Michelle Grabner has curated the exhibition Moreover: 50 Paintingsat The Green Gallery, in Milwaukee, USA. Moreover: 50 Paintings is the sister exhibition to the Milwaukee Art Museum’s, 50 Paintings, which Grabner co-curated with Margaret Andera, senior curator of contemporary art. The contemporaneous exhibitions together feature the work of one-hundred artists. Read more about the exhibition 50 Paintingshere and Moreover: 50 Paintingshere.
A tender portrait by Julie Dowling of her own grandmother features in the exhibition Dance Me to the End of Love at Shepparton Art Museum. Works in the exhibition are selected from the SAM collection and include ceramics, sculpture, painting, printmaking, drawing, assemblage and installation.
Angela Brennan‘s work features in the current exhibition BLAZE: people made known at Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, which features portraits drawn from the Cruthers Collection of Women’s Art.
The historical origin of the verb ‘blaze’ refers to the use of sound and fire to announce an individual’s arrival. BLAZE speaks of agency, visibility and a desire to communicate to a public. In this sense, the exhibition investigates the power of portraiture to convey the unique characteristics of a person and acknowledge remarkable individuals. – Text courtesy of Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery
Celebrating The Met’s Oceanic art collection, the exhibition The Shape of Time: Art and Ancestors of Oceaniafrom The Metropolitan Museum of Art is touring throughout to a number of locations throughout the world. Now on at the National Museum of Qatar, the exhibition includes nearly 130 cherished works from The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s unparalleled Oceanic collection, including work by Angelina Pwerle.
The National Gallery of Australia’s touring exhibition Know My Name: Australian Women Artistsbegins its two-year tour of regional Australia at Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery. The exhibition features works from the National Gallery’s two-part exhibition held between 2020 and 2022, including Helen Maudsley and Brenda L. Croft.
Our Place: 20 Years of Town Hall Gallery at Town Hall Gallery features significant works from the Town Hall Gallery Collection, including The wonderful diversion by Helen Maudsley. The exhibition has been grouped into themes: People, Places and Perspectives; showcasing the vital role of the gallery in reflecting a sense of community and shared history in Boroondara.
Critical Witness: Official war artists after 1999, currently at the Australian War Memorial features several paintings by Rick Amor. In 1999, Amor was appointed the official war artist to East Timor by the Australian War Memorial, the first such appointment since the Vietnam War. Rick Amor paved the way for a generation of artists to “observe, record and interpret” the activities of the Australian Defence Force.
Brenda L. Croft‘s work can be seen at two venues in Victoria this summer: at Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery alongside Helen Maudsley and at NGV Australia, Fed Square, alongside Dianne Jones and Martin Parr.
The National Gallery of Australia’s touring exhibition Know My Name: Australian Women Artists features works from the National Gallery’s two-part exhibition held between 2020 and 2022.
Featuring work by three Niagara artists: Brenda L. Croft, Dianne Jones and Martin Parr, the current exhibition Photography: Real and Imaginedat NGV Australia examines photography grounded in the real world and as a product of the imagination. This is the NGV’s largest survey of the photography collection and includes more than 200 works.
Sleep my horse…5 August 1956 | Noel McKenna, the autobiographical exhibition at Maitland Regional Art Gallery features work by McKenna alongside treasures and poetry from the artist’s collection. McKenna notes that “this is a contemplation of things that have come about, or have not come about or what may come about or what may never come about”.
Noel McKenna‘s work also appears in A Line A Web A Worldat Powerhouse Museum. The exhibition features 230 drawings from across the world and ends on the 31 December 2023.
In addition, McKenna’s work will feature in the upcoming exhibition Halfway at Yarrila Arts and Museum, Coffs Harbour. “Halfway explores the duality of Coffs Harbour as a place and non-place – a highway town about to be bypassed, where the highway dominates the city’s rhythms and motels, service stations, ‘Big Things’ and tourism places prevail.” text courtesy of Yarrila Arts and Museum.