Features
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John Brack × Noel McKenna: A face in the mirror
John Brack and Noel McKenna were both keen observers of life – of people, their behavioural patterns, and of their surroundings.
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Mechelle Bounpraseuth: ສູ້ສູ້ Sou Sou
Mechelle Bounpraseuth is known for her ceramic sculptures of food and household objects, rendered in bright, glossy colours and playful scales.
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William Mackinnon: Phoenix
Displayed alongside their earlier iterations, the sixteen large-scale paintings of Phoenix trace both an artistic and personal journey.
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MOTHER: Stories from the NGV Collection
From the trenches of motherhood, MOTHER: Stories from the NGV Collection creates critical discussion about a relatable subject.
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Michael Vale: the Cuckoo, the Herring, and the Trembling Tambourines
This Michael Vale survey exhibition presents thirty key paintings from 2008 to 2026 in his first major survey exhibition in a public gallery.
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Canvas: Art to lunch
Just like the museum’s ever-changing program of artists, the philosophy behind Canvas relies on two similar ideas.
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I AM: Aboriginal art from the State Art Collection
Themes woven into the exhibition of more than sixty works include connection to Country, culture, history and lived experience.
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Proofs and Processes: The Kenneth Tyler Collection
The Ken Tyler legacy lasted almost five decades and redefined what was possible in printmaking.
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Jane Tonks: Nature | Nurture
Over time, Jane Tonks’ landscapes have evolved into a practice in environmental activism, their beauty instilling a quiet urgency to protect.
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Women Photographers 1900–1975: A Legacy of Light
"Do women take photographs differently to men? The answer has to be both yes and no." Sasha Grishin reviews.
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Pat Hoffie: I have loved/I love/I will love
In I have loved/I love/I will love, Pat Hoffie adopts the idea of art as witness to the horrors of war.
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Richard Lewer: I Only Talk to God When I Want Something
A reminder to moderate, to pause, and empathise, I Only Talk to God When I Want Something is a survey exhibition by Melbourne-based artist Richard Lewer.
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