Yvonne deals with themes of displacement and alienation and her own personal experiences with migration, an epic journey expressed through visual images.
Trees are our interdependants in global and local ecosystems. They take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen for us to breathe. They are our environmental partners.
Ngaranggal Muruda (Women’s Footprints) features artworks by female Aboriginal artists from across Australia celebrating the strength and diversity of Aboriginal expression and culture.
What makes where we live special, and why have people chosen to settle here? What creates culture in a place and how does our community contribute to and celebrate that unique culture?
A generational exploration of the connection between father and daughter and their individual perception of art as expressed in both sculpture and painting.
The Basil Sellers Art Prize cements Eurobodalla's support of the arts in the NSW south-east, throughout the state and beyond.
Stephanie celebrates her first solo exhibition, which is an extension of her award winning work, Some days are rough.
The retrospective, My Journey, Lola Cullen looks at the artist’s extensive body of work from over the past fifty years.
Artists from the Eurobodalla Fibre and Textile Artist Group (EFTAG) pay testimony to Mona Hessing, one of Australia’s leading contributors to textile art from the 1960s to the 1980s.
A wistful journey from bush to beach that all at once captures the fundamentals of holiday exploration and how these experiences bond us.
In a quest to create a distinct experience, the artists have become both collector and alchemist, exploring and experimenting with both 2D and 3D forms.
Explore the idea of reliquaries - precious, lavishly decorated containers had a spiritual and symbolic value that legitimised and sanctified their contents to inspire personal and communal devotion.