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Aris Prabawa: Re-start thinking about our nature

Milani Gallery presents Re-start thinking about our nature, an exhibition of new charcoal drawings on canvas by Indonesian artist Aris Prabawa. Spanning galleries 1, 2 and 3, the works explore the intersections of human nature, environmentalism, and geopolitics in the tradition of socio-realist painting. Based between Yogyakarta and Lismore, Prabawa is a founding member of […]

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Andrew Sleeman: Bare

In his debut solo exhibition Bare, Brisbane-based artist Andrew Sleeman presents a gentle series of paintings that examine the human form. This exploration extends beyond physicality into an investigation of how emotion is held within the body. Working primarily with oil and acrylic, Sleeman brings his gestural brushwork and quiet observational style to depictions of nude

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Kin02

Four artists, a mother and daughter, and two sisters, whose diverse practices and materials include ceramics, textiles, stitch and paint, have come together to consider aspects of kin and kinship. What is in the genes, the developed aesthetic, and what in the lived life is manifest in each of our practices? Here we show our

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Arabella Walker: Echoed Ground

Outer Space presents Echoed Ground, a new solo exhibition by Arabella Walker, showing from July 4 to August 2 as part of its 2025 Main Gallery Exhibition Program. Offering a richly layered, multi-sensory experience, the immersive installation brings together archival imagery, contemporary artworks, scent, sound and sculptural forms to explore memory, movement and connection to Country.

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Taryn Ossowski: Lucid Garden

We are pleased to present Lucid Garden, a luminous new solo exhibition by Taryn Ossowski, marking her debut with the gallery. In this meditative and richly textured body of work, Taryn invites viewers into a world where colour and spirit meet—where earthy tones and radiant translucency evoke alternate dimensions and intuitive sensation. Working with traditional

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QCAD Exhibitions

Grey Street Gallery – ដីមិនស្ងៀម ទឹកមិនស្ងប់ (The land is never still, the water is never quiet)Cambodian-Australian artist Nataly Lee explores memory, ritual, and place carried across time. Through gathering, stitching, layering, and binding, her works reflect on identity, spirituality, ecology, and the traces of what remains and what is missing. Project Gallery – Long Transient

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Discover Australian Essence

Discover Australian Essence is a specially curated exhibition that celebrates the richness and diversity of Australia’s landscapes and cultural identity through painting, drawing, and mixed media works. From sweeping mountain ranges and serene rivers to urban scenes and native flora and fauna, this exhibition brings together a dynamic collection of contemporary Australian art. Spanning styles

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Allison Chhorn: Reflections in the Water

Reflections in the Water explores the intergenerational process of remembering through fragments of recreated archival material depicting the Cambodian countryside along the Mekong River. The immersive installation becomes a water sanctuary, highlighting the equally healing and destructive nature of this essential element in the tropical climate of Cambodia. Through recreated fragments of archival material, Chhorn invites

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Outer Space: 2026 Main Gallery Call Out

Outer Space is calling for proposals from emerging, early, and mid-career artists and curators across Australia to present new and ambitious work in their 2026 exhibition program. Based in Magandjin (Brisbane), Outer Space is a platform for experimentation—supporting exhibitions that challenge and expand contemporary practice. What’s Offered: $2,000 artist fee (solo) / $1,000 per artist

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BauchGefühl: From the Gut

A local art show shaped by instinct, memory, and a blend of upcycled and new materials. Berlin-born, Brisbane-based artist Nina Kelm invites you into a tactile, joyfully chaotic creative world—where packaging, found objects, and layered textures are reimagined into gut-led artworks, thoughtfully presented in handmade floating frames. www.linktr.ee/ninakelm

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KYOTO ART CENTER – Artist-in-Residence 2026

Kyoto Art Center invites emerging visual artists and researchers to apply for its Artist-in-Residence Program 2026. This opportunity supports creative development through cultural exchange in Kyoto, Japan. Eligibility: Emerging visual artists or researchers Must demonstrate a clear reason for staying in Kyoto Ability to conduct a public exchange project Must communicate in English or Japanese

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Archer Davies: Arenas

Jan Murphy Gallery is pleased to present Arenas, the first solo exhibition by Archer Davies with the gallery. This body of work was inspired by time spent at Brisbane’s iconic Royal Queensland Show, The Ekka, alongside fellow artist Lucy Culliton in 2024. Drawn to the contrasts between human performance and quiet animal presence, Davies’ works

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Christopher Allery: AFTERLIGHT

Jan Manton Gallery presents AFTERLIGHT, a new photographic series by Naarm/Melbourne-based artist Christopher Allery. Known for his meditative, light-driven imagery, Allery’s practice navigates the emotional and narrative potentials of photography through quiet encounters with place, memory, and light. AFTERLIGHT emerges from travels through Japan and Australia, where shifting weather, solitude, and cinematic influences inform the

