Art Almanac July 2022 Issue

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Art Almanac July 2022 $5

Pure Form NAIDOC Week Catherine O’Donnell



Contents

Art in Australia Art News – Art Almanac team

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Michael Fitzgerald, Pietà – Kirsty Francis

26

Pure Form: Japanese sculptural ceramics – Dr Joseph Brennan In the studio: Debbie Parker – Art Almanac 34 In the studio: Catherine O’Donnell – Jaimi Wright What’s on near me – Art Almanac team

44

Spotlight – Shane Forrest – Joanna Mendelssohn

Art & Industry Artist Opportunities and Awards 57 Submissions and Proposals 64 Materials 64 Services 66 Consultants and Valuers 68 Member Organisations 68 Training 69

What’s On Gallery Index 70 Melbourne 74 Victoria 98 Sydney 106 New South Wales 127 Australian Capital Territory Tasmania 140 South Australia 144 Western Australia 149 Northern Territory 155 Queensland 158 Artist Index 167

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Art news

Illuminate Adelaide Amid a cold, dark winter, Illuminate Adelaide warms the city with a showcase of art, light, music, and technology as boundary-pushing local and international artists reimagine laneways, street fronts, and open spaces in three precincts: North, East and West, from 1 to 31 July. Istanbul-based visionaries at Ouchhh Studio feature their work with NASA and CERN as well as the work of Leonardo da Vinci in Wisdom of AI Light, an AI-driven multisensory experience; virtual band the Gorillaz perform for onenight-only; Montreal studio Moment Factory’s Light Cycles returns with immersive installations, artworks and largescale activations; and in an Australian premiere, Joanna Dudley’s operatic video installation We Will Slam You With Our Wings recasts some of history’s most notoriously sexist speeches into a feminist war cry echoing through the ages. illuminateadelaide.com Joanna Dudley, We Will Slam You With Our Wings Photograph: Dudley Meyburgh Courtesy the artist and Illuminate Adelaide, South Australia

MAVA Substation Brisbane’s Metro Arts has recently transformed its Norman Park satellite site into the Metro Arts Visual Art (MAVA) Substation, a space that offers accessible resources such as a new community workshop, artist studio and equipment hire as well as programs designed to develop sustainable career pathways for contemporary visual artists. Programs include the MAVA Pathfinders, which awards three Queensland mid-career visual artists with a twelve-month paid residency, studio space, materials budget, workshop access, and professional development opportunities. The inaugural recipients are Caitlin Franzmann, an immersive artist who uses her craft to explore environment, history and placemaking; Elizabeth Willing, whose multi-disciplinary work is thematically inspired by food and hospitality; and painter, photographer, and digital media artist James Barth. Visit Metro Arts’ website to learn more about MAVA Substation and the artists in residence. metroarts.com.au James Barth, Bad Compost Adumbral placeholder, 2021, oil on dibond National Gallery of Australia acquisition Photograph: Carl Wagner Courtesy the artist and Metro Arts, Queensland

20 Art news


What’s on near me

Margot McKinney

Allison Chhorn

Museum of Brisbane Until 6 November 2022 Queensland

ACE Until 13 August 2022 South Australia

From our own coral reefs to the rich palette of colours found on safari in Tanzania, World of Wonder celebrates the complex and profoundly beautiful environments and materials that have inspired McKinney’s designs.

Chhorn’s films obliquely approach the echoing traumas, memories, beliefs, and behaviours of her family, particularly set against the Australian context.

World of Wonder

Museum of Brisbane brings out the bling in this showcase of Australian jewellery designer Margot McKinney’s creations alongside five generations of history and storytelling, with a treasure trove of never-before-seen intimate family archives as well as opulent opals, lustrous pearls, and rare exotic gems like the intensely blue tanzanite, lilac amethyst, and pink tourmaline.

