STATION


9 – 18 June 2023

Opening event: 

Friday 9 June, 5.00–8.00pm

Artist talks: 

Saturday 10 June, 2.00–3.00pm

Daily Opening Times :

Friday 9 – Monday 12: 10am–5pm or by appointment
Tuesday 13 – Wednesday 14: by appointment
Thursday 15 – Sunday 18: 10am–5pm or by appointment

This winter, STATION is traveling south to Nipaluna/Hobart, to present an off-site exhibition during Dark Mofo at SOCIAL on Salamanca Place.

Held over ten days in the middle of June, midwinter in the southern hemisphere, the exhibition takes inspiration from the traditions and rituals associated with the winter solstice.

The word ‘solstice’ comes from the Latin ‘sol’ (sun) and ‘sistere’ (to stand), translating literally to the day the sun stands still. Marking the darkest and longest night of the year, winter solstice is celebrated both as a symbolic death of the moon and a rebirth of the sun, as the days slowly begin to lengthen again towards summer. This duality is explored in many of the works included in the exhibition, in the tension between moon and sun, dark and light, birth and death.

The exhibition will feature works by a group of STATION artists, including Jon Cattapan, Adam Lee, Clare Milledge, Nell, Jason Phu (who is presenting a major work for Dark Mofo), and Hobart’s own Heather B. Swann and Jake Walker.

Clare Milledge, NNW: ciar jet, 2023. Courtesy of the artist & STATION
Heather B. Swann, Luna, 2022. Courtesy of the artist & STATION
Jake Walker,194, 2022. Courtesy of the artist & STATION

plural noun: Interstice; a space that intervenes between things; especially one between closely spaced things.


Daily opening times:

Friday 2 June – Thursday 22 June 2023
9AM-5PM

Exhibition of paintings, arising out of life drawing classes exploring the ways of observing the line of the body in landscape and indoor settings.

The Body Observed

Inspired by my life drawing practice, visiting museums, and sometime experience co-caring for a person with disability, The body Observed explores the relationship between the body and the viewer, interrogating how the body may be [re]defined by the nature of its observation.

In doing so the works engage three variations on the gaze including the observant gaze, the fantasising gaze, and the mechanistic gaze.

The mechanistic gaze, looks and goes little beyond delineation, relying on line alone. The observant gaze looks and speculates…possibly about the relationship between the observed and her/his context. The fantasising gaze goes further hoping for a transformation for the body or the observer, or an outcome from observing.

These variations, in turn, have implications for the interplay between the body and its environment.


13 May – 3 June 2023
10AM – 4PM Monday – Saturday (Closed Sunday)

Developed annually by the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery in Launceston, the 2022 exhibition tour showcases a staggering 187 artworks by students in years 11 and 12 across Tasmania.

From analogue photography and traditional printmaking techniques to sculpture, video animation and more, ArtRage 2022 offers an eclectic and vibrant display of student works. As part of the ArtRage experience, students have been assessed on their works for their Tasmanian Certificate of Education.

ARTRAGE OPENING EVENT 
Friday 12th May 2023 | 5:30pm-7:30pm | The Long Gallery

SCHOOL VISITS
School groups are encouraged to visit this exhibition. As this is a popular event, we ask that you please register at the link below to avoid disappointment.

More ArtRage
  • Exhibitions
  • Free

ArtRage

Presented by QVMAG

Saturday 11 May – Saturday 1 Jun 2024
Long Gallery
View event

Opening event:
Friday 26 May – 5pm

Daily opening times:
27 May – 4 June, 2023
10am – 4pm

Resilience and Regeneration is a visual collaboration between John Osborne who lives in Geeveston, Tasmania and Brian Blowers (Brian B.) from the Northern Rivers area of NSW. It’s about the resilience and regeneration of two river valleys: The Huon in Tasmania and the Clarence in NSW.

The exhibition explores the resilience of nature to regenerate especially after catastrophic events such as the bush fires that devastated much of Australia’s east coast in 2019-2020, that were then followed by some of the worst floods in living memory, the combined effects of which threatened many species of plants and animals already under threat from our changing climate.

Nature has, in many areas, surprisingly begun to quickly regenerate with new forest growth and evidence of animals adapting to a changed and damaged environment.

John Osborne is a long-time resident of Geeveston Tasmania and has been involved in many art projects in the Huon Valley. Brian B. lived in Geeveston and shared a studio with John as well as working together in the Southern Design Centre Studios, Geeveston. Brian B. now lives in Maclean in the Clarence Valley of New South Wales.


