Catherine Bell in ‘One foot on the ground, one foot in the water’ at Caboolture Regional Art Gallery

Catherine Bell’s series of hand-carved sculptures from floral foam, Final resting place (2018–19), will be on show at the Caboolture Regional Art Gallery as a part of the touring group exhibition One foot on the ground, one foot in the water.

On tour from NETS Victoria, the exhibition centres the practices of artists who explicate materially the precarity of our contemporary condition. Yoking thematics of mortality through a material practice, harnessing the lingering uncertainty and infinite permutations of future, this show weaves an inseparable link between life and death through a considered collation of contemporary artists in Australia.

One foot on the ground, one foot in the water
Caboolture Regional Art Gallery, Caboolture, QLD
9 March – 1 June 2024

Priorities: Charlotte Posenenske and Peter Robinson at Artspace Aotearoa

Artspace Aotearoa will present a two-person exhibition showcasing the work of seminal German artist Charlotte Posenenske (1930–1985) and leading Aotearoa artist Peter Robinson. Coupled together here to examine how each artist establishes grammars of expression by testing out systems of assembly, seriality, and repetition, Priorities: Charlotte Posenenske and Peter Robinson will showcase each artist’s proficiency to push at the intrinsic nature of space and its undeniably social potential.

Presented in dialogue here, the presentation at Artspace Aotearoa examines the process through which their respective work asks fundamental questions of us as an audience: what are the rules of engagement here? How do we relate to one another? Do we want to participate in this? What happens next? Expanding on this, both artists have necessarily wrestled with the legitimacy of art and the artworld as a territory where change can happen. Spanning sculpture, painting, film, and archival documentation, in this exhibition we encounter an arc of contemporary sculptural practice that calls up its very emergence as a Western construct in mid 20th-century Europe to our present-day Aotearoa.

In this artworld-in-the-world we are invited to consider our bodies in relation to edges, where one thing ends and another begins. This activates the spatio-political quality of time with both artists tapping into this ambiguity: time as a monetizable measure, as an expressive singularity, as a language. This exhibition dives into form: waka, or tongues, or chimneys, or motorways, as well as the labour that it takes to produce all of this—our world in which we live together.

Priorities: Charlotte Posenenske and Peter Robinson
Artspace Aotearoa
10 February – 6 April 2024

Nusra Latif Qureshi Artist Talk at MK Gallery

Nusra Latif Qureshi will take part in the Beyond the Page Conference at the MK Gallery in Milton Keynes on the occasion of the artist’s inclusion in the landmark group exhibition currently on view at the museum, Beyond the Page: South Asian Miniature Painting and Britain, 1600 to Now.

Artists, art historians and authors will gather for a day-long interdisciplinary discussion of the entangled histories of Britain and South Asia, their impact on the evolution of the miniature painting tradition and its revival as an aesthetic and critical force in the 20th and 21st centuries.

Nusra Latif Qureshi
Beyond the Page Conference
MK Gallery (Milton Keynes, UK)
19 January 2024
10:00 – 17:00 GMT

Please note this event is ticketed and has a limited capacity for in-person attendance. There will be an online version of the conference which will be live-streamed throughout the day (booking required).

Kate Beynon Painting Workshop at the National Portrait Gallery

Kate Beynon will lead a portrait painting workshop at the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra/Ngambri on Saturday 20th January.

Inspired by her Archie100 work ‘Self-portrait with Guardian Spirits’ (2010), in addition to the artist’s additional Archibald Prize selected portraits, Kate Beynon will share her ‘Archie’ insights and guide participants through a painting workshop to depict one’s family (and furry friends). Through the use of watercolour, gouache and metallic pigments, attendees will create their own mini portraits by exploring supernatural elements such as guardian spirits, shapeshifting and talismans.

Kate Beynon
Workshop: Supernatural Fam Faces
National Portrait Gallery (Canberra/Ngambri)
20 January 2024
11:00 – 14:00 AEDT

Please note this event is ticketed and has a limited capacity.

Aleks Danko in ‘Old Dog New Tricks’ at Ngununggula

Aleks Danko’s sculpture ‘Log Dog’ (1970) is currently on show in the exhibition ‘Old Dog New Tricks’ at Ngununggula.

