Kenneth Kronberger : behold the animated diorama!
- Authors: Kronberger, Kenneth
- Date: 2023
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: WED 1 MAR – FRI 17 MAR 2023 Please join the artist Kenneth Kronberger to celebrate an end of exhibition event at the Post Office Gallery, on Fri 17 March @ 5.30, for 6pm, until 8pm. All welcome! Through an investigation into the historically intriguing silent and static miniaturised world of the diorama and the contemporary art of animation, Kenneth Kronberger’s new work and PhD examination exhibition integrates these intriguing imagined formats, creating his own metamorphised ‘worlds’ and fantastical illusionistic spaces. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Doctoral research project at the Institute of Education, Arts and Community, Federation University, Australia. Kenneth Kronberger has been supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Stipend and (RTP) Fee-Offset Scholarship through Federation University Australia. Image: Kenneth Kronberger The Penthouse, 2023 wood, paper, digital print, foam board, acrylic paint, found objects, digital video H31.8 x W31.8 x D32 cm (scale 1:10) Courtesy the artist
- Description: WED 1 MAR – FRI 17 MAR 2023 Please join the artist Kenneth Kronberger to celebrate an end of exhibition event at the Post Office Gallery, on Fri 17 March @ 5.30, for 6pm, until 8pm. All welcome! Through an investigation into the historically intriguing silent and static miniaturised world of the diorama and the contemporary art of animation, Kenneth Kronberger’s new work and PhD examination exhibition integrates these intriguing imagined formats, creating his own metamorphised ‘worlds’ and fantastical illusionistic spaces. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Doctoral research project at the Institute of Education, Arts and Community, Federation University, Australia. Kenneth Kronberger has been supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Stipend and (RTP) Fee-Offset Scholarship through Federation University Australia.
- Authors: Kronberger, Kenneth
- Date: 2023
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: WED 1 MAR – FRI 17 MAR 2023 Please join the artist Kenneth Kronberger to celebrate an end of exhibition event at the Post Office Gallery, on Fri 17 March @ 5.30, for 6pm, until 8pm. All welcome! Through an investigation into the historically intriguing silent and static miniaturised world of the diorama and the contemporary art of animation, Kenneth Kronberger’s new work and PhD examination exhibition integrates these intriguing imagined formats, creating his own metamorphised ‘worlds’ and fantastical illusionistic spaces. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Doctoral research project at the Institute of Education, Arts and Community, Federation University, Australia. Kenneth Kronberger has been supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Stipend and (RTP) Fee-Offset Scholarship through Federation University Australia. Image: Kenneth Kronberger The Penthouse, 2023 wood, paper, digital print, foam board, acrylic paint, found objects, digital video H31.8 x W31.8 x D32 cm (scale 1:10) Courtesy the artist
- Description: WED 1 MAR – FRI 17 MAR 2023 Please join the artist Kenneth Kronberger to celebrate an end of exhibition event at the Post Office Gallery, on Fri 17 March @ 5.30, for 6pm, until 8pm. All welcome! Through an investigation into the historically intriguing silent and static miniaturised world of the diorama and the contemporary art of animation, Kenneth Kronberger’s new work and PhD examination exhibition integrates these intriguing imagined formats, creating his own metamorphised ‘worlds’ and fantastical illusionistic spaces. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Doctoral research project at the Institute of Education, Arts and Community, Federation University, Australia. Kenneth Kronberger has been supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Stipend and (RTP) Fee-Offset Scholarship through Federation University Australia.
Benchmark22 : undergraduate visual arts
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: WED 3 AUG – FRI 26 AUG 2022 Cassie BYRON, Sarah CANHAM, Abbey CODY, Erin COOMANS, Liarne CORKE, Michael CREANEY, Hannah D’ANTONIO, Vanessa DICKSON, Katherine DOUGLAS, Kristen FREEMAN, Angela GERRARD, Greg HORRICKS, Peta KALISPERIS, Clayton KEEFE, Shelia-anne KORS, Kristen LEIGH, Stacy LIVITSANIS, Jasmine MCKAY, Sarah MISCHKER, Tiarna PRATTLEY, Tahlia ROBERTS, Selina ROBERTSON, Ilona TOPOLCSANYI, Travis TRUDGEON. In this important Arts Academy annual exhibition, twenty-four undergraduate Visual Arts students showcase their recent work. Here, students explore and experiment with a range of media, expressing complex ideas surrounding politics and society, fantasy and fiction, memory and nostalgia, and the environment across a broad range of disciplines including painting, printmaking, drawing, textiles, ceramics, sculpture and mixed-media. This exhibition was opened by Associate Professor Richard Chew, Director, Arts Academy Ballarat and Gippsland, Institute of Education, Arts and Community on Fri 5 Aug 2022. NB: Due to continuing health concerns with the COVID19 pandemic, we strongly suggest maintaining safe social distancing and wearing a mask in the Gallery space. Image: Abbey Cody Smoke Break, 2022 oil on wood 25.4 x 20.32 cm Courtesy the artist
- Description: WED 3 AUG – FRI 26 AUG 2022 Cassie BYRON, Sarah CANHAM, Abbey CODY, Erin COOMANS, Liarne CORKE, Michael CREANEY, Hannah D’ANTONIO, Vanessa DICKSON, Katherine DOUGLAS, Kristen FREEMAN, Angela GERRARD, Greg HORRICKS, Peta KALISPERIS, Clayton KEEFE, Shelia-anne KORS, Kristen LEIGH, Stacy LIVITSANIS, Jasmine MCKAY, Sarah MISCHKER, Tiarna PRATTLEY, Tahlia ROBERTS, Selina ROBERTSON, Ilona TOPOLCSANYI, Travis TRUDGEON. In this important Arts Academy annual exhibition, twenty-four undergraduate Visual Arts students showcase their recent work. Here, students explore and experiment with a range of media, expressing complex ideas surrounding politics and society, fantasy and fiction, memory and nostalgia, and the environment across a broad range of disciplines including painting, printmaking, drawing, textiles, ceramics, sculpture and mixed-media. This exhibition was opened by Associate Professor Richard Chew, Director, Arts Academy Ballarat and Gippsland, Institute of Education, Arts and Community on Fri 5 Aug 2022. NB: Due to continuing health concerns with the COVID19 pandemic, we strongly suggest maintaining safe social distancing and wearing a mask in the Gallery space.
