La Trobe Art Institute exhibitions
Current and upcoming
Bendigo Campus: Jazz Money
Jazz Money, a poet and artist of Wiradjuri and Irish heritage, has used the Sandhurst Collection as her starting point for a new commission in the Heyward Library
View St: Jeremy Eaton and Nicholas Smith
Dressings brings the language of screens, concealment, exposure and the stage to our street-front façade
View St: Pliable planes
Twelve Australian artists reimagine textiles and fibre art
View St: I wanna be your anti-mirror
An exhibition that reveals new languages, sensations and attitudes in works by 7 early career artists
Touring: One foot on the ground, one foot in the water
Paintings, sculptures and installations that explore the inseparable link between life and death
Bendigo Campus: Emily Floyd
Key works from the series Anti-totalitarian vectors are installed in the Heyward Library
Past
For details of exhibitions held before March 2022, please contact us
National Art School: In our time
Four decades of art from China and beyond – the Geoff Raby Collection
View St: Attention seeker
Visual artists take inspiration from the choreography and charisma of musicians' and actors' performances
View St: Personal mythologies
The creative potential of storytelling, fantasy and cultural histories in the work of seven artists
View St: Citational choices
An exhibition that engages with personal and material archives through contemporary works and 20th-century ceramics
Bendigo Art Gallery: In our time
Four decades of art from China and beyond – the Geoff Raby Collection
View St: Chunxiao Qu
An artist doesn’t need a label has its origins in the experience of existing between dual cultures
View St: Maternal inheritances
An exhibition that explores the entanglements of motherhood and matriarchy with ideas of genealogy, influence and impact
View St: Homo sacer: life unlawed
An exhibition that reveals the law as a messy and visceral bundle of contradictions
View St: Calista Lyon
Remembering future maps the ecological impact of gold mining on box-ironbark forests
View St: Circles of dialogue
Artist Inge King’s modernist legacy sparks a dialogue that encompasses First Nations and colonial memory, material conservation and bodily archives
View St: James Tylor
From an untouched landscape challenges the colonial myth of a rugged and pristine Australian bush
View St: Collecting debt and other bad moods
A group exhibition that reflects an unease and ambivalence about things being on the constant up and up