There are 13 sculpture exhibitions in Australia
13 results
Coogee Live is an all-ages festival of entertainers, artists, artisans, performers, chefs and facilitators in a packed program of free activities at Coogee Beach on 8 - 9 March 2025.
Sharing the work of First Nations artists, from emerging to senior figures, and across time and place.
Explore the history and many styles and stories of Australian art.
From cattle dogs to lap dogs, divine felines to the black cats of superstition, Cats & Dogs explores humanity’s deep connection to these animals through more than 250 works of art and design.
In Her Footsteps: A Tribute to Matrilineal Legacy brings together seven Australian artists who pay homage to the women who have shaped their lives.
This summer Yayoi Kusama’s kaleidoscopic installation, The obliteration room, 2002 – present, will take over the NGV’s dedicated children’s gallery.
Meaning ‘Come Look See’ in the Whadjuk Noongar language, Yoowarl Koorl Djinang is the newest outdoor art installation at the Wadjemup Museum Sculpture Garden.
Best known for his large-scale bronze figures, British artist Thomas J Price creates contemporary monuments that echo the characteristics of Classical statuary.
Born in Japan in 1929, Kusama is one of the world’s most important and recognised practitioners working today.
The NGV Collection contains approximately 70,000 works of art spanning thousands of years.
In May 2004 Dr Joseph Brown AO OBE donated the major part of his collection of Australian art — the most generous single gift of works of art ever made to a public gallery in Australia.
Kusama is renowned globally for her idiosyncratic use of pattern, colour and symbols to create immersive, thought-provoking and intensely personal works of art that transcend language and borders.