Gallery 1 (t)here Eitan Ritz This work is an investigation of the relational space that is between; between a performance and its documentation, and between the words we use to… Continue reading
Gallery 2 Offcuts Matt Fairbridge Through avenues of sculpture and drawing Matt Fairbridge’s work presents a synthesis of the ancient and the prospective, the stable and the temporary and the… Continue reading
Gallery 3 Chronophobia Katie Paine Katie Paine uses collage, assemblage, video and text to explore notions of historicity and the archive, through the creation of complex fictions. Within her hybrid… Continue reading
Gallery 4 Every Object in My House (In Paper) Leanne Failla Every Object in My House (In Paper) marks the continuation of a process of experimentation and making: exploring notions… Continue reading
Gallery 5 Waves Eliza Dyball, Jeremy Eaton, Kate Golding, Will Heathcote, Shane Nicholas, Emanuel Rodriguez, Vivian Cooper Smith, Nathan Stolz and Siying Zhou This exhibition brings together the work of… Continue reading
Gallery 6 Urban Code Troy Innocent Cities are complex systems governed by spatial, social, operational, commercial and cultural codes. They are layered with digital and material traces and are permeated… Continue reading
Gallery 1 A Small Garden Hideaway Yoko Ozawa Yoko Ozawa is a Japan-born, Melbourne-based artist. Working primarily with ceramics, she is interested in how vessels might be experienced beyond their… Continue reading
Gallery 2 Historical Fiction and the Order of Things Kate Hodgetts Coming from the foundation of photography, Kate Hodgetts’ practice plays with the limitations of the medium and its associations… Continue reading
Gallery 3 Give Them Distance Rebecca Nadjowski Give them Distance, a projected video and mirror-sculpture installation, explores the paradoxical coexistence of entropy and the infinite. Created from hundreds of slides… Continue reading
Gallery 4 The sound in the form of a word Arini Byng in terms of living as a body to relate or be isolated from things we can’t relate to… Continue reading