Opening event:
Thursday 11 May 5:30pm

To be opened by Jane Hutchinson, co-CEO Pollination Foundation, Tasmanian Australian of the Year 2016 and co-founder of the Tasmanian Land Conservancy.

Daily opening times:
11 – 21 May, 2023
10AM-5PM

Ancestral Dreams is an exhibition of photography examining our connection to nature, literally and metaphorically, focusing on trees in the forests of Tasmania/lutruwita as a reflection of our human condition. Viewers are invited to look twice and find their own emotional and empathetic response to nature through personal experience.

Ancestral Dreams is an exhibition of photography examining our connection to nature both literally and metaphorically. Initially started as a small study in 2016, an arts residency at the Cradle Mountain Wilderness Gallery expanded the work considerably and includes the National Park, the Vale of Belvoir and the eastern edge of the Tarkine/takayna.

This collection includes images focusing on trees as “equivalents” to our human condition, drawing on the evolution of the tradition established by early 20th century photographer Alfred Stieglitz and advanced over time by others including Edward Weston, John Cato and Tasmania’s own Peter Dombrovskis.

The resulting work portrays the wilderness of Tasmania/lutruwita with an emotive and poetic sensibility. It asks the viewer to look twice and find their own emotional and empathetic response to nature through personal periods of ecstasy, solitude, peace, familial connection and awareness of our own mortality.

For artist Pete Walsh, whose previous work has focused on conservation and anthropogenic impact on the environment, this more current practice has also resulted in a sympathetic and deeper respect for Indigenous understanding around connection to nature, kinship in country. This more spiritual aspect of the work invites the reader to ponder on questions of how we understand, manage and respect the land we rely on for our existence.


Everything breathes in of itself. We separate for our minds. The space around things is connected as much as the things themselves.

When learning new skills. Everything was separate, needing its own time, place, and category. It needed to stay within these categories, or chaos would quickly follow.

Now, it all needs to merge. The Artist, Florist, Model, Mother. In spite of the possible chaos and the definite unknown. Because the comfortable categories are no longer necessary. I can no longer play different roles. I just need to be whole.

Daily opening times:
Friday 12 May – Sunday 25 June 2023
Mon – Fri 9AM – 5PM

Sonder – noun. the realisation that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as one’s own

SONDEROUS is an annual showcase of works by Salamanca Arts Centre’s Resident visual artists, with works created as part of their Studio practice.

The works presented range in mediums including but not limited to photography, painting, collage, printmaking and more.

Featured Artists:
Catherine Arsaut
Halima Bhatti
Emma Bingham
Hannah Blackmore
Michaye Boulter
Belinda Casey
Katherine Cooper
Antoinette Ellis
Phillip England
Joe Fazackerley
Jamin Kluss
Donna Oakford
Julie Payne
Emily Snadden
Linda Veska
Richard Wastell

Opening event:
Thursday 27 April 5:30pm

Daily opening times:
Thursday 27 April – Tuesday 2 May 2023
9AM-5PM

Domain is an exhibition of paintings exploring aspects of place forming The Queens Domain, a shared space, on the edge of central nipaluna/ Hobart. Paintings have grown from a few initial studies and aim collectively to contribute to the conversation about this landscape.

Domain is an exhibition of paintings exploring aspects of place forming The Queens Domain, a shared space on the edge of central nipaluna/Hobart. It is a series of sketches, tying together pieces of a complex location made of divergent parts.

These works scratch the surface of the 230 hectares of this communal place that brings together native and introduced elements. The sites and structures form part of a physical and cultural terrain that has been subject to change over time.

Paintings have grown from a few initial studies and aim collectively to contribute to the conversation about this landscape.


Alexander Beech is a painter based in nipaluna/ Hobart. His practice is linked to the landscape and more recently to places near where he lives and works. He immerses himself in the landscape reflecting on events past and present and synthesises connections between the subject matter and refines what is laid down in paint. Alexander received a Bachelor of Fine Arts with Honours (First Class) and a Master of Fine Art and Design (Painting) from the University of Tasmania. He has exhibited work in a number of states and has been a finalist in several significant art prizes including The Churchie National Emerging Art Prize, The Glover Prize, Hadley’s Art Prize and the Macquarie Group Emerging Art Prize. His work is held in private collections and the Macquarie Group Collection.


Opening event:

Friday 28 April, 6pm

Daily opening times:

Friday 28 April – Saturday 28 May 2023
9AM-5PM

Welcome to everything is not oKAY, enjoy your stay

the debut exhibition of nipaluna artist Rory Kay, presenting for the first time a collection of Tasmanian Expressionism