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.
Bark Ladies: Eleven Artists from Yirrkala is an exhibition that celebrates the NGV’s extraordinary collection of work by Yolŋu women artists from the Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Centre (Buku), in North-East Arnhem…
This essay was first published in NGV Triennial 2020, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne I read recently an article published by Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club,…
In January 2021, Tom Roberts’s Shearing the rams, 1890, tours to Wangaratta Art Gallery in regional Victori
JR’s Homily to Country, 2020, draws attention to the ecological decline of the Darling (Baaka) River, Australia’s third longest river, caused by intensive water extraction due to irrigation, climate change…
Botanical pavilion, 2020, is a collaboration between Japanese architect Kengo Kuma and Australian artist Geoff Nees.