Art Almanac October 2021 Issue

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Art Almanac October 2021 $5

Tarnanthi Found and Gathered John Bokor


CONTENTS

Art in Australia Art News – Art Almanac team

15

Jahnne Pasco-White: Kin – Kirsty Francis

22

Tarnanthi 2021 – Emma-Kate Wilson 26 Found and Gathered: Rosalie Gascoigne | Lorraine Connelly-Northey – Jeremy Eccles John Bokor, Still Lifes and Interiors – Elizabeth Fortescue 33 In the studio: Amy Dynan In the studio: John Scurry

36 40

What’s On Near Me – Art Almanac team Behind the scenes: UMI Arts 56 Behind the scenes: Catherine Asquith

46 59

Art & Industry Artist Opportunities and Awards 63 Submissions and Proposals 69 Studio Spaces 69 Materials 69 Services 70 Consultants and Valuers 73 Member Organisations 73 Training 74

What’s On Gallery Index 76 Melbourne 80 Victoria 96 Sydney 102 New South Wales 118 Australian Capital Territory Tasmania 128 South Australia 131 Western Australia 136 Northern Territory 141 Queensland 144 Artist Index 152

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30



ART NEWS

UK/Australia Season A diverse group of creative collaborators from the United Kingdom (UK) and Australia are taking part in a dynamic cultural exchange where new ideas, hopes and dreams for the future are being channelled out to audiences across a program of panel discussions, workshops, exhibitions, theatre, film, dance, design, architecture, music and literature showcasing extraordinary and innovative responses to the question ‘Who Are We Now?’ Motivated by a new partnership between the British Council and the Australian Government’s Department of Foreign Affairs, the 2021/22 ‘UK/Australia Season’s’ in-person and digital activations are playing out in the UK from now until December 2022, and in Australia until March 2022. Themes of identity and belonging, human rights and representation, social justice, our relationship with technology, COVID-19 recovery and more, will be on the table traversing global community, culture, education and business. To pick just two of the season’s events in October, ‘High Performance Packing Tape’ by the adventurous Australian performance company Branch Nebula questions whether a life without danger is worth living. Safety and wellbeing are deprioritised in liberating ways as an OH&S nightmare unfolds, turning everyday office consumables into the catalyst of one person’s physical ruin; the annunciation of fear and frustration draws on self-preservation and risk management to create new possibilities. ‘PHOTO LIVE’ delivers a series of online conversations between artists and curators in the UK and Australia and centres on representation of black, Indigenous, feminist, queer and other marginalised voices in photography, with artists including Scotty So, Ying Ang, Sonal Kantaria, Monhini Chandra, Atong Atem and Othello De’Souza-Hartley. ukaustraliaseason.com Scotty So, Wearing a mask during the third Bubonic Plague, No. 3, 2020, digital photograph, 6 edition + 2 A/P, 76 × 51cm Courtesy the artist and MARS Gallery, Melbourne

15


FEATURED EXHIBITIONS

Found and Gathered Rosalie Gascoigne Lorraine Connelly-Northey By Jeremy Eccles

‘I’ve worked too hard for people to think I borrowed it all from Rosalie. Our use of corrugated iron is the only thing we have in common.’ Waradgerie (Wiradjuri) woman Lorraine Connelly-Northey has a 20-year career behind her now. But the fact that both she and the late Rosalie Gascoigne (1917-1999) went out and about collecting stuff left on the land and repurposed it into art means that many have connected them even before the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) brought them together in exhibition – ‘Found and Gathered: Rosalie Gascoigne | Lorraine Connelly-Northey’. So, Connelly-Northey is ‘a bit anxious’ that her Indigenous originality won’t be recognised. One point of difference is their location. The New Zealand-born Gascoigne was more New South Wales, Monaro orientated, with its bleached paddocks stretching to the horizon. Though based in Swan Hill, Victoria, Connelly-Northey identifies with her mother’s Country on the other side of the Murray, and rivers come into much of her work – including a brand new 16-metre-long duck net woven from fencing wire that she has made for this show.

