Australian painter John Peter Russell was a close friend of Vincent Van Gogh, so why do so few Australians know of Russell?
A catalyst for conversation, Over Many Horizons is an immersive exhibition that pushes towards sustainable futures.
'Overview' at Stella Downer Fine Art presents a rich psychological foray into the Archibald Finalist's broad practice of prints, etchings and mixed media works. ...
From Newtown to Potts Point, Sydney Sculpture takes shape in a celebration of the lineage of Australian steel sculpture.
An artist that has dedicated his life and art to documenting and working in some of the most troubling places of conflict, George Gittoes is...
Be drawn into the luminescent world of Jason Sims, as he flicks the switch with his anamorphic light works in 'More or Less'.
Subverting taboo topics - from the sexual to the violence of silenced stories, the exhibitions of Julia Robinson and Greg Geraghty pack a punch.
Alex Gawronski is an artist, writer, gallery director and educator, best known for his installations. Here, Artist Profile talks to him about some recently exhibited,...
Australian born, and New York based, artist Jennifer Rankin returns with lyrical codes and constellations...
With Ian McKay leading the charge, in a two-part exhibition Defiance Gallery is celebrating the lineage of steel sculpture in Australia.
The past and the present collide as local ties bring the Wedderburn Artists back together again.
The Archibald begins with the announcement of the Packing Room Prize Winner and the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman finalists...
Geoff Levitus is a traveller and an activist, and his works are a true testament to that.
Artist Profile met with Honeywill in his Brisbane studio to discuss what captures his attention and why he is enticed by the simple things...
If there is something to set your sights towards in these cold winter months - Col Jordan's bright and vivacious paintings are here for you....
From his self-created outpost amid the stark, denuded landscape around Queenstown in Tasmania, Raymond Arnold is an aesthete and activist, a practical polemicist whose printmaking...
Abstracting light and reflection, Jacky Redgate plays with hand-printed analogue film to morph geometric abstraction with the genre of still life.
12 portraits tell tales of identity and resilience, the stolen generation, labour exploitation and ecological destruction stories from various ages and genders.
When Clifton Pugh first saw Nolan’s Ned Kelly series while still an art student, it provided him with a clear sense of where he wanted...
Stephen Haley examines the shake ups of our time – global urbanisation and the rise of the digital era.
Modern Love has nothing of the “lifestyle” genre about it.
When teenage Ken Whisson met artists Joy Hester, her husband Albert Tucker and the Reeds’ avant-garde circle in 1940s Melbourne, his creative education truly began.
Tales of migration and connection across the Pacific speak of cultural continuity and change.
Working with monotypes, etchings, drawings and an exciting addition, heliographs, Idris Murphy's practice is his own multifaceted language that speaks of the land.
My name is Matthew Clarke and I was born in 1986. I live in a wooded hamlet near Warrnambool in south-west Victoria.