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: WED 3 AUG – FRI 26 AUG 2022 Cassie BYRON, Sarah CANHAM, Abbey CODY, Erin COOMANS, Liarne CORKE, Michael CREANEY, Hannah D’ANTONIO, Vanessa DICKSON, Katherine DOUGLAS, Kristen FREEMAN, Angela GERRARD, Greg HORRICKS, Peta KALISPERIS, Clayton KEEFE, Shelia-anne KORS, Kristen LEIGH, Stacy LIVITSANIS, Jasmine MCKAY, Sarah MISCHKER, Tiarna PRATTLEY, Tahlia ROBERTS, Selina ROBERTSON, Ilona TOPOLCSANYI, Travis TRUDGEON. In this important Arts Academy annual exhibition, twenty-four undergraduate Visual Arts students showcase their recent work. Here, students explore and experiment with a range of media, expressing complex ideas surrounding politics and society, fantasy and fiction, memory and nostalgia, and the environment across a broad range of disciplines including painting, printmaking, drawing, textiles, ceramics, sculpture and mixed-media. This exhibition was opened by Associate Professor Richard Chew, Director, Arts Academy Ballarat and Gippsland, Institute of Education, Arts and Community on Fri 5 Aug 2022. NB: Due to continuing health concerns with the COVID19 pandemic, we strongly suggest maintaining safe social distancing and wearing a mask in the Gallery space. Image: Abbey Cody Smoke Break, 2022 oil on wood 25.4 x 20.32 cm Courtesy the artist
- Description: WED 3 AUG – FRI 26 AUG 2022 Cassie BYRON, Sarah CANHAM, Abbey CODY, Erin COOMANS, Liarne CORKE, Michael CREANEY, Hannah D’ANTONIO, Vanessa DICKSON, Katherine DOUGLAS, Kristen FREEMAN, Angela GERRARD, Greg HORRICKS, Peta KALISPERIS, Clayton KEEFE, Shelia-anne KORS, Kristen LEIGH, Stacy LIVITSANIS, Jasmine MCKAY, Sarah MISCHKER, Tiarna PRATTLEY, Tahlia ROBERTS, Selina ROBERTSON, Ilona TOPOLCSANYI, Travis TRUDGEON. In this important Arts Academy annual exhibition, twenty-four undergraduate Visual Arts students showcase their recent work. Here, students explore and experiment with a range of media, expressing complex ideas surrounding politics and society, fantasy and fiction, memory and nostalgia, and the environment across a broad range of disciplines including painting, printmaking, drawing, textiles, ceramics, sculpture and mixed-media. This exhibition was opened by Associate Professor Richard Chew, Director, Arts Academy Ballarat and Gippsland, Institute of Education, Arts and Community on Fri 5 Aug 2022. NB: Due to continuing health concerns with the COVID19 pandemic, we strongly suggest maintaining safe social distancing and wearing a mask in the Gallery space.
EM I Body : works by Indonesian Women Artists
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: WED 14 SEP – FRI 25 NOV 2022 Showcasing select work by seven contemporary Indonesian women artists, EM I BODY uncovers personal stories and unspoken truths while revealing common states of pride, tenacity and personal endurance. Here, an oversized canvas and stilled imposing woman’s gaze, contrasts with the blurred silhouette and video of a woman behind glass painting herself in and out of the picture. Conversely, depictions of naively painted distorted figures act to reclaim the artist’s body and sexuality, while works created from carbon copies, and from human hair, symbolise the act of protection and nurturing between mother and child. Featuring Audya Amalia, Ayurika, Dita Gambiro, Erika Ernawan, I Gusti Ayu Kadek Murniasih (Murni), Theresia Agustina Sitompul (Tere) and Restu Ratnaningtyas, artists present visually compelling work in diverse media examining women’s familial and personal relationships, sexuality, identity, nostalgia and memory. This unique exhibition is presented in partnership with Project Eleven, a philanthropic initiative that supports the work of contemporary artists, with a focus on cutting-edge contemporary art and cross-cultural collaboration. This exhibition was opened by Konfir Kabo, Founder, Project Eleven, with remarks by Asoc. Prof Richard Chew, on Fri 9 Sep. Image: AYURIKA Lost #2, 2020 oil on canvas H200 x W300 cm Courtesy the artist
- Description: WED 14 SEP – FRI 25 NOV 2022 Showcasing select work by seven contemporary Indonesian women artists, EM I BODY uncovers personal stories and unspoken truths while revealing common states of pride, tenacity and personal endurance. Here, an oversized canvas and stilled imposing woman’s gaze, contrasts with the blurred silhouette and video of a woman behind glass painting herself in and out of the picture. Conversely, depictions of naively painted distorted figures act to reclaim the artist’s body and sexuality, while works created from carbon copies, and from human hair, symbolise the act of protection and nurturing between mother and child. Featuring Audya Amalia, Ayurika, Dita Gambiro, Erika Ernawan, I Gusti Ayu Kadek Murniasih (Murni), Theresia Agustina Sitompul (Tere) and Restu Ratnaningtyas, artists present visually compelling work in diverse media examining women’s familial and personal relationships, sexuality, identity, nostalgia and memory. This unique exhibition is presented in partnership with Project Eleven, a philanthropic initiative that supports the work of contemporary artists, with a focus on cutting-edge contemporary art and cross-cultural collaboration. This exhibition was opened by Konfir Kabo, Founder, Project Eleven, with remarks by Asoc. Prof Richard Chew, on Fri 9 Sep.
