the paper forces some couples closer …