Art Almanac September 2021 Issue

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Art Almanac September September 2021 2021 $5 $5

Two Factor Authentication Matthew Cheyne Love in Bright Landscapes


CONTENTS

Art in Australia Art News – Art Almanac team

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Dušan and Voitre Marek: Surrealists at sea – Kirsty Francis

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Matthew Cheyne, Picnic – Dr Joseph Brennan 20 Love in Bright Landscapes – Aimee Dodds 24 What’s On Near Me – Art Almanac team

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The Sydney Canvas Company, The Blank Canvas – Victoria Hynes 40 In conversation with… Rose Larsen, emerging curator – Olivia De Zilva Gosford Regional Gallery – John Feitelson, Simon Fieldhouse

Art & Industry Artist Opportunities and Awards 49 Submissions and Proposals 55 Studio Spaces 55 Materials 55 Services 58 Consultants and Valuers 60 Member Organisations 60 Training 61

What’s On Gallery Index 62 Melbourne 66 Victoria 89 Sydney 96 New South Wales 117 Australian Capital Territory Tasmania 128 South Australia 131 Western Australia 134 Northern Territory 139 Queensland 142 Artist Index 151

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ART NEWS

Ngununggula Meaning ‘belonging’ in the traditional language of the Gundungurra First Nation People, Ngununggula is the Southern Highlands’ first regional art gallery open to the public on 25 September in what was the old dairy at Retford Park in Bowral, New South Wales. Under the leadership of Director Megan Monte, Ngununggula will capture the cultural vibrancy of the region through a dynamic curatorial program focusing on visual arts and education: exhibitions, artistled projects, live events, workshops, artist talks and public programs. The inaugural show, ‘High Jinks in the Hydrangeas’, features a series of newly commissioned photographs and sculptural installations by artist Tamara Dean. The exhibition offers a perspective of our collective experience of isolation and a renewed appreciation of nature. On view until 12 December. ngununggula.com

Tamara Dean, Fleeting, 2020 Courtesy the artist and Michael Reid, Sydney

SWELL Sculpture Festival

Jaco Roeloffs, Superegg, 2019 Photograph: PBR Images Courtesy the artist and SWELL Sculpture Festival, Queensland

Queensland’s Currumbin Beach foreshore will be transformed into a vibrant art-filled wonderland from 10 to 19 September with the presentation of the 19th annual ‘SWELL Sculpture Festival’. With the vision to connect ‘art, people and place’ through artistic modes of storytelling, the free outdoor exhibition features over 65 sculptural works by local, national and international artists working across a range of mediums from silk, wire and natural fibres to concrete, steel and glass.

‘SWELL Kids Elements’ will inspire young creatives with fun art, storytelling and online workshops. ‘SWELL Fringe Festival’ includes a symposium discussing site-specific art and sculpture; a masterclass with Phillip Piperides; an exhibition of small sculptures at Dust Temple, as well as pop-up exhibitions, artist talks and guided walks to enjoy.

swellsculpture.com.au 14



WHAT’S ON NEAR ME

Zoe Grigoris

Harley Manifold

Social Medea

I know you heard me, but are you listening

For ‘Social Medea’, Zoe Grigoris creates an environment that invites a delightful sense of wonder and teeters on the blurred edges of memory. Her new collection of delicate jewellery and decorative wall works are inspired by how memories slip, transform and fade, and jewellery’s nostalgic role in preserving them. Grigori’s pieces bear the hallmarks of her distinctive whimsical aesthetic, including her ornately embossed patterns, romantic feminine forms and painterly surfaces, while her larger-scale wall works provide scope to use pattern in a more uninhibited way.

Enticed by personal stories of love and connection, Harley Manifold’s painted observations present the remnants of a fleeting human presence. His ethereal, empty streetscapes are often centred on a lone element – a dimly-lit streetlight or car headlamps reflecting solitary street signs. In this exhibition ‘I know you heard me, but are you listening?’, the artist invites the viewer to indulge in the reverie of a story with no beginning or end; only an illuminated path for which a stage is set.

