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Be seduced into a world of power, passion and luxury this summer. This sumptuous exhibition is a once in a lifetime chance to see and experience here in Australia a mesmerising period in French history. Included are more than 130 paintings, intricate tapestries, gilded furniture, monumental statues and other objects from the royal gardens, as well as personal items from Louis XIV to Marie-Antoinette.
This powerful exhibition addresses wartime propaganda, front-line experience and remembrance through paintings, drawings and prints by Official War Artists, combatants and women. It also features a special focus on the remarkable artist Will Dyson.
George Coates Australian official war artists
1916-1918 1920, oil on canvas,
Australian War Memorial
Artist Frank Stella and master printer Kenneth Tyler played a significant role in the development of twentieth-century American printmaking. This exhibition showcases a selection of Stella’s adventurous and groundbreaking prints.
Frank Stella Feneralia from the Imaginary places series 1994–97, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, gift of Kenneth Tyler 2002
Mud men is a new installation by artist Ramesh Nithiyendran featuring five large-scale ceramic sculptures, commissioned specifically for the NGA. Built on an attitude of agitation, and ostentatious in style, the sculptures appear to strut and shout.
Ramesh Nithiyendran with his installation Mud men 2016. Works left to right: Pewter deity, Self-portrait with third leg 2, Snake tower, Big idol, Elephant man
This major exhibition surveys the contemporary practice of 30 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists from across the country, responding to the 50th Anniversary of the 1967 Referendum through a diverse group of works.
Yhonnie Scarce, Kokatha/Nukunu peoples, Thunder Raining Poison 2015 (detail). National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, purchased 2016. Photo: Janelle Low
An in-depth survey of human figuration, this exhibition spans more than 50 years of hyperrealist practice. Presenting major works from the 30 artists most representative of this movement, viewers will be surprised by their vivid and lifelike representations of the human figure.
Sam Jinks Untitled (Kneeling woman) 2015. Courtesy the artist and Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney
A breathtaking showcase of the world’s most exquisite jewels with loans from royal families, celebrities and the astonishing Cartier collection itself. Portraits, costumes and film will evoke the glamorous world of Maison Cartier and its clients.
Crocodile necklace made as a special order for María Félix. Cartier Paris, special order, 1975. Cartier Collection. Photo: Vincent Wulveryck, Cartier Collection © Cartier