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: WED 14 SEP – FRI 25 NOV 2022 Showcasing select work by seven contemporary Indonesian women artists, EM I BODY uncovers personal stories and unspoken truths while revealing common states of pride, tenacity and personal endurance. Here, an oversized canvas and stilled imposing woman’s gaze, contrasts with the blurred silhouette and video of a woman behind glass painting herself in and out of the picture. Conversely, depictions of naively painted distorted figures act to reclaim the artist’s body and sexuality, while works created from carbon copies, and from human hair, symbolise the act of protection and nurturing between mother and child. Featuring Audya Amalia, Ayurika, Dita Gambiro, Erika Ernawan, I Gusti Ayu Kadek Murniasih (Murni), Theresia Agustina Sitompul (Tere) and Restu Ratnaningtyas, artists present visually compelling work in diverse media examining women’s familial and personal relationships, sexuality, identity, nostalgia and memory. This unique exhibition is presented in partnership with Project Eleven, a philanthropic initiative that supports the work of contemporary artists, with a focus on cutting-edge contemporary art and cross-cultural collaboration. This exhibition was opened by Konfir Kabo, Founder, Project Eleven, with remarks by Asoc. Prof Richard Chew, on Fri 9 Sep. Image: AYURIKA Lost #2, 2020 oil on canvas H200 x W300 cm Courtesy the artist
- Description: WED 14 SEP – FRI 25 NOV 2022 Showcasing select work by seven contemporary Indonesian women artists, EM I BODY uncovers personal stories and unspoken truths while revealing common states of pride, tenacity and personal endurance. Here, an oversized canvas and stilled imposing woman’s gaze, contrasts with the blurred silhouette and video of a woman behind glass painting herself in and out of the picture. Conversely, depictions of naively painted distorted figures act to reclaim the artist’s body and sexuality, while works created from carbon copies, and from human hair, symbolise the act of protection and nurturing between mother and child. Featuring Audya Amalia, Ayurika, Dita Gambiro, Erika Ernawan, I Gusti Ayu Kadek Murniasih (Murni), Theresia Agustina Sitompul (Tere) and Restu Ratnaningtyas, artists present visually compelling work in diverse media examining women’s familial and personal relationships, sexuality, identity, nostalgia and memory. This unique exhibition is presented in partnership with Project Eleven, a philanthropic initiative that supports the work of contemporary artists, with a focus on cutting-edge contemporary art and cross-cultural collaboration. This exhibition was opened by Konfir Kabo, Founder, Project Eleven, with remarks by Asoc. Prof Richard Chew, on Fri 9 Sep.
Scope 22 Exhibition
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: SCOPE22: ARTS ACADEMY LECTURERS, TEACHERS & HONORARIES WED 2 MAR - FRI 1 APR 2022 Sharon ANDERSON, Jason GRACE, Wendy HABRAKEN-FLACK, Paul MAH, Jill ORR, Jimmy PASAKOS, Kim PERCY, Jenny PETERSON, PITCHA MAKIN FELLAS, Julie REED HENDERSON, Chrissie Louise SMITH, Elke VARGA, Anthea WILLIAMS, Carole WILSON, WIND & SKY PRODUCTIONS. An important Arts Academy annual exhibition, SCOPE showcases new work by lecturers, teachers, research associates and research fellows from the University's Gippsland and Ballarat campuses, who, as educators and researchers at Federation University, also sustain an ongoing rigorous artistic practice. Image: Kim Percy Mama Manna Gum, 2021 digital photograph on paper H32 x W20cm Courtesy the artist
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: SCOPE22: ARTS ACADEMY LECTURERS, TEACHERS & HONORARIES WED 2 MAR - FRI 1 APR 2022 Sharon ANDERSON, Jason GRACE, Wendy HABRAKEN-FLACK, Paul MAH, Jill ORR, Jimmy PASAKOS, Kim PERCY, Jenny PETERSON, PITCHA MAKIN FELLAS, Julie REED HENDERSON, Chrissie Louise SMITH, Elke VARGA, Anthea WILLIAMS, Carole WILSON, WIND & SKY PRODUCTIONS. An important Arts Academy annual exhibition, SCOPE showcases new work by lecturers, teachers, research associates and research fellows from the University's Gippsland and Ballarat campuses, who, as educators and researchers at Federation University, also sustain an ongoing rigorous artistic practice. Image: Kim Percy Mama Manna Gum, 2021 digital photograph on paper H32 x W20cm Courtesy the artist
The chosen vessel : Belinda Michael & Tiffany Titshall
- Michael, Belinda, Titshall, Tiffany
- Authors: Michael, Belinda , Titshall, Tiffany
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Artwork
- Full Text: false
- Description: WED 14 DEC 2022 - FRI 3 FEB 2023 In an exhibition showcasing the collaborative work of Belinda Michael and Tiffany Titshall, these two important central Victorian artists present a powerful new series of drawings and ceramic vessels of immense beauty and intrigue. Set within the colonial Australian gold rush era, the artists challenge stereotypical narratives, recreating traditional scenes with a powerful female protagonist avenging the murder of her mother by performing wild and powerful acts on her harem of enslaved men. Here, accepted histories are upended replaced by a potent gothic mythological tale of female power, lust and revenge! This exhibition was opened by Natasha Mitchell, presenter, ABC Radio National, on Fri 9 Dec 2022. Image: Belinda Michael & Tiffany Titshall A Gothic Tale 9 & 7, 2021 earthenware with slips & oxides, sgraffito, once fired Courtesy the artists
- Description: WED 14 DEC 2022 - FRI 3 FEB 2023 In an exhibition showcasing the collaborative work of Belinda Michael and Tiffany Titshall, these two important central Victorian artists present a powerful new series of drawings and ceramic vessels of immense beauty and intrigue. Set within the colonial Australian gold rush era, the artists challenge stereotypical narratives, recreating traditional scenes with a powerful female protagonist avenging the murder of her mother by performing wild and powerful acts on her harem of enslaved men. Here, accepted histories are upended replaced by a potent gothic mythological tale of female power, lust and revenge! This exhibition was opened by Natasha Mitchell, presenter, ABC Radio National, on Fri 9 Dec 2022.