JamFactory, Adelaide Until 26 September, 2021 South Australia

Warrnambool Art Gallery Until 26 September, 2021 Victoria

Some things are just meant to be, 2021, oil on canvas, 28 × 35cm Courtesy the artist and Warrnambool Art Gallery, Victoria

Sleep Walker, 2021, wall piece: copper, enamel paint, MDF, 15 × 12 × 1cm Courtesy the artist and JamFactory, Adelaide

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WHAT’S ON NEAR ME

Undercurrent

Looking at Painting

Devonport Regional Gallery Until 25 September, 2021 Tasmania

Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre Until 7 November, 2021 Sydney

Artists: Elizabeth (Liz) Braid, Joel Crosswell, Janine Combes, Lisa Garland, Lola Greeno, Ricky Maynard, Tim Morehead, Rodney Pole, John Stroomer, Rosemary Wyllie and Philip Wolfhagen.

Through this exhibition, audiences will see the diversity of the form of expanded painting today, and many of its possibilities in recent works by Nell, Carmen Glynn-Braun, Jody Graham, Rochelle Haley, Kirtika Kain, Hayley Megan French, Claudia Nicholson, Judy Watson and Nyapanyapa Yunupingu.

‘Undercurrent’ features works from the DCC Permanent Collection including prints from the Robinson Collection, and explores Tasmanian art through the lens of the ocean; on an island, it is a powerful force, both isolating and connecting. Tracing the tide lines that connect Tasmanian life and identity across time, ‘Undercurrent’ examines how Tasmania’s unique relationship with the sea shapes our experiences and collective futures.

‘Looking at Painting’ features nine contemporary artists from different geographic and cultural backgrounds that push the boundaries of the canvas: working with painting and experimenting with the medium through various themes and approaches to collaboration, material, process, and installation.

Elizabeth Braid, Flow, 2020, watercolor on paper, 104 × 152cm City of Devonport Permanent Collection Courtesy the artist and Devonport Regional Gallery, Tasmania

Nyapanyapa Yunupingu, untitled, 2018, 5861-18, paint pen on clear acetate, 86 × 82cm Courtesy the artist, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney and Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre

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ART & INDUSTRY

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! Melbourne Art Foundation 2022 Commission

This month, we congratulate Yankunytjatjara artist Kaylene Whiskey who has been awarded the Melbourne Art Foundation 2022 Commission for a new single-channel video work that playfully responds to Melbourne Art Fair’s 2022 theme ‘Djeembana/Place’, with her love of Country and deep connection to her Yankunytjatjara heritage at the heart of its creation. Whiskey is the first, First Nations artist to be awarded with the Melbourne Art Foundation Commission in its 15-year history, as well as the first recipient to be nominated for a moving image work. For the 2022 Commission, Melbourne Art Foundation partnered with ACMI, Australia’s national museum of screen culture.

Whiskey’s homeland is Indulkana, a remote Indigenous community in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands in South Australia. She is recognised for her dynamic depictions of strong women and heroic female idols like Dolly Parton and Tina Turner painted into remote desert community landscapes, surrounded by native plants and wildlife and doing traditional Anangu activities like hunting, collecting bush tucker and cultivating mingkulpa (native tobacco plant), and which also come to life in Whiskey’s animations. ‘I’m very proud to live here on our Country and to hold on to our culture and our language. I grew up watching my family, my aunties and grandfather, making paintings about our Country, and I am continuing this tradition but using new ways too – dot painting and video. I want my work to show a strong, positive message about life in a remote Indigenous community. I am from the generation that grew up with Coca-Cola and TV as well as Tjukurpa (cultural stories) and bush tucker, so I like to have a bit of fun with combining those two different worlds,’ says Whiskey. Whiskey’s winning commission will premiere at Melbourne Art Fair, Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, 17 to 20 February 2022. melbourneartfair.com.au

Experimental Print Prize

Entries close September 12, 2021 Castlemaine Art Museum invites Victorian artists using innovative approaches to traditional printmaking processes, such as intaglio, relief, planographic, digital processes, and photography (if within the printmaking process), to enter the non-acquisitive Experimental Print Prize. The $18,000 prize pool will be awarded across three prizes: $10,000, $5,000, and $3,000 for an emerging artist. The exhibition of finalists will be on view at the Museum from November 13 to February 28, 2022. castlemaineartmuseum.org.au

Volunteer Museum Grants

Artist Kaylene Whiskey Photograph: Meg Hansen Courtesy the artist, Iwantja Arts, South Australia and Melbourne Art Foundation, Victoria