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RECONNECTION IS RESISTANCE: Navigating Indigenous Diaspora in Australia

Join this panel discussion exploring cultural continuity as an act of resistance within the context of Indigenous diaspora in Australia. Through the lens of artistic practice, the conversation will reflect on how culture is sustained, adapted, and reimagined across generations and geographies. Panelists: Makayla Dass Morgan Nanai Brown Nisa Isabel Maria Yam Chan Lopez Richy

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Arteventura Artist Residency 2026

Arteventura offers professional artists—including visual artists, writers, musicians, performers, architects, duos, or groups—a chance to immerse themselves in 25 hectares of cork and holm oak forest in inland Andalusia. The residency is off-grid and ecologically focused, providing silence, space, autonomy, and essential facilities like self-catering apartments (up to 4 artists at a time) and a

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Kitty Horton: Auto Poem

In Auto Poem, Kitty Horton presents a new body of abstract work shaped by the rhythms of daily life, studio practice, and motherhood. Using oil paint, oil stick, beeswax, and tape, Horton explores abstraction as both a process and a release—allowing intuitive gestures to shape her compositions. Balancing saturated tones with soft pastels, and rough

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Creative Australia: Arts Projects for Individuals and Groups

Creative Australia’s Arts Projects for Individuals and Groups grant supports a wide range of artistic activity across all practices. Open to Australian resident practicing artists and arts professionals, this program funds between $10,000 and $50,000 for activities such as: Professional skills development (mentoring, residencies) Creation of new work, research, experimentation, collaborations and exchanges Touring, festivals,

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The Ancient PRESENT II

The Ancient PRESENT II presents powerful works by four Anmatyerr women artists from the Utopia region in the Northern Territory: Kathleen Kngale, Polly Kngale, Angelina Kngale, and Emily Kngwarreye. This exhibition reflects a profound legacy of cultural continuity, storytelling, and artistic innovation within Aboriginal painting traditions. On the ground floor, Kathleen Kngale’s stippled paintings map

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Copenhagen Photo Festival

Copenhagen Photo Festival invites photographers and visual artists from around the world to apply for its 2026 solo exhibition program. Selected artists will have the unique opportunity to present work at the iconic Royal Danish Theatre or its surrounding spaces in the heart of Copenhagen. The 2026 theme, Forestillinger | Scenarios, invites artists to explore

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Light and Land

Light and Land brings together eight mid-career Australian artists—Sally Anderson, Bridie Gillman, Dan Kyle, Ross Laurie, Joanna Logue, Eleanor Louise Butt, Carbiene McDonald Tjangala, and Candy Nelson Nakamarra—who are reimagining landscape painting through abstraction. Rather than depict what is seen, these artists use painting to express memory, emotion, cultural heritage, and connection to place. The

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Lucy Culliton: Ekka

Jan Murphy Gallery presents Ekka, Lucy Culliton’s fifth solo exhibition with the gallery. Known for painting what’s close at hand—her animals, her garden, her home in Bibbenluke—Culliton’s work brims with warmth, detail, and affection for the rural world around her. Ekka was inspired by her 2024 visit to the Royal Queensland Show in Brisbane, where

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FERTILE TERRAINS

FERTILE TERRAINS brings together Queensland College of Art and Design graduates Diane Green, Leisa Turner, and Pat Malt in a multidisciplinary exhibition that explores care, identity, and resistance through a distinctly feminist lens. Across photography, ceramics, embroidery, drawing, and painting, each artist offers a deeply personal reflection on contemporary female experience. Leisa Turner presents staged

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The Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize

The Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize, now in its 8th year, is an annual non-acquisitive international art prize that celebrates diversity and excellence in the representational visual arts. It includes all static mediums: Traditional Art media, Digital Art media, and Photographic media; and all styles from realism and hyperrealism, to pop surrealism and lowbrow. The Prize seeks to

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Hawkesbury Art Prize 2025

The Hawkesbury Art Prize is a biennial award open to Australian artists for a painting, drawing, or work on paper that reflects contemporary Australian identity. The prize excludes photography, textiles, embroidery, and sculpture. The 2025 exhibition will be held at Purple Noon Gallery, Freemans Reach, NSW, from 30 August to 14 September 2025.   Image:

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9×5 Landscape Prize

Now in its 10th year, the Waverley Woollahra Art School’s 9×5 Landscape Art Prize invites artists to explore Australia’s Impressionist tradition. Entrants receive a 9×5-inch plywood board to create their landscape artwork, echoing the spontaneity of early outdoor painters. The prize aims to celebrate the spirit of Australian Impressionism and offers a platform for artists

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Young Paddo Art Prize

The Young Paddo Art Prize is a national competition for artists aged 5–18 years, focusing on A4 paintings on paper inspired by the Australian landscape and environment. There are four age categories with cash prizes: $500 for winners and $250 for honorable mentions. Twenty finalists will be selected for an exhibition at Art Leven Gallery

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