Rosalie Gascoigne, New Zealand 1917-1999, Inland sea, 1986, weathered painted corrugated iron, wire (a-ff) 39.1 x 325 x 355.5cm (variable) (installation) National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, purchased 1993 © Rosalie Gascoigne Estate/Licensed by Copyright Agency, Australia Courtesy National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

30


John Bokor

Still Lifes and Interiors By Elizabeth Fortescue

When John Bokor was preparing to take up an artist’s residency on the wild south coast near Bermagui, New South Wales, in May this year, he filled his car with enough art supplies for the two-week stay. As well as boxes of paint, Bokor packed three expansive canvases for working indoors and a bevy of small boards for painting in the dramatic landscape where the icy winter winds were just gathering pace. But the small boards remained untouched throughout Bokor’s stay at Umbi Gumbi Artist-InResidence, located in the spotted gum forest bordering Cuttagee Beach. In the end, he didn’t do ‘a scrap’ of plein air painting. ‘I envisaged that I would, but I just wanted to walk and think,’ Bokor said.

Umbi Gumbi still life, 2021, oil on board, 100 × 122cm

33


IN THE STUDIO

Amy Dynan in her studio, September 2021 Photograph: Art Almanac Courtesy the artist

Drawing is present in every stage of my studio development; now more than ever, I acknowledge it more fully to be intrinsic to my mode of expression. My studio research investigates the merging of mind|body in art practice as an experiential state of being. For me, this means aligning the pace of mind with body and experimenting with alternate methodologies that might make this a more fluid process. I am drawn to timeconsuming, laborious processes, through which the rapid pace of mind is coerced into meeting the slower pace of the body. Correlations between eastern and western ontological philosophy inform my understanding of drawing in relation to the experience of being – namely that there is no separation between inner and outer self-experience, or any such division in art practice. Drawing in this sense is a unifying method capable of embodying this unifying aspect. Access to the studio during lockdown has been an absolute joy and has offered respite during 38


Veronica Cay conversations with my aunt Anthea Polson Gallery 16 to 30 October, 2021 Queensland

Buderim-based artist Veronica Cay presents an exhibition of mixed media drawings, works on canvas and ceramic figures in ‘conversations with my aunt’. This series of new works are embodied with imaginary conversations the artist wishes she could have had with an audacious aunt who, in 1936, left her conservative family home in Toowoomba, Queensland, bound for Sydney’s National Art School, never to return. Cay reminisces on her aunt’s life with a pictorial storyboard rendered in dazzling colour and luminous light.

Uccello’s hat, 2021, oil, charcoal on polycotton canvas, 120 × 102cm Courtesy the artist and Anthea Polson Gallery, Queensland

Minds Do Matter

Devonport Regional Gallery 2 October to 6 November, 2021 Tasmania

‘Minds Do Matter’ presented by RANT Arts is a month-long community exhibition held annually in October that runs in parallel with Mental Health Week, 9 to 16 October. The group show brings together works, which respond to this year’s theme of ‘Connect’. The exhibition reflects on the relationship between art and mental health and posits the power of art to be life enhancing and life affirming. Also, on view at Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery, Inveresk from 2 October to 5 December.

Arabella Phillips, Argonaut, 80 × 60cm Courtesy the artist, RANT Arts, Tasmania and Devonport Regional Gallery, Tasmania

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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! Anne & Gordon Samstag International Visual Arts Scholarship

Artists Jane Skeer from South Australia and Trent Crawford from Victoria have been announced as the recipients of the highly competitive Anne & Gordon Samstag International Visual Arts Scholarship for 2022. Skeer and Crawford will each receive a generous package comprising institutional fees for one academic year of study and a $50,000 (US) tax free allowance and travel expenses to a leading international art school of their choice. The scholarships are awarded by the University of South Australia on behalf of the Trustee of the estate of Gordon Samstag, in memory of the celebrated American artist who taught at the South Australian School of Art in the 1960s.

a dedicated period of practice based learning. We know from experience that it is a life-changing professional opportunity,’ says Erica Green, Director of the Samstag Museum of Art. Skeer’s practice involves installation, textiles and photography, often incorporating found objects and materials. She graduated from Adelaide Central School of Art with a Bachelor of Visual Arts (Honours) in 2015 and has undertaken residencies and exhibited in solo and group exhibitions across South Australia for the past five years. Crawford is a graduate of the Victorian College of the Arts with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (Honours) 2017. His artistic practice draws on photography, video, and installation to consider the effect images and image-based technology have on human perception and agency, which he has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions in Melbourne, interstate and abroad. Samstag Museum have also commissioned essays on the 2022 Samstag scholars by Tarntanya Adelaidebased art writer Michael Newall. unisa.edu.au/samstag

The Condensery Somerset Regional Art Gallery $30,000 commission

The Australia Council for the Arts has granted $30,000 to The Condensery at Somerset Regional Art Gallery (SRAG) in Toogoolawah, Queensland, for the development of a new commission by Brisbane-based artist Caitlin Franzmann. Franzmann is an artist whose work ‘explores contemporary art’s potential to instigate change by way of critical listening, dialogue and selfempowerment.’ Since 2012, Franzmann has exhibited widely in group and solo exhibitions. She has been a recipient of numerous arts grants and has also undertaken several artist residencies.

