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Melbourne art galleries and exhibitions to visit in October
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New exhibition lands at Wyndham Art Gallery
Wyndham Art Gallery is proud to announce TREATY a new art exhibition opening on 5 August and running until 17 October.
TREATY presents the work of six First Nations artists for whom sovereignty is fundamental to their creative work and lives.
It features artwork by Dr Paola Balla, Gina Bundle, Peter Waples-Crowe, Aunty Marlene Gilson, Coree Thorpe, Kait James and Laura Thompson.
The exhibition features a variety of mediums, including possum skin pelt, earrings, paintings, digital prints and wallpaper.
Wyndham Council’s Creative City portfolio holder, Cr Marcel Mahfoud, said: “We are delighted that Wyndham Art Gallery is leading the way in exhibiting contemporary exhibitions.”
Review: Dogged, directed by Declan Greene. Griffin Theatre Company in association with Force Majeure.
Dingo (Sandy Greenwood, a Gumbaynggirr, Dunghutti and Bundjalung actor) stands facing the audience, dressed in a muddied tracksuit with a dingo-like mask. Her opening speech signals concern; a longing for her lost pups.
We then meet Woman (Blazey Best). Woman is of good Scottish heritage, the daughter of homesteaders and sheep graziers. She is out hunting for wild dogs. Woman is preparing a kill, ripping out a souvenir from a bloodied carcass. Her companion is Dog (Anthony Yangoyan), eager for his own reward, a taste of the kill.
(Image by Peter Walples-Crowe: Alpine Dingoes & Corroboree Frogs – both creatures found on Ngarigu Country)
This week, Jessie has invited Peter Waples-Crowe and Luke George to discuss self-expression through art. Peter is a Ngarigo artist who shares with us his experience of the intersection between being Aboriginal and queer, and how he uses art to express this experience, as well as make sense of it, whilst using it as his own personal healing tool. Peter has been been a finalist several times in the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards as well as the Victorian Indigenous Art Awards.
Our second guest, Luke George, who is an international artist, rope-worker and performer, shares with us on how he uses art to push the boundaries in the exploration of intimacy as an artist and in the process uncovers new layers in how the audience engages with the art. Luke has recently been appointed as Artistic Associate of Temperance Hall and is a recipient of a fellowship
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