Benchmark21 : undergraduate visual arts
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: BENCHMARK21: UNDERGRADUATE VISUAL ARTS WED 11 AUG - FRI 20 AUG 2021 The Post Office Gallery’s important annual exhibition presents innovative, inspired and bold ideas by Ballarat’s Arts Academy undergraduate visual art students across a range of media, styles and disciplines including drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, ceramics and installation. Image: Erin Jankelowitz, Alex Glenk, Perri Hobbs, Morgan McDermott, Libby Lewis (First Year Collaboration Class, 2021) Release, 2021 digital print 65 cm x 85 cm Courtesy the artists
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: BENCHMARK21: UNDERGRADUATE VISUAL ARTS WED 11 AUG - FRI 20 AUG 2021 The Post Office Gallery’s important annual exhibition presents innovative, inspired and bold ideas by Ballarat’s Arts Academy undergraduate visual art students across a range of media, styles and disciplines including drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, ceramics and installation. Image: Erin Jankelowitz, Alex Glenk, Perri Hobbs, Morgan McDermott, Libby Lewis (First Year Collaboration Class, 2021) Release, 2021 digital print 65 cm x 85 cm Courtesy the artists
EYE: Visual art and design 2020 graduating students
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 11 MAR - 1 APR 2021 Anthea BIDWELL Vienna Drysdale BISCHARD Jessica CHAPLIN Kathryn DRUM Miles FOLEY Tameka HAGUE Clayton KEEFE Angeline KOOT Lauren MATTHEWS Tess MCLOUGHLAN Sarah TAYLOR Brittany TUCKER Ella YOUNG Showcasing work by our 2020 visual art and design graduating students within the Bachelor of Visual Arts, Bachelor of Communication Design, Creative Arts (Honours) and Advanced Diploma of Graphic Design, Ballarat, this exhibition has been curated at the School of Arts Post Office Gallery following our virtual exhibition launch in 2020. Image: Vienna Drysdale Bischard Figure 2, 2020 digital print on archival paper H50 X W35 cm Courtesy the artist
- Description: 11 MAR - 1 APR 2021 Anthea BIDWELL Vienna Drysdale BISCHARD Jessica CHAPLIN Kathryn DRUM Miles FOLEY Tameka HAGUE Clayton KEEFE Angeline KOOT Lauren MATTHEWS Tess MCLOUGHLAN Sarah TAYLOR Brittany TUCKER Ella YOUNG Showcasing work by our 2020 visual art and design graduating students within the Bachelor of Visual Arts, Bachelor of Communication Design, Creative Arts (Honours) and Advanced Diploma of Graphic Design, Ballarat, this exhibition has been curated at the School of Arts Post Office Gallery following our virtual exhibition launch in 2020.
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 11 MAR - 1 APR 2021 Anthea BIDWELL Vienna Drysdale BISCHARD Jessica CHAPLIN Kathryn DRUM Miles FOLEY Tameka HAGUE Clayton KEEFE Angeline KOOT Lauren MATTHEWS Tess MCLOUGHLAN Sarah TAYLOR Brittany TUCKER Ella YOUNG Showcasing work by our 2020 visual art and design graduating students within the Bachelor of Visual Arts, Bachelor of Communication Design, Creative Arts (Honours) and Advanced Diploma of Graphic Design, Ballarat, this exhibition has been curated at the School of Arts Post Office Gallery following our virtual exhibition launch in 2020. Image: Vienna Drysdale Bischard Figure 2, 2020 digital print on archival paper H50 X W35 cm Courtesy the artist
- Description: 11 MAR - 1 APR 2021 Anthea BIDWELL Vienna Drysdale BISCHARD Jessica CHAPLIN Kathryn DRUM Miles FOLEY Tameka HAGUE Clayton KEEFE Angeline KOOT Lauren MATTHEWS Tess MCLOUGHLAN Sarah TAYLOR Brittany TUCKER Ella YOUNG Showcasing work by our 2020 visual art and design graduating students within the Bachelor of Visual Arts, Bachelor of Communication Design, Creative Arts (Honours) and Advanced Diploma of Graphic Design, Ballarat, this exhibition has been curated at the School of Arts Post Office Gallery following our virtual exhibition launch in 2020.
Fiona Crawford - When you go looking for me, I am not there
- Authors: Crawford, Fiona
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Following residencies in Assisi, Italy in 2016 and 2019, inspired by the beauty and intrigue surrounding the medieval embroidery tradition of ‘Punto Assisi’ still practised today, Fiona Crawford’s contemporary textiles subvert and transgress conventions and reinterpret the ubiquitous subject of ‘women’s work’ Derived from the exterior of medieval San Rufino Cathedral, Punto Assisi’s highly stylised pattern and form is unique - the subject matter empty of detail, with the outlined negative space seeming to echo the absence of information and who the female artisans were. Invisible and indispensable, the names and faces of the female makers were rarely documented, existing within the dominant male hegemonic ideologies of the time, undervalued and seen as only undertaking 'women’s work'. Using vintage linen and thread, the combination of traditional and contemporary imagery, text, and the concept of drawing with thread, Fiona Crawford’s work investigates the notion of absence and at the same time honours the unknown female makers of this now highly prized and ancient art. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Masters research project at the School of Arts, Federation University, Australia. Fiona Crawford is supported by an Australian Research Training Program (RTP) Fee Offset Scholarship through Federation University. 45-minute session times available via Eventbrite. Please wear a mask and comply with 1.5m social distancing rules.