Round 2 applications close September 12, 2021 Second round applications are open for the Museums & Galleries of NSW (M&G NSW) Volunteer Museum Grant Program. This program is designed to support volunteer community museums and Aboriginal Keeping Places in NSW with funding from the NSW Government through Create NSW and administrated by M&G NSW. Available grants: Small Grants of up to $2,000 for short-term collection-based projects, and Project Development grants of up to $7,500 for community museums and keeping places to carry out strategic and innovative projects with mid to long term outcomes. Visit the M&G NSW website for details. mgnsw.org.au

Art & Industry 49


MELBOURNE

Federation Square CBD Art at St Francis’ Contemporary Art

326 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne 3000. T (03) 9663-2495. W www.stfrancismelbourne.com/art H Mon-Fri and Sun 10.00 to 2.00. Sept 8 to Oct 11 Town and Country paintings by Alison Laird.

Koorie Heritage Trust

Yarra Building, Federation Square, Melbourne 3000. T (03) 8662-6300. E info@koorieheritagetrust.com W www.koorieheritagetrust.com CEO: Tom Mosby. Free entry. H Daily 10.00 to 5.00. Please check website for updates before visiting.

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 Sept 9 We Change the World. To Oct 3 Maree Clarke: Ancestral Memories. To Feb 6, 2022 Big Weather. Aug 27 to Feb 6, 2022 Sampling the Future.

Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI)

Federation Square, Flinders Street, 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 6.00. Please check website for updates before visiting.

Guy Keulemans & Kyoko Hashimoto, Child wearing Daijuzu (Large Prayer Beads), 2019, concrete, steel rebar Photograph: Romon Yang Courtesy the artists and National Gallery of Victoria

One Star Gallery

301-303 Victoria Street, West Melbourne 3003. T 0432-357-537. E onestargallery@gmail.com H Wed-Fri 3.00 to 7.00, Sat 1.00 to 7.00. Instagram: @onestarlounge Sept 1 to 11 People We Know: Recent portraits by John Mandich and Marc Rogerson. Sept 15 to Oct 2 Remarkable Things I Have Seen: New Paintings by Victoria Hartcup.

RMIT Gallery

344 Swanston Street, Melbourne 3000. T (03) 9925-1717. W rmitgallery.com H Visit the RMIT Gallery website for information regarding our exhibitions and opening hours.

68 Melbourne


SYDNEY

Redfern Surry Hills Green Square Aboriginal & Pacific Art

1/24 Wellington Street, Waterloo 2017. T (02) 9699-2211. E info@aboriginalpacificart.com.au W www.aboriginalpacificart.com.au Director: Gabriella Roy (member of ACGA). H Tues-Sat 11.00 to 5.00. Aug 25 to Sept 18 Bob Gibson solo exhibition. In association with Tjarlirli Art, Tjukurla, Ngaanyatjarra Lands, Western Australia. See ad page 101.

Art Atrium

12 Daniel Street (entrance on Daphne Street), Botany 2019. T 0411-138-308. E info@artatrium.com.au W www.artatrium.com.au Director: Simon Chan. H Wed-Fri 12.00 to 5.00, Sat 12.00 to 4.00, or by appt. Please check website for updates before visiting.

Artbank, Sydney

222 Young Street, Waterloo 2017. T (02) 9697-6000, 1800-251-651. E enquiries@artbank.gov.au W www.artbank.gov.au H Mon-Fri by appt. A Commonwealth Government art leasing program for contemporary art. Supporting Australian artists.

Brett Whiteley Studio

2 Raper Street, Surry Hills 2010. T (02) 9225-1881. E brettwhiteleystudio@ag.nsw.gov.au W www.brettwhiteley.org Free admission made possible by J P Morgan. H General public: Thurs-Sun 10.00 to 4.00. Please check website for updates before visiting. The Brett Whiteley Studio is managed by the Art Gallery of New South Wales.

Flinders Street Gallery

61 Flinders Street, Surry Hills 2010. T (02) 9380-5663. E info@flindersstreetgallery.com W www.flindersstreetgallery.com H Wed-Sat 11.00 to 6.00, or by appt. Please check website for updates before visiting.

Fox Jensen Gallery

T 0478-006-359. E gallery@foxjensengallery.com W www.jensengallery.com H Wed-Sat 12.00 to 4.00, or by appt. Please check website for updates before visiting.