Skin Shade Night Day

Allison Chhorn explores the daily routine and rituals practised by her Cambodian-Australian family. Reperformed and documented through a process of embodied empathy, acts of service such as gardening and cooking play out as echoes from the past across a sound and image installation displayed in a shade house. Spectres, shadows, and aural textures conjure impressions of a place that remembers how its inhabitants once lived.

Skin Shade Night Day (video still), 2022, shadow of tree cast onto shadehouse, multi-channel video installation Courtesy the artist and ACE, South Australia

Margot McKinney, Constellation Photograph: TomMac Photography Courtesy the artist and Museum of Brisbane, Queensland

44 What’s on near me


Extricate

Susan Jacobs

Mundaring Arts Centre 2 July to 11 September 2022 Western Australia

Buxton Contemporary Until 6 November 2022 Melbourne

Emerging artists Jane Button, Louise Grimshaw, Isaac Huggins, Eveline Ruys, Kristy Scaddan and Shanti Gelmi look beyond conventional printmaking processes to explore the outcomes of working with nontraditional materials, scales, and forms across a range of techniques and mediums such as glass, clay, light, VHS tapes, and other found objects not usually associated with the genre of printmaking. Explorations of identity, human exploitation, stellar navigation, serendipitous moments, mythical place, the disconnect between money and happiness, and more come into view.

Louise Grimshaw, The Money Trap (detail), 2022, CMYK silkscreen printing on Kozo 45gsm with pine, spring wire, craft paper, and acrylics, dimensions variable Courtesy the artist and Mundaring Arts Centre, Western Australia

The ants are in the idiom

The ants are in the idiom is an expansive sculptural environment that explores the relationship between language and matter. Describing the exhibition as “a series of overlapping ecosystems,” artist Susan Jacobs has created a matrix of sculptural relationships between everyday objects and materials that encourage accidental connections and a shifting array of understandings. Allusions to science, psychology, and mythology jostle with visual puns and word games with reference points ranging from street markets and urban architecture to seventeenth century scientific writings on the spontaneous generation of life from inert matter.

Moire bullseye, 2018, graphite, epoxy, acrylic, wood, steel, carbon fiber, and rubber Courtesy the artist, Sarah Scout Presents, Melbourne and Buxton Contemporary, Melbourne

What’s on near me 53


Spotlight

Shane Forrest “Nothing is wasted. All is transformed.” By Joanna Mendelssohn Francis Bacon famously claimed that all art was about “sex and death,” but Shane Forrest has a more nuanced vision. His art is a constant examination of “entropy and the fight against it.” Forrest is the most economical of artists. The canvases on which he paints are found abandoned on streets. Most of the Arches paper he uses for his paintings comes from his old friend, Guy Warren, who gives him paper he has discarded. Nothing is wasted. All is transformed.

An exciting prospect for further potential and creative updates or renovation, 2020

This is especially true of the brochures from real estate agents which stuff our letterboxes, their glossy pictures and hyperbolic weasel words transforming mediocrity into fantasy. If the brochures are not quickly removed, snails, worms, and insects find them and they are eaten away. Entropy. Forrest has found a use for brochures other than as food for other forms of life or the council’s recycling bin. He takes them, tears them up and reassembles them in ways that the agents could never imagine. The reconstructed works are then sealed with acrylic matte varnish before being repainted in gouache, neatly boxed to make the most enticing of images. Their titles come from the source material: In an admired enclave, Sitting above a vibrant retail piazza and Boasting a sunny rear yard. 54 Spotlight


Art & industry listings

Artist Opportunities We have selected a few galleries and funding bodies calling for submissions for Art Awards, Artist Engagements, Grants, Public Art, Residency Programs, Exhibition Proposals and more. Enjoy, and good luck! artsACT – Arts Activities Funding recipients