- Authors: Crawford, Fiona
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Following residencies in Assisi, Italy in 2016 and 2019, inspired by the beauty and intrigue surrounding the medieval embroidery tradition of ‘Punto Assisi’ still practised today, Fiona Crawford’s contemporary textiles subvert and transgress conventions and reinterpret the ubiquitous subject of ‘women’s work’ Derived from the exterior of medieval San Rufino Cathedral, Punto Assisi’s highly stylised pattern and form is unique - the subject matter empty of detail, with the outlined negative space seeming to echo the absence of information and who the female artisans were. Invisible and indispensable, the names and faces of the female makers were rarely documented, existing within the dominant male hegemonic ideologies of the time, undervalued and seen as only undertaking 'women’s work'. Using vintage linen and thread, the combination of traditional and contemporary imagery, text, and the concept of drawing with thread, Fiona Crawford’s work investigates the notion of absence and at the same time honours the unknown female makers of this now highly prized and ancient art. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Masters research project at the School of Arts, Federation University, Australia. Fiona Crawford is supported by an Australian Research Training Program (RTP) Fee Offset Scholarship through Federation University. 45-minute session times available via Eventbrite. Please wear a mask and comply with 1.5m social distancing rules.
Rodney Forbes : in my life
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork
- Full Text: false
- Description: Exhibition dates: 13 March to 16 May 2021 Gippsland Art Gallery A showcase of Forbes’ colourful and characteristic practice from 1983 to 2020. Celebrating Rodney Forbes’ unique style of storytelling and his highly distinctive painting style. Over four decades, Forbes has developed his figurative narrative painting and use of flattened perspective. Throughout this exhibition visitors can view works that showcase Forbes’ colourful and characteristic practice from 1983 to 2020. Forbes says of the exhibition, “Thanks to Gippsland Art Gallery and Australian Galleries, Melbourne, for collaborating to bring 40 years of my work together. It will be wonderful to see those old friends again.” Rodney Forbes is represented by Australian Galleries, Melbourne. Rodney Forbes is an Adjunct Research Fellow at Federation University Australia.
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork
- Full Text: false
- Description: Exhibition dates: 13 March to 16 May 2021 Gippsland Art Gallery A showcase of Forbes’ colourful and characteristic practice from 1983 to 2020. Celebrating Rodney Forbes’ unique style of storytelling and his highly distinctive painting style. Over four decades, Forbes has developed his figurative narrative painting and use of flattened perspective. Throughout this exhibition visitors can view works that showcase Forbes’ colourful and characteristic practice from 1983 to 2020. Forbes says of the exhibition, “Thanks to Gippsland Art Gallery and Australian Galleries, Melbourne, for collaborating to bring 40 years of my work together. It will be wonderful to see those old friends again.” Rodney Forbes is represented by Australian Galleries, Melbourne. Rodney Forbes is an Adjunct Research Fellow at Federation University Australia.
SCOPE 21 Exhibition
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: SCOPE21 30 JUN - 16 JUL 2021 An important Arts Academy annual exhibition, SCOPE 2021 presents new work by lecturers, teachers, research associates and research fellows who, as artists also sustain a rigorous research and/or teaching practice at Federation University, and whose work expresses complex ideas related to fact and fiction, empathy, politics and global unrest, as well as ideas surrounding Indigenous art and iconography. Image: Elke Varga Temple Flags, 2020 acrylic on canvas 3 x (25 x 25cm) Courtesy the artist
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: SCOPE21 30 JUN - 16 JUL 2021 An important Arts Academy annual exhibition, SCOPE 2021 presents new work by lecturers, teachers, research associates and research fellows who, as artists also sustain a rigorous research and/or teaching practice at Federation University, and whose work expresses complex ideas related to fact and fiction, empathy, politics and global unrest, as well as ideas surrounding Indigenous art and iconography. Image: Elke Varga Temple Flags, 2020 acrylic on canvas 3 x (25 x 25cm) Courtesy the artist
Shelter from the storm
- Authors: Griffin, Tony
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 15 APR - 28 MAY 2021 [extended until 4 June 2021] Through an exhaustive description of the everyday and often overlooked objects in one suburban home in the early part of the twenty first century, as a form of archaeology of its recent past and present, Tony Griffin’s research considers how broader entanglements are hidden in our everyday through the proliferation of our things. Here, by exploring theories of the mutual dependency between humans and things, Griffin examines how his paintings provide agency in discerning those relationships and act as a means to understand our world in this age of anxiety. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Doctoral research project at the School of Arts, Federation University Australia. Tony Griffin’s is supported by an Australian Research Training Program (RTP) Fee Offset Scholarship through Federation University. Image: Tony Griffin Untitled, 2020 acrylic on board H20 X W20 cm Courtesy the artist
- Authors: Griffin, Tony
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 15 APR - 28 MAY 2021 [extended until 4 June 2021] Through an exhaustive description of the everyday and often overlooked objects in one suburban home in the early part of the twenty first century, as a form of archaeology of its recent past and present, Tony Griffin’s research considers how broader entanglements are hidden in our everyday through the proliferation of our things. Here, by exploring theories of the mutual dependency between humans and things, Griffin examines how his paintings provide agency in discerning those relationships and act as a means to understand our world in this age of anxiety. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Doctoral research project at the School of Arts, Federation University Australia. Tony Griffin’s is supported by an Australian Research Training Program (RTP) Fee Offset Scholarship through Federation University. Image: Tony Griffin Untitled, 2020 acrylic on board H20 X W20 cm Courtesy the artist
Twice is lucky, 3 times a charm
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Exhibition dates: 3 August-13 November 2021 Twice is Lucky, 3 Times a Charm’ is Rodney Forbes’ 20th solo exhibition with Australian Galleries. Created during the COVID-19 pandemic, these vibrant paintings explore fortune, transformation and love. This exhibition features ‘A Submariner Dreams of Home’, winner of the 2020 Maritime Art Prize. Rodney Forbes’ paintings address deeply poignant subject matter through dreamlike and surreal imagery. Figures and objects float against his trademark palette of bright, luminous colours, drawing the viewer in to explore a rich narrative. “Although the subject matter of Forbes’ paintings deals with aspects of the human condition, his paintings contain a degree of humour without which his intensity of vision would degenerate into affected angst. It is his ability to see beneath the surface of human relationships and the domestic environment and then to express that vision with warmth and humour that elevates his work from the drily philosophical or the contrived.” – David Thorp – artist and curator, Director, South London Gallery 1992-2001, Turner Prize Judge This exhibition celebrates Rodney Forbes’ unique style of storytelling and his ability to portray wonder, adventure and the unforeseen through a highly distinctive painting style.
