Vacations & Travel

National Gallery of Victoria (NGV), Melbourne

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Who’s Afraid of Colour? is an important exhibition at the NGV bringing together more than 200 contempora­ry artworks by 118 Indigenous Australian women. Encompassi­ng works from customary woven objects and bark paintings, to contempora­ry acrylic canvases and modern photograph­ic and digital works, this unpreceden­ted survey of Indigenous Australian women’s art is on now. Major new acquisitio­ns featured in the exhibition include iconic photograph­s by artists Destiny Deacon and Bindi Cole Chocka, and large scale works by one of Australia’s most prominent contempora­ry artists Emily Kame Kngwarreye, including the painting Anwerlarr anganenty (Big yam Dreaming) 1995. This piece travelled to the Royal Academy of Arts, London as part of the Australia exhibition in 2013. Paintings by Warlpiri artist Lorna Napurrurla Fencer, mixed media and video works by the interdisci­plinary Tasmanian Aboriginal artist Julie Gough, and paintings by the renowned Gija artist Queenie McKenzie of Warmun, Western Australia are also on show. The exhibition is on until April 2017. ngv.vic.gov.au

 ??  ?? Above left: Julie Dowling, Badimaya born 1969: Goodbye white fella religion 1992, synthetic polymer paint, earth pigments and blood on canvas. 174.5 x 164.5 cm. National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne. Purchased, NGV Foundation, 2007 (2007.456) ©Julie...
Above left: Julie Dowling, Badimaya born 1969: Goodbye white fella religion 1992, synthetic polymer paint, earth pigments and blood on canvas. 174.5 x 164.5 cm. National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne. Purchased, NGV Foundation, 2007 (2007.456) ©Julie...

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