Presenting works by artists who use the canine to interrogate modes of communication, the exhibition re-examines and re-frames mythology, alternative biologies by showcasing a menagerie of creatures who resist classification. Here, dogs are our muses, collaborators, guides, protectors, comedians, companions and shrines. This exhibition celebrates the implosion of nature and culture through the intertwined lives of dogs and people.

Old Dog New Tricks
Ngununggula
18 November – 4 February 2024

Mia Boe in ‘From the other side’ at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA)

Mia Boe in included in the group exhibition ‘From the other side’ currently on show at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA).

Embedding the self within a distorted scenography of quintessential Australian cinema, the artist re-populates film stills from ‘Walkabout’ and ‘Wake in Fright’ (both 1971) through the figuration of a spectral presence painted atop the lightbox surface.

Boe has produced two new works, ‘A Desolate Primitive Place’ and ‘I Suspect’ (both 2023) that mark the artist’s first employment of the lightbox as an agent of display and support. The silhouetted figures laid upon this illuminated surface disquiet the sinister and tension-filled spaces in each frame, reasserting presence in instances of narrative cinema which proliferate a jarring and ambiguous relationship to space and place.

Curated by Jessica Clark and Elyse Goldfinch, the exhibition brings together nineteen Australian and international artists, integrating historical and contemporary works alongside key new commissions that draw upon horror’s capacity to transgress and destabilise forms of power and subjugation. The exhibition casts a lens upon feminist, queer and non-binary subjectivities to consider the transgressive pleasures and liberations of horror, as makers, masters and consumers of the genre.

From the other side
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA)
9 December 2023 – 3 March 2024

John Meade in conversation with curators Russell Storer and Zara Stanhope at McClelland

On the occasion of John Meade’s solo exhibition It’s Personal! at McClelland, the artist will be in discussion with curators Russell Storer (Head Curator of International Art, National Gallery of Australia) and Zara Stanhope (Ringatohu/Director of the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, Ngāmotu). A part of the McClelland Critical Perspective Series, the discussion will offer sensitive insights to further understand the drives and conceptual framework behind Meade’s practice from two of the leading museum curators in Australia and New Zealand.

John Meade in conversation with Russell Storer and Zara Stanhope
Through their eyes: McClelland Critical Perspective Series
Saturday 20 January 2024, 11:30 am – 12:30 pm.
McClelland Gallery, Melbourne

Sara Hughes ‘Glass Canopy’ re-installed at the New Zealand International Convention Centre

The largest ever public art installation in New Zealand has been reinstalled following damage to the facade of the building during the 2019 Auckland fires.

Sara Hughes designed a “glass forest” to enwrap the facade of the NZICC, Auckland for an installation that strives to reflect the unique New Zealand ecosystem, bringing the experience of the sublime natural environment to the urban landscape. The work clads the top level of the iconic building, consisting of 2,400 sq. meters of glass and comprising of over 550 panels in 60 different colour tones.

On the inspiration behind the installation, Hughes explained that the visual effect rendered by the work “reflects the experience of walking through the New Zealand bush and looking up through a canopy of trees to see the unique light and colour of the forest.”

Nicholas Mangan: A World Undone at the MCA

The Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA) will open the largest museum survey of Nicholas Mangan’s practice to date next year.

Organised by MCA curators Anneke Jaspers and Anna Davis, Nicholas Mangan: A World Undone charts the evolution of Mangan’s distinctive visual language over two decades, culminating with his latest project Core-Coralations (2021–ongoing), inspired by the challenges facing the Great Barrier Reef.


Exhibition highlights will include Ancient Lights (2015), a film that considers our relationship to the sun powered by solar panels installed on the MCA building; Limits to Growth (2016–ongoing), which compares Bitcoin with an ancient form of stone currency from the Pacific; and Termite Economies (2018–2021), a series of sculptures that evoke non-human labour and social organisation.


The exhibition, designed by architect Ying-Lan Dann, will be accompanied by a monograph containing newly commissioned essays. In addition, a series of public programs will take inspiration from the many disciplines and current affairs Mangan draws on in his work.