Fifteen artists, authors, musicians, performers, and arts workers have been granted funds through the Arts Activities $5,000 to $50k funding round, open twice yearly, with the aim to support Canberra-based artists and arts groups to develop one-off projects. The recipients and their projects include: A Gender Agenda for the delivery of Transgender, Gender Diverse, and Intersex creative writing workshops; Emma Batchelor for the publication of a new fiction manuscript; Christopher Carroll for an original play titled I Have No Enemies; Contour 556 towards the presentation of the Canberra art biennial Contour 556; Brenda L Croft artist, author, curator, educator, and researcher, for the design of a multimodal website; Glitoris for the production and promotion of a new social justice themed album; Hannah Gason for the purchase of equipment for the development

new play at Q Theatre titled Demented; Storytorch Press to publish and promote a program of local writers; Seaton Rogers to support Wiradjuri hip hop artist YNG Martyr with touring costs for festivals; Eliza Sanders for the premiere season of a new dance piece entitled That Was Friday; Hiroe Swen to develop content for a website resource entitled The world of Hiroe Swen’s ceramic art; Bec Taylor for a new collaborative album Bec Taylor and the Lyrebirds; and Savanhdary Vongpoothorn to support the exhibition Spinning the Fire Sutra at Campbelltown Arts Centre. Round two is open and applications close 5pm, July 31, 2022, for activities commencing after December 1, 2022. Apply online via the artsACT grants portal. arts.act.gov.au

artsACT – ACT Screen Arts Fund recipients

Seven film-based projects have been selected to receive funds from the ACT Screen Arts Fund, which provides Screen Canberra with $100,000 each year for one-off screen and film projects aimed at smallscale self-identified film and screen activity, including career development, short films, documentaries, scripts, and games development. The grantees and their film-based projects are: Prajdnik Awasthi to support post-production of an animated short film Marionettes (and the virtue of a lotus flower); Jessica Beange for mentorship to develop scripts and pitch documents to market for Summer Camp, Leona and Victims of Crime; Nathan Collett for the production of a cinematic documentary exploring the relationship between wild peacocks and human residents in an Australian suburb; Nick Delatovic to develop a script for a supernatural neo-western feature film titled Bleeding Heart; Eleanor Evans’ grant will assist the development/pre-production of a stop motion short film based on the story The Fairy Woman and the Three Cockerels by Pixie O’Harris; Kite Shield Interactive will develop the Legion Fall, a new role-playing game that explores Roman history and mythology in the Gallic wars of 52 BC; and Christine Ryan will develop an eight-part comedy series about anxiety and life called the Ninja Worrier. arts.act.gov.au

Glitoris, 2022 Courtesy the artists and artsACT, Australian Capital Territory

of a solo exhibition at Canberra Glassworks; Aislinn King for an exhibition and participation in World Stage Design 2022 in Canada; Ruth Pieloor for a

CJ Shaw, Ain’t Many Like Lennie, stop motion film clip $5,000 to $50,000 Arts Activities funding recipient 2021 Courtesy the artist and artsACT, Australian Capital Territory

Art & industry listings 57


RMIT Gallery State Library Victoria West End Art Space

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Melbourne listings

Federation Square / CBD

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Koorie Heritage Trust

ACMI

Federation Square, Melbourne 3000. T (03) 8663-2200. W www.acmi.net.au General entry, free. H Mon–Fri 12.00 to 5.00, Sat–Sun 10.00 to 5.00. To Nov 13 Light: Works from Tate’s Collection – Melbourne Winter Masterpieces® 2022. Ticketed.

Koorie Heritage Trust

Yarra Building, Federation Square, Melbourne 3000. T (03) 8662-6300. E info@koorieheritagetrust.com W www.koorieheritagetrust.com Free entry. H Daily 10.00 to 5.00. Closed public hols. To Aug 28 Barring – Nganjin Our Path – Our Journey. To Sept 18 Still Sacred and Golden by Dr Deanne Gilson.

