What’s On: Art Events and Openings

Browse upcoming art events, exhibitions and gallery openings

  • Shireen Taweel: the trig point

    Mosman Art Gallery 1 Art Gallery Way, Mosman, NSW, Australia

    the trig point is an imagining of local sacred architecture and of embodied space, a work of speculation, participation, and a vision of future making. Celestial and terrestrial spectral forms shimmer in their magnitude, transitioning in space and time. Skeletal geometry draped in silk orbits Alpha Centauri A; the trig point is a house of seven circles, filled with reverence for environment and perception of place, and a [...]

  • Elizabeth Day: The Fragility of Goodness: The Prison on the Landscape and Other Stories

    Bathurst Regional Art Gallery 70-78 Keppel St, Bathurst,, NSW, Australia

    Elizabeth Day’s survey exhibition at BRAG examines the legacy of Empire and the colonisation of Australia and its First Nations peoples. The exhibition focuses on the lasting impact of colonial prison systems and how these institutions reshaped both landscape and society. The project connects closely to Bathurst’s history as part of a network of colonial prison towns established west of the Blue Mountains. Day has explored these [...]

  • Group Exhibition: My Blood Sings Old Songs

    La Trobe Art Institute 121 View St, Bendigo, VIC

    ‘Some memory cannot be documented. Some memory lives in the body.’ — Dr Natalie Harkin, Archival-Poetics (Vagabond Press, 2019) My Blood Sings Old Songs gathers artists who capture what is not always said—but deeply felt. The works in this exhibition resonate over time, unraveling layers of the body and the quiet weight of being seen, where movement becomes a vessel for remembrance. Hovering between an ending and a beginning, each gesture [...]

  • Group Exhibition: what we share

    Manningham Art Gallery 687 Doncaster Road, Doncaster, VIC, Australia

    Positioning themselves within the frame, these artists craft memories and autobiographical narratives to explore truth, identity, culture, ancestry, and politics. Through deeply personal cultural and familial histories, the works reflect on lived experience while highlighting the ongoing impacts of Australia’s colonial past on First Nations peoples. Featured artists include Hayley Millar Baker, Michael Cook, Jahkarli Felicitas Romanis, Damien Shen, Dr Christian Thompson AO, and Keemon Willams.

  • Kerry McInnis & Mike MacGregor: Of Ravens and Rivers

    Belconnen Arts Centre 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen, ACT, Australia

    Kerry McInnis has been painting and drawing the River for many decades. The focus of her renditions of a waterway, wet or dry, has always been to represent the interconnectedness between the river and the earth that shapes it – to investigate the rhythms of liquid and solid form, to layer in paint the inconstancy of the river in both its power and vulnerability. Moving away from [...]

  • Barbara Dawson: Becoming Now

    Belconnen Arts Centre 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen, ACT, Australia

    Barbara Dawson’s work is a contemplation of senescence — ageing seen not as decline, but as a layered experience shaped by growth, memory, and renewal. Using the life cycles of plants as metaphor, she explores the human journey: its fragility, quiet strength, and continual transformation. These works trace the parallel landscapes of inner and outer worlds, finding beauty in both blossoming and fading, in change, endurance, and [...]

  • Open exhibition: Dear earth…

    Belconnen Arts Centre 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen, ACT, Australia

    Artists from throughout Australia bring a lens on the concept of ‘earth’: our home, the environment, soil, land, fragility, strength or purpose; the need for its safe keeping and preservation, inclusive of all that lives within. This open exhibition has invited works to provoke awareness, dialogue, political activism, experimentation, thoughtfulness, playfulness, or deep contemplation.

  • Brian Hincksman: Abstract Connotations

    Belconnen Arts Centre 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen, ACT, Australia

    In Abstract Connotations, Hincksman explores human nature and our interactions with the natural environment., in the face of rapid changes due to the advancement of technology and social change. Hicksman’s practice allows the simplicity of everyday thoughts and experiences to inspire the paintings. The process can be quite dynamic between contemplation and the use of colour, form and tone, along with the fluidity of paint with various forms [...]

  • Steve Roper: Works

    Belconnen Arts Centre 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen, ACT, Australia

    Focussing on line rather than tone, this exhibition features drawings on paper in a variety of media including pencil, crayons, ink, and watercolour. These are not necessarily drawings of things; they are abstract works but may evoke subjects. As clay dries, it hardens, and each stage creates a different engagement with the drawing process. Roper says, “Line drawing has been much on my mind of late as [...]

  • The Neighbour at the Gate

    New England Regional Art Museum 106-114 Kentucky Street, Armidale, NSW, Australia

    The National Art School (NAS) presents a major exhibition, The Neighbour at the Gate, curated by a guest curatorium led by Clothilde Bullen OAM (Wardandi Noongar and Badimaya Yamatji), with Micheal Do and Zali Morgan (Whadjuk Balladong and Wilman Noongar). Bringing together newly commissioned works by leading Australian artists Jacky Cheng, Elham Eshraghian-Haakansson, Dennis Golding (Kamilaroi/Gamilaraay), Jenna Mayilema Lee (Gulumerridjin (Larrakia), Wardaman, KarraJarri), James Nguyen and James Tylor (Kaurna, Thura-Yura language region), the exhibition reckons with the echoes of immigration policies and the legacies [...]

  • Grace Wood: Petal as Pixel

    LON Gallery 136a Bridge Road, RICHMOND, VIC, Australia

    Petal as Pixel draws on an enduring fascination with Lawrence Alma-Tadema’s The Roses of Heliogabalus (1888), reimagining its themes of seduction, excess, and latent violence through a contemporary lens. Comprising over 80 works, the exhibition centres on a large suspended mobile of mirrored surfaces, chains, and collaged imagery, precariously assembled in situ. As elements shift, reflections fragment and multiply, enveloping the viewer in a disorienting visual field.

  • Group exhibition: Stormy Weather

    Art Collective WA 565 Hay St, Perth, WA, Australia

    A group exhibition that invites us to look toward the soaring skies above. While Western Australia is well known for its vast blue horizons, this exhibition turns to the darker moments – luminous clouds thickening, rain pending, storms breaking without warning. Across painting, drawing, sculpture, photography and video, the artists consider the unfolding drama of shifting weather patterns and the moods they carry with them.

  • Melody Popple: Balun Gawarima – River Story

    Lone Goat Gallery 28 Lawson Street, Byron Bay, NSW, Australia

    Balun Gawarima – River Story is a new exhibition by Indigenous artist Melody Popple, developed through her PhD project Moving Through Waters. Grounded in the waterways of Bundjalung Jagun, the exhibition explores the cultural, emotional, and ecological significance of water through bush dyeing, natural pigments, and visual story-mapping. Created in collaboration with Country, the works use native flora, found materials, and water gathered from local river systems to produce richly [...]

  • Jessie French: Material Conditions: Systems Beneath Surfaces

    Warrnambool Art Gallery 26 Liebig St, Warrnambool, 3280, Australia

    Jessie French’s exhibition, Material Conditions: Systems Beneath Surfaces, examines the industrial systems embedded within the materials that shape our inhabited spaces and their resultant environmental and ethical consequences. Established systems, optimised for efficiency, low cost, and standardisation, dictate how physical resources are produced, circulated, and utilised in our daily environments. Many of these materials rely on chemical additives including binders, stabilisers and coatings to enable their rapid manufacturing. [...]