Nicholas Mangan: A World Undone
Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA), Sydney/Gadigal Country
5 April – 30 June 2024

Kate Beynon Awarded Yarra Arts Fellowship 2024

The inaugural Yarra Arts Fellowship has been awarded to artist Kate Beynon by the City of Yarra. This new award provides a $10,000 grant to artists working in the City of Yarra, Melbourne, in order for them to focus more intently on their practice by reducing the financial burden associated with a sustained creative practice.

With support from the fellowship, Beynon will create a body of new works that explore an interest in socially engaged space- both through her studio at Collingwood Yards and other interactive spaces in Yarra- using colour, imagination, and shared experiences.

Vivienne Binns and Elizabeth Gower at Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery

Works by Vivienne Binns and Elizabeth Gower are included in the landmark group exhibition Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now | Part 2 at the Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery (MPRG). On tour from the National Gallery of Australia (NGA), this exhibition follows on from the success of the first iteration that took place at the NGA in 2020.

A celebration, a commitment and a call to action, Know My Name is a gender equity initiative of the National Gallery of Australia, celebrating the work of all women artists with an aim to enhance understanding of their contribution to Australia’s cultural life.

Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now | Part 2
Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery
25 November 2023 – 18 February 2024

John Meade: It’s Personal! at McClelland

Through sculpture, video, and installation, John Meade draws relations between the metaphysical and surreal in the experience of contemporary life and culture. A refined and adventurous materiality defines his work, through sensuous forms and unexpected juxtapositions inflected by the erotic and uncanny.

John Meade: It’s Personal! is curated to reflect various personal threads in Meade’s work relating to alterity, including queer culture, politics, and artistic experimentation. It’s Personal! is a reflection on some of the psychological and societal drivers that have informed Meade’s life and art. The title refers to the way personal subjectivity shapes the sculptures Meade creates, and references Carol Hanisch’s seminal essay from 1970, ‘The Personal is Political’, which outlines the pragmatism of women coming together to share their personal experience as a basis for collective action.

The exhibition will feature three large new works exploring abstract form alongside key sculptures from three decades of Meade’s practice, installed across three expansive gallery spaces and outdoors at McClelland. The exhibition will coincide with Meade’s major public sculpture Love Flower (2019) being installed at McClelland as part of the Southern Way McClelland Commissions.

John Meade: It’s Personal!
McClelland Gallery, Melbourne
2 December 2023 – 25 March 2024

Kate Beynon in ‘Das Kapital’, NotFair Art Foundation

The animated video work Spirits Summoning (2023), produced by Kate Beynon, Rali Beynon and Michael Pablo (aka TudoFam) is on show at the group exhibition ‘Das Kapital’. Organised by NotFair Art Foundation, the exhibition centres around the theme of value and commerce, presenting works by over 50 artists within the vaults and halls of the former union bank in Prahran. Curated by Amanda Morgan, Kieran Boland and Brie Trenerry, this exhibition of film, video art, and new media within a physical space characterised by decay and transition draws our attention to mediums affiliated with the “immaterial” in order to question the value of cultural capital.

Combining experimental watercolour and digital techniques, Spirits Summoning features a cast of supernatural characters (adapted from the KB X RB—Mask Spirits collaborative series) brought to life as unconventional protective figures appearing amidst aquatic backdrops, kaleidoscopic serpentine patterns and botanical forms. Accompanied by an atmospheric soundtrack, the work aims to create an otherworldly dreamscape to counteract troubled times.

Das Kapital
236 Chapel Street, Prahran, VIC (Former Union Bank)
30 November – 2 December 2023

Mia Boe at Ace Hotel Sydney featured in RUSSH Magazine

Mia Boe’s residency at Ace Hotel is featured in RUSSH magazine.

Taking part in the AIR (Art in Residence) programme curated by Nina Fitzgerald at the Ace Hotel, Sydney, Boe is presenting a new body of body of work entitled I can’t stop thinking about you, including a series of ink paintings on silk and a natural-fibre hanging sculpture.