Jane Skeer, True Blue, 2019, used truck ratchet straps, steel, timber, acrylic, 300 × 400 × 120cm Photograph: Charlie Hillhouse Courtesy the artist and Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, South Australia

‘We warmly congratulate the 2022 scholars on this tremendous achievement. The annual scholarships enable emerging Australian artists to develop their artistic capacities and skills outside Australia through

Caitlin Franzmann, artist in residence at The Condensery Courtesy Somerset Regional Art Gallery, Queensland

Art & Industry 63


MELBOURNE

Ladder Art Space

81 Denmark Street, Kew 3101. T (03) 9852-8772. E info@ladderartspace.com.au W www.ladderartspace.com.au H Tues-Fri 12.00 to 6.00, Sat 11.00 to 6.00, Thurs-Sat evenings by appt. Please check website for updates and exhibition program. Exhibitions’ catalogues available online.

Town Hall Gallery

360 Burwood Road, Hawthorn 3122. T (03) 9278-4770. E arts@boroondara.vic.gov.au W boroondara.vic.gov.au/arts H The gallery is closed due to COVID-19 lockdowns. Please check the website for updates.

Caulfield Elsternwick

10.00 to 5.00, Sat-Sun 1.00 to 5.00. Closed public hols. To Oct 17 New Health Plan – project 10. Back from China by Tony Scott. Also, Confines of Being by Simon Lloyd. Gallery Annexe: COVID-19 Cats. Oct 22 to Dec 12 Telling Tales – Chris Bond, Penelope Davis, Prudence Flint, Nicholas Jones, Victoria Reichelt, Tai Snaith, Charlie Sofo and Deborah Walker. Curated by Diane Soumilas.

Glimmer Gallery

241 Hawthorn Road, Caulfield North 3161. T 0414-575-072. E info@glimmergallery.com.au W www.glimmergallery.com.au www.instagram.com/ glimmer.gallery. H Mon-Wed 9.00 to 3.00, ThursFri 1.30 to 5.00, Sat 9.00 to 12.00. Sat Oct 23, 6-10pm 1980s Pop-up Portrait night – an interactive 1980s-themed photography exhibition event where your themed portrait will be captured on the night by @hot_but_not_portraits. RSVP required via website for a COVID-19-safe event.

Glen Eira City Council Gallery

Cnr Glen Eira and Hawthorn roads, Caulfield 3162. T (03) 9524-3333. W www.gleneira.vic.gov.au/gallery Curator: Diane Soumilas. Free admission. H Mon-Fri

S T U D I O D AX P R E S E N T S

LOUISE MARSON

BREATH 23 SE PT - 18 DEC 202 1 Marson’s

first

solo

exhibition

brings together three aspects of her creative practice.

Isolation

through illness, then connection, and healing through making. As an emerging artist living with disability, Breath speaks of Marson’s lived experience, particularly amidst the impact of COVID-19.

