In this issue we introduce the 2021 Melbourne Winter Masterpieces exhibition French Impressionism from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and celebrate the French Impressionist artists who pushed the boundaries of…
The Darling / Baaka River is the major tributary to the Murray-Darling River system – the largest system on the Australian continen
NGV curator Myles Russell-Cook introduces audiences to Yolŋu artist Dhambit Munuŋgurr and her Triennial installation, titled Can we all have a happy life 2019–2
Hannah Brontë’s music videos, banners and large-scale installations explore the role of Indigenous, Blak and First Nations women through recurring themes of resilience, matriarchy, and pow
Watch the live broadcast here Yolŋu artist Dhambit Munuŋgurr’s immersive work in NGV Triennial is made up of fifteen bark paintings and nine larrakitj (hollow po
Levels 7-10 Let’s talk about art! From Sally Gabori’s brightly painted odes to Bentinck Island off the coast of Queensland, to Reko Rennie’s neon-lit evocations of the urban environment, the distinctive work…
Levels 3-6 Let’s talk about art! From Sally Gabori’s brightly painted odes to Bentinck Island off the coast of Queensland, to Reko Rennie’s neon-lit evocations of the urban environment, the distinctive work…
For more than 65,000 years Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have developed an intimate understanding of the lands and waterways that make up this country.
VCE Mon – Fri, 10am, 11.30am, 1pm,
Mon–Fri, 10am, 11.30am, 1pm &
Big Weather reveals the deep ecological understanding and continuing connection to Country of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists.
Presented by Readings as part of Melbourne Art Book Fair We are honoured to have Wayne Quilliam, one of Australia’s leading indigenous creators discuss his work and the importance of…
Ordinarily I would insist on referring to any artist — woman, man or other — by their last name: Picasso, Monet, Warhol, Kngwarray and so
Levels 5-8 Big Weather explores Australia’s unique weather systems and the idea that Indigenous cultural knowledge is central to understanding our natural environmen
For millennia artists, designers and craftspeople have looked to, and relied on, nature for the space, materials and inspiration to live and work.