National Gallery of Victoria The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia

Federation Square, cnr Russell and Flinders streets, Melbourne 3000. T (03) 8620-2222. W www.ngv.vic.gov.au H Daily 10.00 to 5.00. To July 24 Top Arts 2022. To Aug 21 WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture. To Sept 11 New Australian Printmaking. To Jan 29, 2023 NGV Indigenous Collection of Art and Design. James Turrell, Raemar, Blue, 1969 Tate: Presented by the Tate Americas Foundation, partial purchase and partial gift of Doris J Lockhart, 2013 Photograph: Chen Hao © the artist Courtesy the artist, Tate and ACMI

Art at St Francis’ Contemporary Art

326 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne 3000. T (03) 9663-2495. W www.stfrancismelbourne.com/ art H Mon–Fri 10.00 to 4.00, Sun 10.00 to 2.00. July 12 to Aug 16 Strolling the suburbs – a collection of paintings by Hans Schiebold.

Maureen Morrangulu Thompson, Untitled, 1991, synthetic polymer paint on paper, 37.7 × 54.1cm (image and sheet) National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, purchased 1996 © the artist Courtesy the artist, Ngukurr Arts, Northern Territory and The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia

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Melbourne listings

Lauraine Diggins Fine Art

Boonwurrung/Bunurong Country, 5 Malakoff Street, North Caulfield 3161. T (03) 9509-9855. E ausart@diggins.com.au W www.diggins.com.au H Tues–Fri 10.00 to 6.00, or by appt. Specialists in Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Modern, Contemporary and Indigenous Painting, Sculpture and Decorative Arts. Through July A Walk through the Australian Landscape.

Monash University Museum of Art | MUMA

Ground Floor, Building F, Monash University, Caulfield Campus, 900 Dandenong Road, Caulfield East 3145. T (03) 9905-4217. E muma@monash.edu W www.monash.edu.au/muma Free entry. H Tues–Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat 12.00 to 5.00. Closed Sun. Mon by appt. To July 23 Collective Movements.

Henry Reilly, 1845–1902, Shooting Near Heidelberg, 1875, oil on canvas, 53 × 82cm Courtesy Lauraine Diggins Fine Art

MADA Gallery

Monash University, Caulfield Campus. Building D, Ground Floor, 900 Dandenong Road, Caulfield East 3145. E MADA.Gallery@monash.edu W www.monash.edu/mada/galleries/mada-gallery Free entry. H Wed–Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat 12.00 to 5.00 during exhibitions. July 14 to 30 Barreeng Yirramboi – Steven Rhall, Brad Webb, Gabi BriggsWidders, Jahkarli Romanis, Moorina Bonini, Desiree Hernandez Ibinarriaga, Kareen Adam and wāni Toaishara. Co-curated by Moorina Bonini, Kareen Adam, Desiree Hernandez Ibinarriaga, wāni Toaishara and Jahkarli Romanis. Presented by the Wominjeka Djeembana Indigenous Research Lab. July 19 to 20 Symposium: www.monash.edu/mada/events/2022/ Barreeng-Yirramboi-Symposium

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Art Almanac

92 Melbourne listings

Pitcha Makin Fellas, We Know Where You Eat (Koala), 2013, synthetic polymer paint on foam board, 122.2 × 89.8cm National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Purchased, Victorian Foundation for Living Australian Artists, 2014 Photograph: Peter Widmer Courtesy the artists, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne and Monash University Museum of Art | MUMA


VIC listings

Central Victoria

Art Gallery of Ballarat

La Trobe Art Institute Bendigo Art Gallery BENDIGO MARYBOROUGH CASTLEMAINE Central Goldfields Art Gallery Falkner Gallery ARARAT Ararat Gallery TAMA

The Old Auction House KYNETON CRESWICK

Art Gallery of Ballarat

BALLARAT

40 Lydiard Street North, Ballarat 3350. T (03) 5320-5858. E artgal@ballarat.vic.gov.au W artgalleryofballarat.com.au H Daily 10.00 to 5.00. Closed Christmas and Boxing Day. To July 3 Rachel King: Terrain. To Aug 7 Lionel’s Place: Lionel Lindsay from the Maitland Regional Art Gallery and Art Gallery of Ballarat Collections – 170 etchings, wood engravings, and watercolours. To Aug 28 Trevor Smith: A Fanciful Feast – Smith’s quirky and inventive crochet sculptures push the boundaries of crochet in a move from functional items to creative artworks. To Sept 18 Monochrome – highlights the subtleties of shape, mark, form, and texture in black, white and grey ceramic works and paintings from the Art Gallery of Ballarat Collection. To Sept 25 Lionel Lindsay: Creswick – features some of Lindsay’s rarely scene watercolours as well as drawings and sketches of members of the Lindsay family.