Exhibition proudly supported by

30 Royal Pde Kenneth Myer Building University of Melbourne Parkville VIC 3010

view the exhibition online at www.daxcentre.org Melbourne 91


VICTORIA

Art Gallery of Ballarat

40 Lydiard Street North, Ballarat 3350. T (03) 5320-5858. E artgal@ballarat.vic.gov.au W artgalleryofballarat.com.au H Visit the website for updates on opening times and COVID-19 closures. To Oct 24 Linda McCartney: Retrospective – the Ballarat International Foto Biennale returns with an exhibition of exclusive works by world-famous, awardwinning American photographer Linda McCartney. Personally curated by Paul, Mary and Stella McCartney, the retrospective displays intimate images of the McCartney family and a series of never before exhibited prints from their trips to Australia in 1975 and 1993. To Oct 31 Robert Fielding: miil-miilpa. Robert Fielding is a contemporary artist of Pakistani, Afghan, Western Arrente and Yankunytjatjara descent, who lives in Mimili Community in the remote Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands. His work combines strong cultural roots with contemporary perspectives. Fielding’s current practice spans photography, works on paper, sculpture, film and installation. To Nov 14 Anindita Banerjee: Ondormohol – Ondormohol is a Bengali word referring to the inner or private areas of a house. In this exhibition, Ballarat-based artist Anindita Banerjee has assembled the visual imaginings of a Bengali girl, combining her reactions of the colonial heritage of both Kolkata and Ballarat. Oct 7 to Dec 5 Backspace: Marie Mason: From The Murray To The Sea.

Ballarat – Gallery on Sturt

421 Sturt Street, Ballarat 3350. T (03) 5331-7011. E info@galleryonsturt.com.au W www.accentframing.com.au/gallery instagram.com/galleryonsturt_accentframing Director: Leigh Tweedie. H Tues-Fri 10.00 to 4.00, Sat 10.00 to 2.00. 24/7 online sales. Please see our website for the latest information on exhibitions.

Ballarat International Foto Biennale

W www.ballaratfoto.org Ballarat International Foto Biennale – presents an extraordinary showcase of photography by Australian and international artists, across more than 100 venues at Ballarat and the surrounds. Please check the festival website for the announcement of new dates due to COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.

Linda McCartney, Paul, Stella and James, Scotland, 1982 Courtesy Art Gallery of Ballarat

Linda McCartney, The Beatles, Abbey Road, London, 1969 Courtesy Ballarat International Foto Biennale

Anindita Banerjee Courtesy the artist and Art Gallery of Ballarat

Victoria 99


SYDNEY

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. Contact gallery for updates before visiting. Oct 14 to Nov 13 The Guardians by Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran. Oct 21 to Nov 13 Z Garden by Michael Zavros.

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, MonTues by appt. Please check website before visiting.

Inner West Artereal Gallery

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 Closed for COVID-19 lockdown. Please see blogspot for changes in announcements.

Artsite Galleries

165 Salisbury Road, Camperdown 2050. T (02) 8095-9678. E enquiries@artsite.com.au W www.artsite.com.au H Thurs-Sun 11.00 to 5.00, Mon-Wed by appt. Browse in Gallery. Acquire online. Please check website for updates before visiting.

Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran, Blue spiky head with gold teeth, 2021, earthenware, 74 × 41 × 27cm Photograph: Simon Hewson Courtesy the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf

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. Utopia Art Sydney is a leading Australian contemporary gallery. Opened in 1988, Utopia Art Sydney represents Australia’s most prominent contemporary artists including Simyrn Gill, Emily Kame Kngwarreye, Peter Maloney, Yukultji Napangati, Helen Eager, Liz Coats, Ronnie Tjampitjinpa and George Tjungurrayi. Gallery artists Kirsteen Pieterse, Tony Coleing, Angus Nivison, Marea Gazzard, David Aspden and Kati Watson, shape and define the look and feel of Australian art. For all enquiries call or email the gallery.

110 Sydney

Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative

55-59 Flood Street, Leichhardt 2040. T (02) 9560-2541. E boomalliartgallery@gmail.com W www.boomalli.com.au www.facebook.com/boomalligallery www.instagram.com/boomalliartgallery H Tues-Sat 10.00 to 4.00. Visit website for updates and exhibition program.

Glass Artists’ Gallery

Upstairs Level 1, 68 Glebe Point Road, Glebe 2037. T / F (02) 9552-1552. E mail@glassartistsgallery.com.au W www.glassartistsgallery.com.au H Wed-Sat 11.00 to 5.00, or by appt. Please contact the gallery before visiting.


ACT

Civic Inner North ANCA Gallery

1 Rosevear Place, Dickson 2602. T (02) 6247-8736. E gallery@anca.net.au W www.anca.net.au H Due to the current lockdown in the ACT, ANCA Gallery will not be presenting any exhibitions for the remainder of 2021. Visit the website for updates.

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. Please check website for updates before visiting. To Nov 6 Spowers & Syme – Melbourne artists Ethel Spowers and Eveline Syme. Spowers & Syme presents the changing face of inter-war 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. Please check website before visiting.

Nancy Sever Gallery

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 Visit website for opening hours and exhibition program.