Sabbia Gallery

609 Elizabeth Street, Redfern 2016. T (02) 9361-6448. E gallery@sabbiagallery.com W www.sabbiagallery.com Directors: Anna Grigson and Maria Grimaldi. H Tues-Fri 11.00 to 6.00, Sat 11.00 to 4.00. Sept 8 to Oct 2 Main Gallery: Lave a solo exhibition in ceramics by Honor Freeman. Gallery Two: Light Cast new works in glass by Christine Cathie.

Honor Freeman, fade (detail), 2021, porcelain with gold Photograph: Grant Hancock Courtesy the artist and Sabbia Gallery

104 Sydney


SYDNEY

Stella Downer Fine Art

1/24 Wellington Street, Waterloo 2017. T 0402-018-283. E info@stelladownerfineart.com.au W www.stelladownerfineart.com.au H Tues-Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat 11.00 to 5.00. Please check website for updates before visiting.

Sullivan+Strumpf

799 Elizabeth Street, Zetland 2017. T (02) 9698-4696. E art@sullivanstrumpf.com W www.sullivanstrumpf.com Directors: Ursula Sullivan and Joanna Strumpf. H Tues-Sat 10.00 to 5.00, or by appt. Sept 2 to Oct 2 There on the Other Shore by Kirsten Coehlo. Sept 9 to Oct 2 Fume by Jemima Wyman. Oct 14 to Nov 13 The Guardians by Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran. Oct 21 to Nov 13 Michael Zavros.

Utopia Art Sydney

983 Bourke Street, Waterloo 2017. T (02) 9319-6437. E art@utopiaartsydney.com.au W www.utopiaartsydney.com.au Director: Christopher Hodges. H Tues-Sat 10.00 to 5.00. To Sept 25 The Drawing Room by Helen Eager – a solo exhibition featuring works from four decades of drawings by Eager. View the exhibition online. Postponed until May 27 to June 18, 2022 Vivid Sydney, MCA – Eager will be shining bright during Vivid Sydney with her work New York Sunday projected across the MCA.

Helen Eager, studio print drawers, 2021 Courtesy the artist and Utopia Art Sydney

The Wellington Gallery

2/24 Wellington Street, Waterloo 2017. T (02) 9197-0901. E info@thewellingtongallery.com W www.thewellingtongallery.com H Wed-Sat 10.00 to 6.00, Sun 11.00 to 4.00, Mon-Tues by appt. Please check website before visiting.

Inner West Artereal Gallery Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran, Blue spiky head with gold teeth, 2021, earthenware, 74 × 41 × 27cm Photograph: Elise Frederickson Courtesy the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf

747 Darling Street, Rozelle 2039. T (02) 9818-7473. E info@artereal.com.au W www.artereal.com.au H Wed-Sat 11.00 to 5.00. Please check website for updates before visiting.

Articulate project space

497 Parramatta Road (opposite Cass Bros), Leichhardt 2040. W articulate497.blogspot.com.au articulateupstairs.blogspot.com.au. H Fri-Sun 11.00 to 5.00. Closed for COVID-19 lockdown. Please see blogspot for details.

106 Sydney


ACT

Civic Inner North

Nancy Sever Gallery

ANCA Gallery

Acton

1 Rosevear Place, Dickson 2602. T (02) 6247-8736. E gallery@anca.net.au W www.anca.net.au H Wed-Sun 12.00 to 5.00. Closed public hols. To Sept 12 of soap and stone by Kati Gorgenyi, Fran Romano and Melinda Brouwer. Sept 22 to Oct 3 Human, Jewellery, Human by Jonathon Zalakos.

Level 1, 131 City Walk, Civic, Canberra City 2601. T (02) 6262-8448, 0416-249-102. E nancy.sever@iinet.net.au W www.nancysevergallery.com.au H Wed-Sun 11.00 to 5.00.

ANU Drill Hall Gallery

Kingsley Street (off Barry Drive), Acton 2601. T (02) 6125-5832. E dhg@anu.edu.au W dhg.anu.edu.au Director: Terence Maloon. Free admission. H Wed-Sun 10.00 to 5.00. To Oct 17 Still in my Mind by Brenda L Croft.

