Heather B Swann, Bronek Kozka, Annika Koops and our own lovely staff member Mish Meijers are all finalists in the Substation Contempoaray Art Prize, announced 21st of September 2012.
Raymond Arnold, Neil Haddon, Tim Burns and Megan Walch are all finalists in the 2012 City of Hobart Art Prize. Announced 5th of October 2012.
Barbie Kjar, Peter Atkins, Heather B Swann and Prudence Flint have all been selected for inclusion in this years Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery 2012 National Works on Paper exhbition. Ends 7 October.
Bronek Kozka is a finalist in the 2012 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize, announced 26 October 2012.
Thursday, 13 September 2012
Joel Crosswell selected for Shotgun
This is a great show. Don't miss it.
Joel's work is creepy and superb.
15 September to 7 October 2012
CAST, Tasma Street, North Hobart
Joel's work is creepy and superb.
15 September to 7 October 2012
CAST, Tasma Street, North Hobart
Tuesday, 11 September 2012
Tuesday, 24 July 2012
Congratulations Helen Wright
Congratulations to all the winners in this year's Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize, especially our own Helen Wright who took out 2nd place in the Works on Paper category with her wood cut print titled The Exquisite Corpse of Seaweed Man .
The Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize is a prestigious art award that celebrates our intricate and complex global biodiversity and encourages excellence in natural history art within Australia and around the world.
The prize was established by the South Australian Museum in 2002 to honour its first curator, the eminent zoologist Frederick George Waterhouse. Now in its tenth year, the Waterhouse is Australia’s richest prize for natural history art. It has proudly contributed over one million dollars to the arts community since its inception.
The enduring popularity of the prize is testament to the unique opportunity it gives artists to interpret the beauty and fragility of our natural world.
The exhibition of finalists' artworks are on display at the South Australian Museum until 9 September 2012.
The Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize is a prestigious art award that celebrates our intricate and complex global biodiversity and encourages excellence in natural history art within Australia and around the world.
The prize was established by the South Australian Museum in 2002 to honour its first curator, the eminent zoologist Frederick George Waterhouse. Now in its tenth year, the Waterhouse is Australia’s richest prize for natural history art. It has proudly contributed over one million dollars to the arts community since its inception.
The enduring popularity of the prize is testament to the unique opportunity it gives artists to interpret the beauty and fragility of our natural world.
The exhibition of finalists' artworks are on display at the South Australian Museum until 9 September 2012.
Wednesday, 4 July 2012
Heather B Swann wins Swan Hill Drawing Prize
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Cloud, ink on paper, 100 x 150 cm |
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery acquire David Keeling work
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Slow walk, coastal track, oil on linen, 184 x 138cm |
Tuesday, 8 May 2012
Julie Gough featured in 2nd Indigenous Triennial
From May to July 2012, the National Gallery will celebrate the second National Indigenous Art Triennial, unDisclosed.
Over autumn and winter, Gallery visitors will have the opportunity to
experience the dynamic visual expression of contemporary Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander art. 20 artists have been selected for
their commitment to excellence and their daring to explore new fields
of practice and artistic vision, these artists both inform and
redefine contemporary Indigenous art as we presently know it.
The twenty artists featured in UnDisclosed: 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial are: Tony Albert, Vernon Ah Kee, Bob Burruwal, Michael Cook, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Nici Cumpston, Fiona Foley, Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori, Gunybi Ganambarr, Julie Gough, Lindsay Harris, Jonathan Jones, Danie Mellor, Naata Nungurrayi, Maria Josette Orsto, Daniel Walbidi, Christian Thompson, Alick Tipoti, Lena Yarinkura and Nyapanyapa Yunupingu.
The exhibition’s theme, ‘unDisclosed’, alludes to the spoken and the unspoken, the known and the unknown, what can be revealed and what cannot. It captures the duality of the disclosed and undisclosed embedded within the works and the exhibition as a whole. Viewers are invited to unearth the layers of hidden and subtle meanings and to place them alongside those that are conspicuous.
The twenty artists featured in UnDisclosed: 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial are: Tony Albert, Vernon Ah Kee, Bob Burruwal, Michael Cook, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Nici Cumpston, Fiona Foley, Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori, Gunybi Ganambarr, Julie Gough, Lindsay Harris, Jonathan Jones, Danie Mellor, Naata Nungurrayi, Maria Josette Orsto, Daniel Walbidi, Christian Thompson, Alick Tipoti, Lena Yarinkura and Nyapanyapa Yunupingu.
The exhibition’s theme, ‘unDisclosed’, alludes to the spoken and the unspoken, the known and the unknown, what can be revealed and what cannot. It captures the duality of the disclosed and undisclosed embedded within the works and the exhibition as a whole. Viewers are invited to unearth the layers of hidden and subtle meanings and to place them alongside those that are conspicuous.
