Australian Centre for Contemporary Art
ACCA, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art
Winter season 2015
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art
Autumn 2015
ホット・スポットVol.6 Australian Centre for Contemporary Art(ACCA)
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art(ACCA)は、最も挑戦的で、革新的で、創造的なビジュアルアートを提示しているメルボルンの主要な現代アートギャラリーです。ギャラリーは無料で観覧することができます。展示内容も定期的に入れ替えられ、オーストラリア国内だけでなく、海外のアーティストの展示もされています。この動画の記事はこちら→URL:
NEW13 Exhibition, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art ACCA, 2013
NEW13
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art
16 March -- 12 May 2013
NEW, ACCA's annual commissions exhibition, offers rising Australian artists the chance to make a bold, brave new work for ACCA's large exhibition spaces. The 2013 NEW artists , this year selected by ACCA's Associate Curator Charlotte Day, are Benjamin Forster (WA), Jess MacNeil (NSW), Alex Martinis Roe (VIC), Sanne Mestrom (VIC), Scott Mitchell (VIC), Joshua Petherick (VIC) and Linda Tegg (VIC).
Melbourne hosts naturist art tours
The Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in Melbourne is hosting a new exhibition where visitors walk through the space naked.
Australian Centre for the Moving Image
australian centre for the moving image
australian centre for contemporary art
australian centre for the moving image jobs
acmi shop
australian centre for photography
Melbourne's hidden art spaces
Art spaces and galleries aren't always hiding in plain sight – sometimes you need to know where to look and that's where design nerd Tim Ross is here to help.
Exploring some of Melbourne's most hidden and quirky art spaces including Housemuseum Gallery and Buxton Contemporary, art is in Melbourne's DNA.
From buildings and architecture, laneways, museums and centres, Melbourne is continually changing and yet remains one of the best cities in the world to explore and experience truly cutting edge art and design.
#Melbourne
#Art
#HumansOfMelbourne
NOTIF - ACMI (Australian Centre of the Moving Image)
Our visitation to one of the most visited museum in Melbourne, Australia
Amrita Hepi
Presentation at Museum & Galleries of NSW event ArtChat, 14 September 2018.
Amrita Hepi is an award winning first nations choreographer and dancer from Bundjulung (Aus) and Ngapuhi (NZ) territories. Her mission as an artist is to push the barriers of intersectionality and make work that garners multiple access points through allegories. An artist with a broad following and reach her work has taken various forms (film, performance, sculpture, text, lecture, paticipatory installation) but always begins from working with the body as a point of archive, memory and resistance.
She is a member of the Western Australian Dance Company OCHRES and has worked with Victoria Chiu, Marrugeku, Melanie Lane & Amos Gerbrahnt, Bhenji Ra and Force Majeure. In 2018 she was the recipient of the people's choice award for the Keir Choreographic award and was named one of Forbes Asia's 30 under 30. Amrita has also worked in various commercial capacities and has been commissioned by ASOS global to create and choreograph film works and has been featured globally in Vouge USA, TeenVouge USA, Instyle, Harpers Bazar and PAPER US.
Amrita trained at the National Aboriginal Islander Skills Development Association (NAISDA) dance college, New South Wales, Australia and Alvin Ailey American Dance School, New York. And has been an artist in residence at BANFF centre for the arts Canada, ACE OPEN South Australia.
She has exhibited and performed extensively internationally and nationally at Sydney Opera House, Sydney, Next Wave Festival, Melbourne, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Australia, the Australian Centre for Contemporary art, Melbourne, Carriageworks, Sydney, TEDX, Sydney, Banff Centre Canada, Art Central Hong Kong, DARK MOFO Tasmania.
IMPORTANT AUSTRALIAN ART | MELBOURNE | 14 MAY 2013
This video includes highlights in the forthcoming Important Australian Art sale to be held in Melbourne 14 May 2013. Paintings discussed include works by Aby Altson, Arthur Boyd, John Perceval and Brett Whiteley.