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Exhibition dates: 3 August-13 November 2021 Twice is Lucky, 3 Times a Charm’ is Rodney Forbes’ 20th solo exhibition with Australian Galleries. Created during the COVID-19 pandemic, these vibrant paintings explore fortune, transformation and love. This exhibition features ‘A Submariner Dreams of Home’, winner of the 2020 Maritime Art Prize. Rodney Forbes’ paintings address deeply poignant subject matter through dreamlike and surreal imagery. Figures and objects float against his trademark palette of bright, luminous colours, drawing the viewer in to explore a rich narrative. “Although the subject matter of Forbes’ paintings deals with aspects of the human condition, his paintings contain a degree of humour without which his intensity of vision would degenerate into affected angst. It is his ability to see beneath the surface of human relationships and the domestic environment and then to express that vision with warmth and humour that elevates his work from the drily philosophical or the contrived.” – David Thorp – artist and curator, Director, South London Gallery 1992-2001, Turner Prize Judge This exhibition celebrates Rodney Forbes’ unique style of storytelling and his ability to portray wonder, adventure and the unforeseen through a highly distinctive painting style.
Yapaneypuk Nyini Wowa (Together my Brother)
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: YAPANEYPUK NYINI WOWA FROM 5 JULY 2021 Through a unique collaboration between Federation College’s VET visual arts program, Langi Kal Kal and Hopkins Correctional Centre, select indigenous artists present their recent work to celebrate their rich cultural heritage and traditions and the power of creativity to express ideas surrounding identity, country, environmental issues, family, kinship and friendship during NAIDOC in 2021. Image: Maggs (Noongar) Two Lizards, 2020 acrylic on canvas H45 x W55 cm Courtesy the artist
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: YAPANEYPUK NYINI WOWA FROM 5 JULY 2021 Through a unique collaboration between Federation College’s VET visual arts program, Langi Kal Kal and Hopkins Correctional Centre, select indigenous artists present their recent work to celebrate their rich cultural heritage and traditions and the power of creativity to express ideas surrounding identity, country, environmental issues, family, kinship and friendship during NAIDOC in 2021. Image: Maggs (Noongar) Two Lizards, 2020 acrylic on canvas H45 x W55 cm Courtesy the artist
EYE : Arts Academy End of Year Graduating Student Exhibition
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: EYE: ARTS ACADEMY END OF YEAR GRADUATING STUDENT EXHIBITION 16 DEC 2020 – 2 MAR 2021 Molly BERRY, Jackson BERTRAM, ;Ann BETTS, Anthea BIDWELL, Christine BOURCHIER, Jessica CHAPLIN, Kathryn DRUM, Vienna DRYSDALE BISCHARD, Daniel CULLINAN, Lauren ESPIE, Miles FOLEY, Tameka HAGUE, Tyra HOWARD, Caleb JORDAN, Clayton KEEFE, Angeline KOOT, Georgia LEONARD, Lauren MATTHEWS, Tess MCLOUGHLAN, Tayla RIDGEWAY, Poppy SCHEMBRI, Sarah TAYLOR, Brittany TUCKER, Grace WARE, Ella YOUNG EYE - End of Year Exhibition showcases work by visual art and design graduating students across five programs: Bachelor of Visual Arts (Ballarat), Bachelor of Fine Arts (Gippsland), Bachelor of Communication Design, Creative Arts (Honours) and Advanced Diploma of Graphic Design, and represents the culmination of at least two to three years study. Due to COVID-19, the exhibition has been created via a software platform enabling the students' work to be curated in a virtual gallery setting. The online exhibition launch, with Federation University’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Duncan Bentley and Associate Professor Rick Chew, Director, Arts Academy, with Visual Arts' students, was held on Wed 16 Dec. Through the generosity of our sponsors, awards recipients were announced for our high achieving and committed students at the official online launch. A physical exhibition of EYE will be held at our Post Office Gallery, Ballarat and Switchback Gallery, Gippsland in March 2021.
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Artwork , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: EYE: ARTS ACADEMY END OF YEAR GRADUATING STUDENT EXHIBITION 16 DEC 2020 – 2 MAR 2021 Molly BERRY, Jackson BERTRAM, ;Ann BETTS, Anthea BIDWELL, Christine BOURCHIER, Jessica CHAPLIN, Kathryn DRUM, Vienna DRYSDALE BISCHARD, Daniel CULLINAN, Lauren ESPIE, Miles FOLEY, Tameka HAGUE, Tyra HOWARD, Caleb JORDAN, Clayton KEEFE, Angeline KOOT, Georgia LEONARD, Lauren MATTHEWS, Tess MCLOUGHLAN, Tayla RIDGEWAY, Poppy SCHEMBRI, Sarah TAYLOR, Brittany TUCKER, Grace WARE, Ella YOUNG EYE - End of Year Exhibition showcases work by visual art and design graduating students across five programs: Bachelor of Visual Arts (Ballarat), Bachelor of Fine Arts (Gippsland), Bachelor of Communication Design, Creative Arts (Honours) and Advanced Diploma of Graphic Design, and represents the culmination of at least two to three years study. Due to COVID-19, the exhibition has been created via a software platform enabling the students' work to be curated in a virtual gallery setting. The online exhibition launch, with Federation University’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Duncan Bentley and Associate Professor Rick Chew, Director, Arts Academy, with Visual Arts' students, was held on Wed 16 Dec. Through the generosity of our sponsors, awards recipients were announced for our high achieving and committed students at the official online launch. A physical exhibition of EYE will be held at our Post Office Gallery, Ballarat and Switchback Gallery, Gippsland in March 2021.