Ararat Gallery TAMA (Textile Art Museum Australia)

82 Vincent Street, Ararat 3377. T (03) 5355-0220. E gallery@ararat.vic.gov.au W www.araratgallerytama.com.au H Please check gallery website for updates. To Aug 14 The Utopia Collection, on loan from Tamworth Regional Gallery. To Oct 2 Prints & Drawings: Works from the TAMA Collection. To Nov 6 Works from the TAMA Collection. Lionel Lindsay, The Ferns, facing Albert Street, 1894, watercolour on paper Collection of the Art Gallery of Ballarat. Gift of Peter Lindsay, 1967 © Estate of Lionel Lindsay, by permission of the National Library of Australia Courtesy Art Gallery of Ballarat

Trevor Smith, A fanciful feast installation view Photograph: Ben Cox Courtesy the artist and Art Gallery of Ballarat

Ada Bird Petyarre, 1930–2009, Anmatyerre, Alyawarre, Atnangkere, Utopia Region NT, Awely (detail), 2000, batik, and silk with azoic dyes, hand-painted, 300 × 115.5cm Purchased by Tamworth Regional Gallery Friends and Tamworth Regional Gallery, 2000 Photograph: Lou Farina Courtesy Ararat Gallery TAMA

102 VIC listings

To Oct 16 Light + Shade: Max Meldrum and his followers – artist and teacher Max Meldrum was one of the most influential figures in 20th century Australian art. Works from the Art Gallery of Ballarat Collection bring together paintings by Meldrum, Clarice Beckett, Colin Colahan, Alma Figuerola, Jock Frater, Harry Harrison, Percy Leason and other "Meldrumites". July 9 at sunrise Skywhales: Every Heart Sings – two


Women of Spinifex 1 – 23 July 2022 Presented by Aboriginal & Pacific Art Gallery in association with Spinifex Arts Project, Tjuntjuntjara, Western Australia

Ngalpingka Simms, Unpularaya, #16-30, acrylic on linen, 200 × 137 cm © 2022 Ngalpingka Simms and the community, Spinifex Arts Project, Tjuntjuntjara, Western Australia

1/24 Wellington Street, Waterloo NSW 2017 telephone 612 9699 2211 Tues–Sat 11.00–5.00 email info@aboriginalpacificart.com.au web www.aboriginalpacificart.com.au

ONLINE ENTRIES NOW AVAILABLE A $30,000 ANNUAL NATIONAL ACQUISITIVE PRIZE, now in its 19th year, is to be awarded by Marlene Antico OAM to the artist for a single winning entry for a painting inspired by the Australian landscape. NON-ACQUISITIVE PRIZES

$3,000 HONOURABLE MENTION PRIZE sponsored by Chris Antico (Co-Principal Sponsor) $1,000 HIGHLY COMMENDED PRIZE sponsored by Julia Martin (Artist/Curator) DEFIANCE GALLERY AWARD AND RESIDENCY Two unrepresented artists selected from the entries will be offered a joint exhibition at Defiance Gallery in 2023 as well as an artist residency with one of our generous host partners. PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARD $1,000 gift certificate from Theresa Sarjeant of Fine Art Imaging

KEY DATES

Entries Close: 5 September, 5pm | Finalists Announced: 28 September, 3pm Prize Presentation: 27 October | Exhibition Dates: 27 October – 6 November

OUR JUDGES FOR 2022 – Blak Douglas, Dr Grant Stevens and Jane Devery

info@paddingtonartprize.com.au

www.paddingtonartprize.com.au Sydney listings 109


Sydney listings

ARO Gallery

51 William Street, Darlinghurst 2010. T 0414-946-894. E info@arogallery.com W www.arogallery.com H Gallery hours vary, see individual exhibitions on the website.

