Filtering by: 2025 Program
On the day following the opening exhibition, Jingwei Bu will present a one-on-one, silent tea ceremony retrial. This objectless performance invites individual audience members to enter the tea room and sit opposite the artist on a stack of A4 paper, still and present. Together, they share the quiet ritual and the passing of time, creating a space for reflection, intimacy, and presence.
View Event →
I Am Not My Father is a multigenerational collaboration exploring the complexities of fatherhood. Each artist brings personal experience—ranging from nurturing relationships to those shaped by absence, neglect, or trauma—into a shared conversation through textiles, sculpture, video, and an original score.
View Event →
‘Labyrinths of Signs’ is a textile installation body of work by Sue Jo Wright, which explores the journey of identity, belonging, and the discovery of community.
View Event →
This exhibition responds to the idea of 'Digital Genocide,' a term coined by Muneera Bano, Principal Research Scientist in Ethics and AI at the CSIRO. It names a hidden violence: the systematic disappearance, distortion, and underrepresentation of cohorts of women in the data that feeds machine learning and artificial intelligence.
View Event →
We Tea is an immersive installation developed through Bu’s ongoing studio-based tea ceremony practice since 2022. Rooted in intimate gatherings with friends, family, and visitors, each session becomes a durational act of presence where the slow rituals of making and sharing tea quietly document shared time and space.
View Event →
Grow your collection and nurture the future of contemporary art 🖼️
We are delighted to announce that the Firstdraft Fundraiser is back and will be online from Monday 28 July and in-person from 1 - 3 August!
View Event →
Join us from 2-4pm on Saturday 24 May for artist talks with the May/June exhibitions, including Joseph Burgess, Kiera Brew Kurec, Alex Tálamo, Nebbi Boii, Naoise Halloran-Mackay, Emily Greenwood and Fergus Berney-Gibson.
View Event →
Naoise Halloran-Mackay explores ideas of shelter and the ways in which we may build, seek, or offer it.
View Event →
Join us from 6-8 pm, for the opening of four new exhibitions including 3 solo exhibitions by Naoise Halloran-Mackay, Emily Greenwood and Fergus Berney-Gibson and a group exhibition with Joseph Burgess, Kiera Brew Kurec, Alex Talamo, Nebbi Boii, Dana Albatrawi & Wirrin Ward-Lowe.
View Event →
Intricate Rituals traces the uneasy space between boyhood and manhood—where affection becomes obscured by expectation, and kinaesthetic desire is tangled in myth. Through a darkened installation of four sculptural assemblages, the exhibition reframes domestic masculinity as a series of obscure and sacred rituals.
View Event →
This exhibition considers the function of art in articulating opposition, fostering solidarity and imagining alternative futures.
View Event →
The series of prideful Tongan flags recontextualizes the Eurocentric standard to fit the Pasifika diaspora’s post-colonial framework. Continuing to unravel ancestral histories through a post-colonial lens as a forgotten Tongan excluded from the culture of the ancestors the work juxtaposes contemporary punk sub- cultural influences from the postmodernist period with ancient ancestral history.
View Event →
Make your body-safe, usable eco pleasure toy while exploring sensory pleasure and the Indigenous practice of inner deep listening through clay.
View Event →
In an era of increasing polarisation, political, cultural, social, and economic, a question arises: why don’t those seeking genuine change engage more with those who think differently? People often voice their beliefs within familiar circles, both online and in person, reinforcing opposition rather than encouraging understanding.
View Event →
Garden Variety Dykes is a group show inspired by the PDF of the same name; ‘Garden Variety Dykes: Lesbian Traditions in Gardening’ edited by Irene Reti and Valerie Jean Chase in 1994. This exhibition dives into queer ecologies, puts forward questions surrounding the continuation of a queer linage in climate activism and explores sapphic yearning in the garden space.
View Event →
Nelson Nghe aims to illuminate the often "invisible" nature of gambling harm, especially its impact on loved ones. Through evocative found objects and images, Nghe reimagines hidden domestic moments, exploring the emotional toll that gambling harm inflicts on those indirectly affected.
View Event →
ALGAEIC INTENT investigates the ways in which Algae thrive in the wreckage of capitalism (it grows in response to the excesses of agriculture and suffocates fish via depletion of oxygen) and how this can operate as a mirror/reflective distortion of our intermingled biological actions and porous relations to matter.
View Event →
Motherhood and fertility have been extensively represented in creative practice for both their pictorial qualities and in the documentation of lived experiences. These representations continue to play an important role in shaping public perceptions of womanhood, while infertility is underrepresented, silenced or deemed contentious – often framed in terms of lack or failure.
View Event →
This project reassembles everyday life scenes in a conned space to generate an analog of a nocturnal urban park, reflecting the ongoing colonisation of the late night.
View Event →
Press against; Soften into explores fat as a material, an identity and a form of embodiment. The exhibition responds to conventions in contemporary art that distinguish between normal and fat bodies.
View Event →