SCOPE 20 Exhibition
- Button, Loris, Horrocks, Lucinda, Nemo, Jary, Wind & Sky Productions, Mah, Paul, Orr, Jill, Pasakos, Jimmy, Percy, Kim, Pilven, Peter, Fellas, Pitcha Makin, Laxton, Ted, Edgeley, Trudy, Rigney, Adrian, Varga, Elke, Williams, Morgan, Wilson, Carole
- Authors: Button, Loris , Horrocks, Lucinda , Nemo, Jary , Wind & Sky Productions , Mah, Paul , Orr, Jill , Pasakos, Jimmy , Percy, Kim , Pilven, Peter , Fellas, Pitcha Makin , Laxton, Ted , Edgeley, Trudy , Rigney, Adrian , Varga, Elke , Williams, Morgan , Wilson, Carole
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: SCOPE20: ARTS ACADEMY VISUAL ARTS LECTURERS, TEACHERS AND HONORARIES FRI 21 FEB – SAT 7 MAR 2020 Please join us for the exhibition opening, with remarks by Associate Professor Rick Chew, Director, Arts Academy, Federation University Australia @ 5:30 for 6pm on Thu 20 Feb 2020. All welcome! Loris BUTTON, Lucinda HORROCKS & Jary NEMO, Paul MAH, Jill ORR, Jimmy PASAKOS, Kim PERCY, Peter PILVEN, PITCHA MAKIN FELLAS, Elke VARGA, Morgan WILLIAMS, Carole WILSON In the Arts Academy’s important annual exhibition, SCOPE presents a diverse selection of works on paper, video, ceramics, printmaking, painting and design, by Visual Arts lecturers, teachers, Research Associates, Associate and Adjunct Professors and Research Fellows who, as artists, also sustain a rigorous artistic research and/or teaching practice at Federation University's School of Arts. Participating artists present work across disciplines including drawing, painting, photography, performance art, video, ceramics, textiles and printmaking. Presenting works of beauty and contemplation alongside the real and unsettling, participating artists express complex ideas related to fact and fiction, identity, empathy, politics and global unrest, as well as climate change, Indigenous art and cultural appropriation. Image: Wind & Sky Productions & Chris Hayward, Collections and Climate Change, 2019 Video: 9.01 mins. Courtesy the artists
- Authors: Button, Loris , Horrocks, Lucinda , Nemo, Jary , Wind & Sky Productions , Mah, Paul , Orr, Jill , Pasakos, Jimmy , Percy, Kim , Pilven, Peter , Fellas, Pitcha Makin , Laxton, Ted , Edgeley, Trudy , Rigney, Adrian , Varga, Elke , Williams, Morgan , Wilson, Carole
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: SCOPE20: ARTS ACADEMY VISUAL ARTS LECTURERS, TEACHERS AND HONORARIES FRI 21 FEB – SAT 7 MAR 2020 Please join us for the exhibition opening, with remarks by Associate Professor Rick Chew, Director, Arts Academy, Federation University Australia @ 5:30 for 6pm on Thu 20 Feb 2020. All welcome! Loris BUTTON, Lucinda HORROCKS & Jary NEMO, Paul MAH, Jill ORR, Jimmy PASAKOS, Kim PERCY, Peter PILVEN, PITCHA MAKIN FELLAS, Elke VARGA, Morgan WILLIAMS, Carole WILSON In the Arts Academy’s important annual exhibition, SCOPE presents a diverse selection of works on paper, video, ceramics, printmaking, painting and design, by Visual Arts lecturers, teachers, Research Associates, Associate and Adjunct Professors and Research Fellows who, as artists, also sustain a rigorous artistic research and/or teaching practice at Federation University's School of Arts. Participating artists present work across disciplines including drawing, painting, photography, performance art, video, ceramics, textiles and printmaking. Presenting works of beauty and contemplation alongside the real and unsettling, participating artists express complex ideas related to fact and fiction, identity, empathy, politics and global unrest, as well as climate change, Indigenous art and cultural appropriation. Image: Wind & Sky Productions & Chris Hayward, Collections and Climate Change, 2019 Video: 9.01 mins. Courtesy the artists
The Messengers
- Authors: Drendel, Graeme
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Please join the artist for the exhibition opening, with remarks by Geoff Wallis, former Federation University lecturer, on Sat 14 Mar @ 6:30pm. All welcome! In Graeme Drendel’s first solo exhibition in Ballarat, Victoria, the renowned Australian artist presents his intriguing vignettes for which he is well known and celebrated – his subjects and characters on the one hand puzzling and perplexing and on the other mystical and surreal. Born in the Mallee, Victoria, Drendel has gained recognition for his highly accomplished hand in drawing and painting and for his particularly intelligent observation and portrayal of life and the human condition. Graeme Drendel is represented by Australian Galleries, Melbourne. australiangalleries.com.au
- Authors: Drendel, Graeme
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Please join the artist for the exhibition opening, with remarks by Geoff Wallis, former Federation University lecturer, on Sat 14 Mar @ 6:30pm. All welcome! In Graeme Drendel’s first solo exhibition in Ballarat, Victoria, the renowned Australian artist presents his intriguing vignettes for which he is well known and celebrated – his subjects and characters on the one hand puzzling and perplexing and on the other mystical and surreal. Born in the Mallee, Victoria, Drendel has gained recognition for his highly accomplished hand in drawing and painting and for his particularly intelligent observation and portrayal of life and the human condition. Graeme Drendel is represented by Australian Galleries, Melbourne. australiangalleries.com.au
To Wandiligong : A visual journey through memory, time, space, light, landscape and fourteen layers of glass
- Authors: Murray, Lauren
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Images recording travel have been part of numerous cultural traditions enabling extraordinary discoveries and providing historical documents of great beauty used for millennia across many cultures. Lauren Murray’s work and research explores a visual journey within an observed environment through "fourteen layers of glass" that includes the car window, the lens of the camera, the lens of her glasses and the surface of her iPad - the nature of light, time and distance and ongoing changes to the climate of particular interest to her. Utilising photography, drawing, digital and analogue media, Murray presents 16 digitally augmented photographs and a 9.6 metre story map - beautiful yet uncannily prescient images and visual narratives of place, time and season. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Masters research project at the School of Arts, Federation University, Australia. Lauren Murray is supported by an Australian Research Training Program (RTP) Fee Offset Scholarship through Federation University Australia.