Arthouse Gallery

66 McLachlan Avenue, Rushcutters Bay 2011. T (02) 9332-1019. E contact@arthousegallery.com.au W www.arthousegallery.com.au H Tues–Fri 9.30 to 6.00, Sat 10.00 to 5.00. To July 16 Eating Wild Honey by Lauren O’Connor. Also, Out of the Blue – a group landscape show.

Jiang Zhi 蒋志, Fade 16, 2016–17, archival inkjet print, 125 × 93.8cm Courtesy the artist and White Rabbit Gallery

East Sydney St

NAVA

Macleay

Victoria St

Artspace WOOLLOOMOOLOO

Nicole Kelly, Nightwalker, 2022, oil on polyester, 170 × 200.5cm (framed) Courtesy the artist and Arthouse Gallery

Firstdraft ARO Gallery

Bourke St

The Cross Art Projects KINGS CROSS

William St

Stanley Street Gallery

STATION

King Street Gallery on William

DARLINGHURST Liverpool Street Gallery APY Gallery

Robin Gibson Gallery Gallery 9

Arthouse Gallery

NAS Gallery

APY Gallery Sydney

45 Burton Street, Darlinghurst 2010. T (02) 9368-1173. E sydneygallery@apyacc.com W www.apygallery.com H Tues–Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat 10.00 to 4.00. The APY Gallery is a platform for emerging Indigenous artists from the APY Art Centre Collective apyartcentrecollective.com

Artspace

43–51 Cowper Wharf Road, Woolloomooloo 2011. T (02) 9356-0555. E artspace@artspace.org.au W www.artspace.org.au H Artspace is closed for redevelopment. We have temporarily relocated to the National Art School campus in Darlinghurst NSW 2010, until late 2022.

The Cross Art Projects

8 Llankelly Lane (off Orwell Street), Kings Cross 2011. T (02) 9357-2058, 0406-537-933. E info@crossart.com.au W www.crossart.com.au Director: Jo Holder. H By appt via email, phone or our website. To July 11 RISE 2: Considerations of saltwater, fish, mangroves & people, oil & plastic – Northern Australia, Torres Strait Islands, and Indonesian Archipelago.

Firstdraft

13–17 Riley Street, Woolloomooloo 2011. E info@firstdraft.org.au W firstdraft.org.au H Wed–Sun 11.00 to 5.00 (except during exhibition changeover). Established in 1986, Firstdraft is Australia’s longest running artist-led organisation.

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NSW listings

Orange Regional Gallery

149 Byng Street, Orange 2800. T (02) 6393-8136. E gallery@orange.nsw.gov.au W www.orange.nsw.gov.au/gallery Facebook + Instagram: @orangeregionalgallery H Daily 10.00 to 4.00. Closed Christmas Day, Boxing Day, and Good Friday. To July 17 Steve Lopes: Encountered. To July 24 Liam Benson: hello, good to meet you. July 9 to Sept 4 Catherine O’Donnell: Beyond the Shadow.

Suki & Hugh Gallery

38A Gibraltar Street, Bungendore 2621. T (02) 6238-1398. E susan@sukihugh.com.au W www.sukihugh.com.au H Sat–Sun 10.00 to 4.00, or by appt. To July 24 When Two Ends Meet by Sandra McMahon and Gabrielle Collins. McMahon and Collins have produced a body of work following their stay on Cockatoo Island, Sydney Harbour. From the figurative to the abstract, the paintings evoke the many visual contradictions of Cockatoo Island. July 30 to Sept 4 Quiet Compositions by Stefan Gevers and Jo Victoria – works in watercolour and porcelain inspired by landscape.

