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See the city’s art, exhibitions, and occasions in October.
It will be a great month for arts and exhibitions in October. As the weather, regardless, begins to heat up, we can choose between going indoors to see amazing exhibits or heading out to see stunning outdoor art pop-ups. in a position to be a component of it?
The Archibald Prize made its way south for a special exhibition in Melbourne of this year’s portraits. And this is your last chance to revel in the immersive virtual delight of Van Gogh’s paintings in Lume. Or check out a trail filled with street art. with more than 40 new paintings scattered around the alleys of Melbourne.
The Melbourne Museum still houses its interactive 360-degree virtual art exhibition, which explores Australia’s herbal landscape, and now you can even see it after dark. You can spend time with the Tate collection of Kandinsky, Turner, Monet and many others at a light-themed exhibition at ACMI, or head to the NGV for a glimpse of Chinese art.
Get your fix of art, culture and exhibitions in Melbourne this month with a massive list of our most sensible picks below.
Get ready to explore themes of spirituality and contemplation, strength and prestige, compassion, auspicious symbols, trust and obsession, mythology, and the importance of the plant environment at the opening of China: The Past is Present on NGV on October 15.
Juxtaposing ancient Chinese masterpieces alongside poignant new works of art and design, the exhibition highlights the influence of classical artistic practices on fashionable Chinese culture, while revealing unexpected synergies between early craftsmen and today’s artists linking millennia, themes and forms.
With more than 120 works covering a diversity of art forms, China: the past is present until February 20, 2023. Visit the for more information.
The Jewish Museum of Australia presents the paintings of one of the world’s most daring photographers in Helmut Newton: In Focus, a definitive exploration of the paintings of German-born photographer and former Melbourne resident Helmut Newton.
And now they’ve created a series of evening tours: grab a glass of wine and explore the exhibition after dark.
Think you know the galleries? Think again. The Lume is a virtual gallery. The immersive art space, created through Great Melbourne Experiences, is permanently located at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre in South Wharf.
The 3000 square meter area of the gallery is in the final days of an exhibition on the famous Post-Impressionist artist Vincent Van Gogh until October 10, before moving on to Monet. Some of Van Gogh’s best-known works, such as “Starry Night and His Series of Sunflower Paintings,” will be projected onto all surfaces of Lume, allowing you to see each and every detail of the paintings up close and around you.
The UK’s Tate Museum is known as one of the most important art institutions in the world, but this winter you may not even have to leave Melbourne to see the works of this famous gallery.
Light: Works from Tate’s Collection brings more than 70 works from Tate’s impressive national collection to ACMI as part of the Melbourne Winter Masterpieces series. It will be supported through a series of lectures, performances, film screenings, workshops and events that will be more (pun intended) on the themes of the exhibition.
Light: Works from Tate’s Collection premieres at ACMI on June 16, 2022.
Before Hozier Lane received the tourist charm it has now, more than 20 years ago, the legendary street artist Invader created a mosaic in the style of Space Invaders in a secret place in Melbourne. Now, after saving the paintings from destruction, renovating the Arts Centre in 2018, the iconic piece is the star of City Gallery’s most recent exhibition, Off the Grid.
Presented at Melbourne City Hall and the surrounding area, the exhibition helps identify the works of Invader and five other street artists from this era as valid in an ancient context. Stop along the way through the city and learn a little more about Melbourne’s street art roots. , via February 15, 2023.
Naadohbii: To Draw Water has arrived at the Melbourne Museum. A tri-national exhibition organized in collaboration with New Zealand’s Pātaka Art and Museum and Canada’s Winnipeg Art Gallery, it features more than 20 artworks by Indigenous artists from Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
Naadohbii “to draw or bring water” and comes from the Anishinaabemowin language of the First Peoples of Canada. This exhibition aims to shed light on First Peoples’ cultural ties to water through discussion of climate change from an indigenous perspective.
Naadohbii: To Draw Water will be on display at Bunjilaka Aboriginal Cultural Centre, Melbourne Museum until 26 March 2023. Tickets for the exhibition are included in the Melbourne Museum General Admission.
To celebrate its twentieth anniversary and the tens of thousands of years in which the Wathaurung, Bunurong and Woiworung peoples accumulated in the place where it is located, Fed Square will host a busy month-long party in October. The birthday party will come with food and drink. offers, big-screen films, giveaways and first global screenings at NGVA, ACMI and Koorie Heritage Trust.
One of his masterpieces is We Will Slam You With Our Wings, a stimulating audiovisual installation. Created by artist Joanna Dudley, virtual art will open for the first time on International Day of the Girl Child (Tuesday, October 11). Available until October 31, with screenings of 20 minutes at 11:00, 13:00, 15:00, 17:00, 18:00, 19:00, 20:00 and 21:00. You can also scan the QR code and pay attention to the immersive soundscape on your own device every partial hour from 11:00 to 22:00
Backed by the City of Melbourne, Flash Forward is Melbourne’s most ambitious street art project, with more than 40 large-scale works commissioned and able to reach Melbourne’s alleys.
From Mountjoy’s “Your Turn” on Little Lonsdale Street, which is over six metres tall with colorful pops of colour, to LING’s gigantic sculptural piece “Crushed Can” on Wills Street that pays homage to the city’s graffiti scene, Flash Forward encourages exploration with a surprise detail, as the pieces appear to appear in the city at night.
If you’re interested in taking an alley tour, you can get an interactive, printable map on the Flash Forward website.
Transforming brutal history into fresh good looks is the central purpose of 11 talented Victorian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists and designers featured in the Layers of Blak exhibition. Opened at Koorie Heritage Trust in Fed Square, the exhibition explores notions of healing, resilience and empowerment through the art form of jewellery making.
This most recent exhibition is the result of the Blak Design Program, which cultivates innovation in First Nations design and sustainable practices. Layers of Blak is available until February 19, 2023 at Koorie Heritage Trust, Yarra Building in Fed Square.
Tyama: A Deeper Sense of Knowing invites you to look at six unique virtual environments that reinvent our connection to the physical world and redefine the typical museum experience.
Immerse yourself in an unprecedented immersive experience as you explore colorful 360-degree multimedia projections, interactive soundscapes and soft soundscapes, and elements from the Museum’s collection. Awaken your connection to classical cultural lands and explore Tyama, where generation and herbal history converge.
Forget everything you think you know about pirates – the new exhibition at the Ballarat Art Gallery will reveal a more unexpected history of piracy. Celebrating the lives and varied crews aboard classic pirate ships, the Under the Black Flag exhibit hopes to excite audiences with pirate adventure stories and photographs.
In addition to the gallery exhibit, the exhibit features a series of pirate-themed interactive systems meant to attract and excite children, pirate stories, pirate-inspired parrot art, street art exploration, and pirate telescope making.
Under The Black Flag is loose to watch. See the full children’s program or online page for more information.
In a quiet gallery at the State Library of Victoria is a desirable new exhibit exploring the ancient importance of crafts and crafts, from mapping the stars into tactics no one had noticed before, to makers who have shipped their products to First Nations stars and artists who create their fresh art in close connection with classical methods.
The centrepiece of the exhibition is through Melbourne artist and software engineer Sarah Spencer. You can ignite with your own star path plotted.
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