I can’t stop thinking about you
Ace Hotel Sydney
25 November 2023 – 13 January 2024

‘Dog Robot Space Star: A Two Cathies Collaboration’ reviewed in Artlink by Jane Trengove

The exhibition Dog Robot Space Star: A Two Cathies Collaboration at Gertrude Contemporary by Catherine Bell and Cathy Staughton, also known as ‘The Two Cathies’, has been featured in ArtLink. In a review by fellow artist Jane Trengove, the article considers the conceptual efficacy of the exhibition, remarking on how “the works of Dog Robot Space Star tackle a duality of care, within the disability space and the human interface with artificial intelligence.”

Working collaboratively since 2009, Catherine Bell and Cathy Staughton have established a unique bond shaped by a shared visual language, social media, painting, filmmaking, a love of dogs, grief, loss and empathy. The exhibition Dog Robot Space Star: A Two Cathies Collaboration was on show at Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne, between 21 April – 20 May 2023.

David Rosetzky in ‘Between the Details: Video Art from the ACMI Collection’ at the Manningham Art Gallery

David Rosetzky’s film Gaps (2014) is included in the group exhibition ‘Between the Details: Video Art from the ACMI Collection’ at the Manningham Art Gallery. This presentation highlights exceptional moving image artworks made by Australian artists found in the collection of the ACMI.

Gaps (2014) embodies Rosetzky’s ongoing exploration of personal identity and the relationship – or ‘gaps’ – between self and other through speech, movement and dance. Rosetzky’s collaborators on Gaps include choreographer and performer Stephanie Lake, (who also choreographed How to Feel, 2011) co-writer Anna Zagala, and performers, Jessie Oshodi, Lee Serle, Rani Pramesti and Dimitri Baveas.

Between the Details: Video Art from the ACMI Collection
21 October 2023 – 4 February 2024
Manningham Art Gallery, Doncaster

Mia Boe in ’15 Artists 2023′ at Redcliffe Art Gallery

Mia Boe’s painting Interrogation Room (2023) is included 15 Artists 2023 at Redcliffe Art Gallery, an exhibition organised by the Moreton Bay Region Council highlighting 15 Australian contemporary artists. One artist from the selected shortlist will be awarded a $20,000 prize and their exhibited work will be acquired into the Council’s Art Collection.

15 Artists 2023
Redcliffe Art Gallery, Redcliffe
25 November 2023 – 10 February 2024

Anne Ferran in ‘Photography: Real and Imagined’ at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia

Anne Ferran’s photographic work ‘Scenes on the Death of Nature III’ is included in the group exhibition ‘Photography: Real and Imagined’ at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia. Showcasing more than 200 works sourced from the NGV’s extensive photography collection, the exhibition interrogates the proposition that photographs are either grounded in reality – a record, a document, a reflection of the world – or the product of imagination, storytelling and illusion.

Remarking on the acclaimed series ‘Scenes on the Death of Nature’ in 1987, Anne Ferran has said, “In their size and scale, their period connotations, their employment of classical conventions, the photographs are reminiscent of monumental sculpture which is, out of all art forms, the most public. It could be said of these photographs that the language they “speak” is so much a part of our culture that the audience already knows how to interpret them, even if it doesn’t “know” that it knows.”

Photography: Real and Imagined
The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia
13 October 2023 – 28 January 2024

Nick Selenitsch in ‘Question The Space’, Walker Street Gallery

Works from the series ‘&’ and ‘More Rebounds’ by Nick Selenitsch are included in the group exhibition Question the Space at the Walker Street Gallery in the City of Dandenong. Curated by Esther Gyorki, the exhibition confronts a conception of galleries as uncomfortable, rigid spaces in which movement is strictly regulated and accessibility is limited. The exhibition circumvents traditional modes of display, presenting artworks in unconventional and rarely attended to spaces within art galleries, while centring artists who’s work invokes playfulness and participation, each of which are fundamental tenets in Selenitsch’s practice.

Question the Space
Walker Street Gallery, City of Dandenong
21 November 2023 – 1 March 2024

Catherine Bell included in Mona Foma

Catherine Bell and Cathy Staughton’s collaborative film ‘Dog Robot Space Star’ 2023 is included in this years Mona Foma festival, organised by MONA, Hobart, Tasmania.

Catherine Bell and Cathy Staughton, aka The Two Cathies, have worked together on projects since The Portrait Exchange (2009), their first collaborative venture for Arts Project Australia. The creative partnership’s current project involves working exclusively with the infamous Boston Dynamics Robot ‘Spot’ during a six-month residency at RMIT Health Transformation Lab.