Foreshore Southside Beaver Galleries

Fran Romano, Loculus IV, 2021, midfire ceramic, black stain, underglaze colour, copper leaf and oxide, found housebricks, 28 × 30 × 15cm Photograph: Andrew Sikorski Courtesy the artist and ANCA Gallery

81 Denison Street, Deakin 2600. T (02) 6282-5294. E mail@beavergalleries.com.au W www.beavergalleries.com.au Directors: Martin & Susie Beaver (ACGA). H Tues-Sun 10.00 to 5.00. Beaver Galleries is Canberra’s largest private gallery. Three spacious galleries, plus a dedicated print room, sculpture garden and gallery shop feature outstanding work by contemporary Australian artists. Aug 26 to Sept 19 The first dance paintings and works on paper by Graeme Drendel. Also, Landscape in sculpture by Denese Oates.

Canberra Museum and Gallery

Cnr London Circuit and Civic Square, Canberra City 2600. T (02) 6207-3968. E cmag@act.gov.au W www.cmag.com.au H Mon-Sat 10.00 to 5.00. Closed some public hols, call to confirm. To Nov 6 Spowers & Syme – Melbourne artists Ethel Spowers and Eveline Syme. Spowers & Syme presents the changing face of interwar Australia through the perspective of two remarkable women artists.

Craft ACT Craft + Design Centre

Level 1, North Building, 180 London Circuit, Canberra 2601. T (02) 6262-9333. E craftact@craftact.org.au W www.craftact.org.au H Tues-Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat 12.00 to 4.00. Closed Sun, Mon and public hols. 126 Australian Capital Territory

Graeme Drendel, The silence, watercolour on paper, 28 × 30.5cm Courtesy the artist and Beaver Galleries


NT

Tactile Arts Contemporary Craft Studios and Gallery

19 Conacher Street (located in the grounds of the Museum and Art Gallery of NT), Fannie Bay 0810. T (08) 8981-6616. E admin@tactilearts.org.au W tactilearts.org.au H Tues-Sun 10.00 to 4.00, except public holidays and during exhibition changeover. Tactile Arts is a member-based, not-forprofit artist services organisation that actively supports and promotes artists and craftspeople from the top end of the Northern Territory since 1973.

Alice Springs Araluen Arts Centre

Larapinta Drive, Alice Springs 0870. T (08) 8951-1122. E araluen@nt.gov.au W www.araluenartscentre.nt.gov.au H Daily 10.00 to 4.00. Sept 10 to Oct 24 Desert Mob 30 – the most comprehensive survey of contemporary Aboriginal art celebrates 30 years. See ad page 7.

Artback NT Arts Development and Touring 67 Bath Street, Alice Springs 0871. T (08) 8953-5941. W artbacknt.com.au Artback NT works with artists from around the Northern Territory to develop and tour their work to local, national and international audiences.

Desart

11/54 Arthur J Gallagher Centre, Reg Harris Lane, Alice Springs 0870. T (08) 8953-4736. E mail@desart.com.au W desart.com.au www.facebook.com/desart.inc Instagram: @desartinc Desart is committed to supporting Aboriginal art centres, which provide autonomy, sustained growth and stability for Central Australian Aboriginal communities. Desart currently has over 30 independently governed Aboriginal Art and Craft Centres, representing 8,000 artists, as its members.

Tjanpi Desert Weavers

3 Wilkinson Street, Alice Springs 0870. T (08) 8958-2377. E tjanpi.sales@npywc.org.au W www.tjanpi.com.au, www.facebook.com/Tjanpi Instagram: @tjanpidesertweavers Tjanpi Desert Weavers is a social enterprise of the Ngaanyatjarra Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (NPY) Women’s Council, working with women in the remote Central and Western desert regions who earn an income from contemporary fibre art. Tjanpi represents over 400 Anangu/Yarnangu women artists from 26 remote communities on the NPY lands.

Watch This Space

DESERT MOB 30 design: Cheryl Oliver, Evelyn Young, Nyungawarra Ward, Janet Forbes, Dianne Wamantjangu, Billy Kenda, Marlene Rubuntja, Corban Clause Williams, Langaliki Lewis, Joseph Williams, Heather Anderson Courtesy the artists and Araluen Arts Centre

8 Gap Road, Alice Springs 0870. T (08) 8952-1949. E wts@wts.org.au W www.wts.org.au H Wed-Fri 12.00 to 5.00, Sat 10.00 to 2.00, during exhibitions. A dynamic contemporary artist-run space with a long history in the desert of Central Australia. The annual Creative Program supports local and interstate, Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal, emerging and established artists with a focus on contemporary and experimental multidisciplinary art.