Wednesday, 4 April 2012
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery acquire Amanda Davies
Congratulations Imants Tillers
This painting is my version of Fred Williams’s Free copy of Eugene von Guerard’s Waterfall, Strath Creek, 1862. Von Guerard’s celebrated painting hangs in the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Williams’s work was a gouache executed in 1970. However, he went on to paint several significant original oils of this iconic subject. In my work, the waterfall somehow embodies the fleeting and mysterious nature of life. The waters of Strath Creek, after all, come from the catchments around Mount Disappointment [in Victoria].
Super-imposed over the ever-changing movement of water, I have quoted the sentiments of a famous Indian sutra:
The fleeting self
Like a beam
Like a vision
Like a bubble
Like a shadow
Like dew
Like lightening
Like a beam
Like a vision
Like a bubble
Like a shadow
Like dew
Like lightening
Thursday, 29 March 2012
Jane Burton 'other stories' opens Thursday 5th of April 2012
Other Stories is a collection of photographs that are intended to be experienced as a series of impressions: loose associations rather than determined narratives. Structured with five chapters like a fairy-tale collection, each series is toned in a different colour. These tones, reminiscent of old photographic processes and hand-colouring techniques, have been selected to bring particular associations of atmosphere and emotion to the images.
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La Bête #1 2011 pigment print on paper, 40 x 54 cm |
The atmosphere common to all the stories is cinematic and dreamlike. Saturated with colour (peach-sepia, red, viridian green, lavender, and blue), each series has its own emotional pitch and temperature; the ‘story’ is non-linear, non-literal, falling instead between remembrances, hallucination, and fantasy.
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Limbo #7 2011 pigment print on paper, 60 x 40 cm |
This exhibition features a selection of photographs from Jane's recently published book – Other Stories. This book is one of three published under the title 3 Books, comprising three separate photographic monographs by three contemporary Melbourne artists - Jane Burton, Darren Sylvester, and Simon Terrill. The books are designed by Darren Sylvester, edited by Helen Frajman and published by M.33, Melbourne.
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Sleep has his house #10 2011 pigment print on paper |
Burton’s work has gained considerable critical and curatorial attention over the last 15 years. Often described as an investigation into the feminine, her oeuvre has also explored landscape and the architectural. The world of Jane Burton’s photography is a morass of mystery, nostalgia, film noir, potential threat, sense of place, spirituality and sexuality; a world of dread and desire, beauty and melancholia.
View exhbition online http://www.bettgallery.com.au/artists/burton/otherstories/index.html
View exhbition online http://www.bettgallery.com.au/artists/burton/otherstories/index.html
David Stephenson works acquired by National Gallery of Australia
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The Zinc Works & Mt Wellington 2004, type c colour photograph |
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Light Cities: Hobart 2010, fine art ink-jet print |
Monday, 19 March 2012
Josephine Ulrick & Win Schubert Photography Award
Congratulations to Anne MacDonald & Bronek Kozka, both finalists in the 2012 Josephine Ulrick & Win Schubert Photography Award. Announced 31 March.
Thursday, 15 March 2012
Wynne Prize Finalists
Congratulations Neil Haddon, Imants Tillers & Philip Wolfhagen, all finalists in the 2012 Wynne Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
Monday, 5 March 2012
Tricky Walsh 'science fictions' opens Friday 9th of March 2012
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The quartz crystal piezoelectric generator (detail) 2012 |
Science Fictions is Tricky's debut exhibition with Bett Gallery. This exhibition explores Tricky's fascination with the inner workings of things. Sculptural works, faux - museum type displays of instruments and gadgetry, constructed of timber and found objects are accompanied by detailed renderings of diagrams and drawings in ink and gouache, that replicate both the scientific and fantastical. Incredible work.
Wednesday, 22 February 2012
Congratulations Kurilpa Collection

http://www.bettgallery.com.au/collections/collections.html
Pat Brassington & Richard Bell at 2012 Adelaide Biennale of Australian Art
Across four physical platforms, Parallel Collisions presents 21 commissioned works by some of Australia’s leading artists, including Pat Brassington and Richard Bell. Curated by Natasha Bullock and Alexie Glass-Kantor the 2012 Adelaide Biennial explores the ways in which ideas emerge, converge and re-form through time. From a floating island of 2000 cut-glass objects to an explosive light installation that clocks in real time human births, deaths and dying stars, this Biennial considers the temporality of the present as it parallels and collides with the past.
Julie Gough at Adelaide Festival
Deadly features newly commissioned works by eight leading Australian First Nation artists and collectives, including Julie Gough. Curated by Fulvia Mantelli and Renee Johnson with Troy-Anthony Baylis, Nici Cumpston and Brenda L. Croft as advisors. The Adelaide Festival is on from the 2nd to the 8th of March. To find out more have a look at their website http://www.adelaidefestival.com.au/2012/visual_arts/deadly.
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