- Description: Faculty of Arts
- Authors: Murray, Lauren
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Images recording travel have been part of numerous cultural traditions enabling extraordinary discoveries and providing historical documents of great beauty used for millennia across many cultures. Lauren Murray’s work and research explores a visual journey within an observed environment through "fourteen layers of glass" that includes the car window, the lens of the camera, the lens of her glasses and the surface of her iPad - the nature of light, time and distance and ongoing changes to the climate of particular interest to her. Utilising photography, drawing, digital and analogue media, Murray presents 16 digitally augmented photographs and a 9.6 metre story map - beautiful yet uncannily prescient images and visual narratives of place, time and season. This exhibition constitutes the visual outcomes emerging from a practice-led Masters research project at the School of Arts, Federation University, Australia. Lauren Murray is supported by an Australian Research Training Program (RTP) Fee Offset Scholarship through Federation University Australia.
- Description: Faculty of Arts
'EYE' : the End of Year Exhibition 2019
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 16th-24th November 2019. The Arts Academy at Federation University Australia presents the formal opening of ‘EYE’: the 2019 End of Year Exhibition, showcasing the extraordinary breadth and talent of the graduating visual arts and communication design students. Passionate, contemporary, challenging and visionary, audiences will navigate a highly diverse and eclectic exhibition, a feast of contemporary art that will excite and ignite Ballarat’s Mining Exchange. The annual EYE Exhibition represents an opportunity for the Ballarat community to step into the creative hothouse of the Arts Academy and explore the future of contemporary art in Australia. The Arts Academy strives for excellence in the visual and performing arts and prides itself as a centre for culture and artistic practice. The exhibiting students are emerging artists who continue to broaden their horizons by immersing themselves into the wider world of the Arts and the community in general.
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 16th-24th November 2019. The Arts Academy at Federation University Australia presents the formal opening of ‘EYE’: the 2019 End of Year Exhibition, showcasing the extraordinary breadth and talent of the graduating visual arts and communication design students. Passionate, contemporary, challenging and visionary, audiences will navigate a highly diverse and eclectic exhibition, a feast of contemporary art that will excite and ignite Ballarat’s Mining Exchange. The annual EYE Exhibition represents an opportunity for the Ballarat community to step into the creative hothouse of the Arts Academy and explore the future of contemporary art in Australia. The Arts Academy strives for excellence in the visual and performing arts and prides itself as a centre for culture and artistic practice. The exhibiting students are emerging artists who continue to broaden their horizons by immersing themselves into the wider world of the Arts and the community in general.
Adi Nes: Soldiers
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 24th August-20th October 2019. In partnership with the Ballarat International FOTO Biennale (BIFB'19), the School of Arts Post Office Gallery presents 'Soldiers’, a selection of works from the compelling series created by Adi Nes, one of Israel’s leading contemporary photographers. Captured between 1994 and 2000, Nes’s series focuses on both the intermediary moments between privacy and intimacy within the rigid framework of military life, and the loss of innocence within this highly masculine world. Considered one of the most important series of works in contemporary Israeli photography, Nes's work has been collected by prestigious museums and private collectors worldwide. Achieving awards including the 1999 Minister of Education, Culture and Sport Prize, Nes’s work was described by the New York Times as “shrewd send ups of the pervasive, macho military presence in Israeli life”. PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY Debbie Daddon and Embassy of Israel, Australia Image: Adi Nes, Untitled, 1995 digital print on Hahnemühle Photo Rag Baryta 315 gsm Courtesy the artist and Sommer Contemporary Art. Tel Aviv
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 24th August-20th October 2019. In partnership with the Ballarat International FOTO Biennale (BIFB'19), the School of Arts Post Office Gallery presents 'Soldiers’, a selection of works from the compelling series created by Adi Nes, one of Israel’s leading contemporary photographers. Captured between 1994 and 2000, Nes’s series focuses on both the intermediary moments between privacy and intimacy within the rigid framework of military life, and the loss of innocence within this highly masculine world. Considered one of the most important series of works in contemporary Israeli photography, Nes's work has been collected by prestigious museums and private collectors worldwide. Achieving awards including the 1999 Minister of Education, Culture and Sport Prize, Nes’s work was described by the New York Times as “shrewd send ups of the pervasive, macho military presence in Israeli life”. PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY Debbie Daddon and Embassy of Israel, Australia Image: Adi Nes, Untitled, 1995 digital print on Hahnemühle Photo Rag Baryta 315 gsm Courtesy the artist and Sommer Contemporary Art. Tel Aviv
Benchmark 2019
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 19th July-17th August 2019. An important annual exhibition by FedUni’s undergraduate and postgraduate Visual Arts’ students, Ballarat, BENCHMARK19 showcases a rich mix of contemporary ideas, approaches, methods and materials by students working across diverse studio areas, including design, painting, drawing, printmaking, ceramics, video, photography and installation. Image: Demi Gerardi, Block It Out, 2019. Presets ‘Tools Down’ digital still. Third Year Communication Design. Arts Academy, Ballarat Federation University
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 19th July-17th August 2019. An important annual exhibition by FedUni’s undergraduate and postgraduate Visual Arts’ students, Ballarat, BENCHMARK19 showcases a rich mix of contemporary ideas, approaches, methods and materials by students working across diverse studio areas, including design, painting, drawing, printmaking, ceramics, video, photography and installation. Image: Demi Gerardi, Block It Out, 2019. Presets ‘Tools Down’ digital still. Third Year Communication Design. Arts Academy, Ballarat Federation University