Northern Territory 141


QLD

North Artspace Mackay

Civic Precinct, cnr Gordon and Macalister streets, Mackay 4740. T (07) 4961-9722. E artspace@mackay.qld.gov.au W www.artspacemackay.com.au Free admission. H Tues-Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat-Sun 10.00 to 3.00. To Oct 17 Rosella Namok & Fiona Omeenyo: Sandbeach People. Also, Void, and Focus on the Collection: Collaged. To Oct 31 Tracey Robb: The Lichen Garden.

Gab Titui Cultural Centre

Cnr Blackall Street and Victoria Parade, Thursday Island 4875. T (07) 4069-0888. E info@gabtitui.com.au W www.gabtitui.gov.au www facebook.com/GabTituiCulturalCentre Admission fees. H Mon-Fri 9.00 to 4.30, Sat 9.30 to 1.00 (April-Oct), Mon-Fri 10.00 to 3.00, Sat 9.30 to 1.00 (Nov-March). Gab Titui Cultural Centre is a contemporary art gallery and keeping place for cultural artefacts located on Thursday Island, Torres Strait. Our goal is to contribute to the preservation and revitalisation of our region’s rich cultures, and to the development and promotion of local Torres Strait Islander and Aboriginal art.

Perc Tucker Regional Gallery

Tracey Robb, Hypogymnia Lugubris (detail), 2020, waxed polyester fabric, metallic polyester and cotton yarns, and wire, 40 × 55 × 10cm Photograph: Jim Cullen Photography Courtesy the artist and Artspace Mackay

Bundaberg Regional Art Gallery

Cnr Flinders and Denham streets, Townsville 4810. T (07) 4727-9011. E galleries@townsville.qld.gov.au W www.townsville.qld.gov.au/ptrg H Tues-Fri 10.00 to 5.00, Sat-Sun 10.00 to 1.00. Sept 3 to Nov 28 A Journey Through Images: 40 Years Of Perc Tucker Regional Gallery – Tate Adams, G W Bot, James Brown, William Bustard, Laura Castell, John Coburn, Ray Crooke, Russell Drysdale, Donald Friend, HAHA, Sandi Hook, Jan Hynes, Robert Jacks, Jenuarrie, Peter Lawson, Sean Leathers, Anne Lord, David Malangi, Ron McBurnie, Stewart MacFarlane, George Milpurrurru, Mini Graff, David Rowe, Jan Senbergs, Anneke Silver, Madonna Staunton, Ben Trupperbaumer, Fred Williams and many more. Perc Tucker Regional Gallery celebrates its 40th anniversary with a diverse selection of work made by the artists of Townsville, the community, and staff of the gallery past and present. A Journey Through Images builds on the connections made between artist and viewer through the gallery, and through the artwork, an exhibition drawn from connections, stories and anecdotes related to our city, our region and our community.

1 Barolin Street (cnr Quay Street), Bundaberg 4670. T (07) 4130-4750. E bragadmin@bundaberg.qld.gov.au W artsbundaberg.com.au/galleries H Mon-Fri 9.30 to 5.00, Sat-Sun and public hols 10.00 to 2.00. To Sept 5 HERE + now 2021.

Cairns Art Gallery

Cnr Abbott and Shields streets, Cairns 4870. T (07) 4046-4800. E info@cairnsartgallery.com.au W www.cairnsartgallery.com.au H Mon-Fri 9.00 to 5.00, Sat 10.00 to 5.00, Sun 9.00 to 2.00. Closed public hols. Aug 28 to Dec 5 Botanical art of the tropical rainforest by William T Cooper.

148 Queensland

William Bustard, Castle Hill, Townsville (detail), 1936, watercolour on paper, 31 × 41.5cm Collection of the City of Townsville, purchased 1995 Courtesy Perc Tucker Regional Gallery


MATTHEW CHEYNE Picnic 25 August – 2 October 2021

mitchellfineartgallery.com 07 3254 2297 @mitchellfineartgallery Image: Party Boat, 2021, oil on canvas, 210 × 270 cm


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