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Melbourne /ˈmɛlbən, -bərn/[3] is the capital and most populous city in the state of Victoria, and the second most populous city in Australia.[2]
The Melbourne City Centre is the hub of the greater metropolitan area and the Census statistical division—of which Melbourne is the common name. The metropolis is located on Port Phillip, a large natural bay, with the city centre positioned on the estuary of the Yarra River at the northernmost point of the bay.[4] The metropolitan area then extends south from the City Centre, along the eastern and western shorelines of Port Phillip, and expands into the hinterland. The City Centre is situated in the municipality known as the City of Melbourne, and the metropolitan area consists of a further 30 municipalities.[5] The metropolis has a population of 4.25 million, growing the fastest in numerical terms and fifth fastest in percentage terms since the previous year.[1] Inhabitants of Melbourne are called Melburnians.[6]
Melbourne was founded in 1835 (47 years after the European settlement of Australia) by settlers from Launceston in Van Diemen's Land.[7] It was named by Governor of New South Wales Sir Richard Bourke in 1837, in honour of the British Prime Minister of the day, William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne.[7] Melbourne was officially declared a city by Queen Victoria in 1847.[8] In 1851, it became the capital city of the newly created colony of Victoria.[8] During the Victorian gold rush of the 1850s, it was transformed into one of the world's largest and wealthiest cities.[9] After the federation of Australia in 1901, it served as the interim seat of government of the newly created nation of Australia until 1927.[10]
Melbourne has been ranked as the world's most liveable city in ratings published by the Economist Group's Intelligence Unit (in 2011 and 2012).[11] It has also been ranked in the top ten Global University Cities by RMIT's Global University Cities Index (since 2006)[12][13][14] and the top 20 Global Innovation Cities by the 2thinknow Global Innovation Agency (since 2007).[15][16][17][18] Often referred to as the cultural capital of Australia,[19] Melbourne is the birthplace of cultural institutions such as Australian film (as well as the world's first feature film),[20][21] Australian television,[22] Australian rules football,[23] the Australian impressionist art movement (known as the Heidelberg School)[24] and Australian dance styles such as New Vogue and the Melbourne Shuffle.[25][26] It is also a major centre for contemporary and traditional Australian music.[25]
The main passenger airport serving the metropolis is Melbourne Airport, which is the second busiest in Australia. The Port of Melbourne is Australia's busiest seaport for containerised and general cargo.[27] Melbourne is also home to the world's largest tram network.[28]
Melbourne is an international cultural centre, with cultural endeavours spanning major events and festivals, drama, musicals, comedy, music, art, architecture, literature, film and television. Melbourne is the birthplace of Australian film and television,[22] Australian rules football,[23] the Heidelberg School of Australian Impressionism, Australian contemporary dance (including the Melbourne Shuffle and New Vogue styles), and is home to the National Gallery of Victoria, Australia's oldest and largest public art museum. In 2008, Melbourne became the second city after Edinburgh to be declared a UNESCO City of Literature. It has thrice shared top position in a survey by The Economist of the world's most liveable cities on the basis of a number of attributes which include its broad cultural offerings.[124]
Info Taken from Wikipedia.com
Credits to Wikipedia.com
ACCA in the CITY, 21 – 27 September 2015, performance art in Melbourne CBD
ACCA in the City is a series of performances, situations and uncanny moments designed by the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art to bring attention to the characteristics of the city of Melbourne.
Starting Monday 21 September, ACCA will take art to the streets, historic sites, social and business spaces of Melbourne’s CBD in a rolling series of the unexpected. Choreography for the fans, pop up performances, processions by the river and knowledge bubbles for commuters will feature amongst the performed gestures and procedures that take place during the waking hours of city life.
Artists: Eglė Budvytytė, Kate Daw, Agatha Gothe-Snape, Public Movement
Important Aboriginal Art, Melbourne, 7 June 2011
Welcome to Sotheby's Australia's June auction of Important Aborignial Art. Within this catalogue we are delighted to offer a diverse collection of works including early artefacts, and significant Papunya boards through to contemporary paintings by urban artists.
ACMI | Melbourne | Australian Center for the Moving Image
We visit the Australian Centre for the Moving Image in Melbourne, Australia.