Acton aMBUSH Gallery

Level 2, Building 153, Kambri Cultural Centre, The Australian National University, Acton 2601. T (02) 6249-7147. W ambushgallery.com H Mon-Fri 10.00 to 6.00, Sat-Sun 12.00 to 5.00 (during exhibitions). Please visit website for updates before visiting. To Oct 24 Are We Dead Yet? by Stephen Dupont.

Ethel Spowers, The gust of wind, 1931 National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, purchased 1976 Courtesy National Gallery of Australia, Australian Capital Territory and Canberra Museum and Gallery

Stephen Dupont, Tarkine, 2018, 320gsm cotton rag art paper, edition of 8, 120 × 80cm Courtesy the artist and aMBUSH Gallery

Australian Capital Territory 125


WA

Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts (PICA)

Perth Cultural Centre, 51 James Street, Perth 6000. T (08) 9228-6300. E info@pica.org.au W www.pica.org.au Free entry. H Tues-Sun 10.00 to 5.00. Closed during exhibition changeover. To Oct 10 Love in Bright Landscapes, curated by Annika Kristensen. Also, I don’t see colour by Salote Tawale. Also Leitī by Sione Tuívailala Monū. Oct 22 to Jan 9, 2022 Sky Cave by Amy Perejuan-Capone. Also, Coming Home by Alex Martinis Roe.

Subiaco West Perth Crawley Gallery 360

176 Railway Parade, West Leederville 6007. T (08) 9381-6577. E info@gallery360.com.au W www.gallery360.com.au www.facebook.com/gallery360aus Instagram: @gallery.360 H Mon-Fri 8.30 to 5.30, Thurs 8.30 to 6.30, Sat 9.00 to 4.00.

Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery

UWA, 35 Stirling Highway (cnr Fairway), Crawley 6009. T (08) 6488-3707. E lwag@uwa.edu.au W lwag.uwa.edu.au H Tues-Sat 12.00 to 5.00. To Nov 27 Feeling abstract? Paintings from the UWA Art Collection, 1950-1990 – an exploration of abstract painting over a 40-year period. Also, Matter: Works from the Cruthers Collection of Women’s Art – a focus on materials and materiality and featuring works of grit, weight and significance. Also, Creatures: Ochred, Pokered, Carved and Twined – a diverse menagerie of animal representations from the Berndt Museum of Anthropology.

Jack Ball, Night diver, 2021, installation with multiple inkjet prints on gloss and rag, powder-coated aluminium pipes Photograph: Bo Wong Courtesy the artist, sweat pea, Perth and Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts Sydney Ball, Ispahan, 1967, acrylic on canvas, 182.8 × 341cm The University of Western Australia Art Collection. Gift of Dr Albert Gild, 1969 Courtesy Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery

Linton & Kay Galleries Subiaco

299 Railway Road (cnr Nicholson Road), Subiaco 6008. T (08) 9388-3300. E subiaco@lintonandkay.com.au W www.lintonandkay.com.au H Mon-Sun 10.00 to 4.00.

Western Australia 139


QLD

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. Closed Sun (temporarily) and public hols. To Oct 30 Terminus: Jess Johnson and Simon Ward. To Feb 13, 2022 William T Cooper: Botanical art of the tropical rainforest. Oct 16 to Dec 4 Women Painting Country.

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

Jess Johnson, We Dream of Networks, 2016, drawing in fibre-tip pen, fibre-tip markers and gouache Courtesy the artist, Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney, Ivan Anthony Gallery, Auckland, Jack Hanley Gallery, New York, and Cairns 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. To Nov 28 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. 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.

CIAF: Cairns Indigenous Art Fair 2021

Nov 10 to 19 Australia’s premier Indigenous Art Fair CIAF goes digital in 2021 with exclusive offers and audience access to virtual galleries, an online shop, interviews, performances and the annual fashion parade ‘Of Spirit & Story’. Buy artworks online at 2021.ciaf.com.au Go to ticketlink.com.au to explore the program of community events. See ad inside front cover. John Coburn, Garden of desire, 1976, screenprint, printed in colour from multiple stencils, 56 × 89.8cm Accession No: 1976.0010.000. Purchased with funds from the Townsville Art Society and the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council, 1976. City of Townsville Art Collection Photograph: Michael Marzik Courtesy Perc Tucker Regional Gallery

150 Queensland


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