Dog Robot Space Star fuses art, film and technology. Bell’s Dadaist-inspired film explores the impact of COVID lockdowns on the creative psyche and the effect of prolonged, enforced, social isolation on marginalised and vulnerable communities. Staughton’s series of two-dimensional artworks investigate the artist’s passion for technology, and empathic relationship with ‘Spot’ the Boston Dynamics Robot. Situated together, the exhibition raises ethical questions about our duty of care to the technology that companions and serves us. Do we owe a debt of gratitude to the technological devices we bond with over extended periods of time? How should we respond when the technology we rely on malfunctions, becomes old and outdated, ceases and desists?

Nick Selenitsch at 1301SW

Nick Selenitsch’s wall drawing ‘Maze’ (2023) is included in the group exhibition Palermo was thinking of Monk, I was thinking of J. P. Melville in a thicket, currently on show at 1301SW until 16 December.

Featuring abstract works by Janet Burchill, Don Driver, Hilarie Mais, Robert Moreland and Nick Selenitsch, this exhibition takes its impetus from ideas surrounding “jazz” and “folk” and how they sit alongside (on… in…) materiality, construction and concept, and colour the complexity of abstraction.


Palermo was thinking of Monk, I was thinking of J. P. Melville in a thicket
1301SW, Melbourne
11 Nov – 16 Dec 2023

Nicholas Mangan included in ‘The Recent’ at Talbot Rice Gallery , Edinburgh

Nicholas Mangan’s video work A World Undone (2012) is included in The Recent, a group exhibition that considers a conceptual world of geological, evolutionary, human and environmental time. Exploring what art can do to stretch the human imagination, the exhibition aims to situate our actions and impact within a deeper, future-oriented timeframe. The geological ruminations that underpin the exhibition are deeply rooted in Edinburgh—a city punctuated by a dormant volcano—where eighteenth century geologists James Hutton, and later Charles Lyell (whose journals and geological specimens feature in the exhibition), developed the theory of deep time that is reflected in many of the artists’ works.

The Recent presents an experience of life on this planet that is aged and complex, where the impact of our choices resonates beyond the short-termism that calcifies our ability to take responsibility. Through the visions, provocations, research and poetics of artists, it connects the emotional anxiety of the present with the need to stretch the human imagination into a deeper timeframe, to embrace long-termism, and radically shift our perceptions and priorities.

The Recent
Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh
28 October 2023 – 17 February 2024

Mia Boe in residence at Ace Hotel, Sydney

“I miss a lot of people and places. I get very sentimental and nostalgic. These works represent that feeling, that ever-present feeling you have when you are away from home or from those you love.” —Mia Boe

During a month-long residency at Ace Hotel Sydney, Mia Boe created a series of ink paintings on silk and a natural fibre hanging sculpture exploring that ever-present feeling of acknowledging lost loved ones and ancestors around you. Depicting spirit people in landscapes and domestic space, Boe’s work is influenced by her Butchulla and Burmese ancestry, folklore and the inheritance and “disinheritance” of these two cultures.

Mia Boe
I can’t stop thinking about you
Ace Hotel, Sydney
25 November 2023 – 13 January 2024

Gian Manik and Mia Boe included in Gertrude Studios 2023, Gertrude Contemporary

The annual Gertrude Studios exhibition presents new and recent works produced in the organisation’s 16 studios, celebrating the site as a conduit for dialogue and making. A collective snapshot of the practices supported within the program, the exhibition offers the opportunity to experience a broad diversity of works from leading arts practitioners in Naarm/Melbourne, as well as examine material and conceptual developments in contemporary practice.

The exhibition features work from each of Gertrude’s sixteen Studio Artists, including Mia Boe and Gian Manik, remaining a cornerstone of the annual Gertrude programme that is conceived throughout the year by the Gertrude Studio Artists and the Curator in Residence Amelia Winata. The Studio Artists experiment with divergent ideas or reflect on recent productions in new configurations, all in conversation with the work of fellow practitioners.

Gertrude Studios 2023
Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne
11 November – 17 December 2023

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