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Tolarno Galleries, an Art Gallery in Melbourne for Contemporary Art or for Art Exhibition
TOLARNO GALLERIES is at the cutting edge of contemporary Australian art, representing twenty-three artists working across a wide range of media. Tolarno has a reputation for supporting new and challenging painting, sculpture, photography and video.
Tolarno Galleries
104 Exhibition St, St.Melbourne VIC Australia 3000
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The Triumph of Modernism in the Art of Australia
The Triumph of Modernism in the Art of Australia is a partnership project between TarraWarra Museum of Art and Hazelhurst Regional Gallery & Arts Centre. Curated for Hazelhurst by its patron, Edmund Capon, the exhibition provides an opportunity to see some works that are rarely made available for public viewing.
Artists featured include Howard Arkley, George Baldessin , Charles Blackman, Arthur Boyd, John Brack, William Delafield Cook, William Dobell, Russell Drysdale, Ian Fairweather, Joy Hester, Dale Hickey, Roger Kemp, Joanna Lamb, Godfrey Miller, Sidney Nolan, John Olsen, John Perceval, Jeffrey Smart, Tim Storrier, Edwin Tanner, Imants Tillers, Aida Tomescu, Tony Tuckson, Brett Whiteley, Fred Williams and William Wright.
Exhibition dates: 28 March - 24 May 2015. More information at hazelhurst.com.au.
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Now, Peter Kennedy
Directed, Cinematography & Produced by: Daniela Velickovic & Benjamin Ducroz
Producers: Benjamin Walbrook & Matthew Lim
Sound Recorder & Post Production Audio: Michael Prior
Editor: Benjamin Ducroz
NGV, Melbourne Now Exhibition
22 November 2013 - 23 March 2014
Artist: Peter Kennedy
Here is a short documentary we were commissioned to make for the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Now Exhibition.
This video looks at the artist Peter Kennedy and his project for Melbourne Now. Peter Kennedy first exhibited neon light works in 1970 as part of his conceptual and multidisciplinary art practice. For Melbourne Now Kennedy is creating his largest neon light work, drawing on his own lineage of light works and incorporating recent developments in particle physics, including an equation that makes use of the groundbreaking discovery in 2013 of the Higgs boson or 'God' particle.
Born 1945, Brisbane, Queensland; lives and works in Melbourne. Peter Kennedy was a founding member of Inhibodress, an artist-run space in Sydney (1970--72) and was the director of the University of Sydney Art Workshop (The Tin Sheds) from 1980 to 1985. In 2002 the Ian Potter Museum of Art at the University of Melbourne held a retrospective survey of his work, Peter Kennedy: Selected Works 1970--2002. His solo exhibition Peter Kennedy: Light Years 1970--71 was presented at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, in 2011. In recent years, Kennedy has featured extensively in group exhibitions at the Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, and the National Gallery of Victoria, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art and Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne.
Buxton Contemporary: Australia's new art gallery | Exhibitions | Showcase
Michael Buxton is the Melbourne-based mogul behind Australia's newest art gallery. With a private collection that could rival many major galleries around the globe and years of experience as a property developer, Buxton is forging a new space for the city's contemporary art lovers.
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SYDNEY, EXPLORING the fascinating MUSEUM of CONTEMPORARY ART ????️ (AUSTRALIA)
SUBSCRIBE: - Let's visit one of the most wodnerful museums in Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (abbreviated MCA), located in Sydney, Australia and which is a museum solely dedicated to exhibiting, interpreting and collecting contemporary art, both from across Australia and around the world. The museum was opened in 1991 as the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, and from 2010 underwent an A$58 million expansion and re-development, reopening on 29 March 2012 under its current name as the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. The collection contains over 4,000 works by Australian artists that have been acquired since 1989. The collection spans all art forms with strong holdings in painting, photography, sculpture, works on paper and moving image, as well as significant representation of works by Aboriginal artists.
Australia is a country and continent surrounded by the Indian and Pacific oceans. Its major cities – Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide – are coastal. Its capital, Canberra, is inland. The country is known for its Sydney Opera House, the Great Barrier Reef, a vast interior desert wilderness called the Outback, and unique animal species like kangaroos and duck-billed platypuses.
Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com.
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