Stefan Gevers, Blue River, 2022, acrylic on canvas, 104 × 104cm Courtesy the artist and Suki & Hugh Gallery

Wagga Wagga Art Gallery

Civic Centre, cnr Baylis and Morrow streets, Wagga Wagga 2650. T (02) 6926-9660. E gallery@wagga.nsw.gov.au W waggaartgallery.com.au Facebook + Instagram: @waggawaggaartgallery Free entry. H Tues–Sat 10.00 to 4.00, Sun 10.00 to 2.00. To Aug 28 Pack and Follow – The Quilts of Jenny Bowker.

Western Plains Cultural Centre

Dubbo Regional Gallery / Dubbo Regional Museum, 76 Wingewarra Street, Dubbo 2830. T (02) 6801-4444. E contact@westernplainsculturalcentre.org W www.westernplainsculturalcentre.org Free entry. H Daily 10.00 to 4.00, Fri 10.00 to 6.00. Closed Good Friday, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, and New Year’s Day. July 9 to Sept 18 The Collection: Predator Becomes Prey.

Jo Victoria, Untitled, porcelain, size variable Courtesy the artist and Suki & Hugh Gallery

FREEDOM WILSON The Narrow Neck Plateau A Selection of Small Edition Prints 18 June – 27 July 2022 98 Lurline Street, Katoomba NSW 2780 02 4782 1220 Open Daily lostbeargallery.com.au Image: Banksia Forms. Photo: Ann Niddrie.

NSW listings 135


WA listings

Greater Perth JOONDALUP

Wanneroo Gallery WANNEROO

Linton & Kay Mandoon Estate CAVERSHAM MUNDARING Midland Junction MIDLAND Mundaring Arts Centre Arts Centre PERTH Goolugatup John Curtin Gallery Heathcote Gallery BENTLEY FREMANTLE

Mundaring Arts Centre

7190 Great Eastern Highway, cnr Nichol Street, Mundaring 6073. T (08) 9295-3991. E info@mundaringartscentre.com.au W www.mundaringartscentre.com.au Free entry. H Tues–Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat–Sun 11.00 to 3.00. Closed Mon and public hols. July 2 to Sept 11 Extricate – emerging artists Jane Button, Louise Grimshaw, Isaac Huggins, Eveline Ruys, Kristy Scaddan and Shanti Gelmi take the printmaker’s craft beyond tradition. Curated by Shanti Gelmi.

Goolugatup Heathcote Gallery

Swan House, Goolugatup Heathcote, 58 Duncraig Road, Applecross 6153. T (08) 9364-5666. E heathcote@melville.wa.gov.au W www.goolugatup-heathcote.com.au H Mon–Fri 10.00 to 4.00, Sat–Sun 12.00 to 4.00. Closed public hols. To July 31 An Ode to Transperth by Pip Lewi. Also, Road Repairs by Paul Sutherland and Pip Lewi.

Pip Lewi and Paul Sutherland, Gravel Map, 2022, acrylic, ink and solvent transfer on paper, 30 × 40cm Photograph: Pip Lewi Courtesy the artists and Goolugatup Heathcote Gallery

John Curtin Gallery

Building 200A, Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley 6102. T (08) 9266-4155. E gallery@curtin.edu.au W jcg.curtin.edu.au H Mon–Fri 11.00 to 5.00, Sun 12.00 to 4.00. Closed public hols.

Shanti Gelmi, Tensile (detail), 2022, ceramic, waxed linen thread, dimensions variable Courtesy the artist and Mundaring Arts Centre

Wanneroo Gallery

Wanneroo Library and Cultural Centre, 3 Rocca Way, Wanneroo 6065. W wanneroo.wa.gov.au/wanneroogallery Free entry. H Wed–Sat 10.00 to 4.00. Closed Sun and public hols.

Linton & Kay Galleries Mandoon Estate

10 Harris Road, Caversham 6055. T (08) 9388-3300. E info@lintonandkay.com.au W www.lintonandkay.com.au H Fri–Sun and public hols 10.00 to 4.00, or by appt.

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