galleries, public program

Artist Talk: Dai Trang Nguyen, alONEness - một

Image: Dai Trang Nguyen, Threads of Life (detail), 2025, yarns, repurposed fabric and wire, dimensions variable, courtesy of the artist

Artist Talk

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When: Friday, November 28, 5:30-6:30pm

exhibition catalogue

Gallery I& II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

  • You can find Dai Trangs’s exhibition in The Mill’s Gallery II, located at 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta (Adelaide).

    Gallery I is open Monday-Friday, 10am-4pm.

    Accessibility

    The Mill’s entrance has a small step into the building. We have a ramp available, please ring the doorbell and our friendly team will assist you.

    During gallery hours, our entrance will be unlocked. If the door is closed, please ring the doorbell to alert our team.

    The Mill has concrete flooring throughout with no internal steps and a disability toilet on site.

    Read more in-depth information on our accessibility web page.The Mill has concrete flooring throughout with no internal steps and a disability toilet on site.

    Read more in-depth information on our accessibility web page.

Join exhibiting artist Dai Trang Nguyen in conversation with The Mill’s Visual Arts Curator Adele Sliuzas for a chat about her exhibition, alONEness - một. Hear the artists speak about process, material and making work about aloneness and oneness.  

  • Dai Trang Nguyen is a Vietnamese artist and designer based in Kaurna Country, with a creative journey spanning Vietnam, the UK and Australia. Originally trained in graphic design, her practice has evolved from structured precision to a meditative, intuitive approach rooted in mindfulness, presence and the unfolding of each moment.

    During the solitude of COVID-19, art became her sanctuary and a guide for self-understanding, leading to her first solo exhibition in Vietnam and inspiring her move to South Australia in 2022 to pursue a Master’s in Contemporary Art. Since then, her practice has deepened through introspection and experimentation, expanding materially from digital illustration into tactile forms.

    Living far from home has enriched her connection to her Eastern heritage. Influenced by Zen Buddhist roots and her experience as a migrant, Dai Trang’s process is slow and embodied, embracing making as meditation - each gesture responding to internal and external conditions. Working with textiles, found objects and mixed media, she creates contemplative sculptures, wall pieces and installations that reflect life’s fluidity, impermanence and interconnectedness.

    Her Kayangan residency at The Mill Adelaide marked a first step toward relational, community-connected making, opening her process to place, people and the more-than-human world, while remaining grounded in herself through mindfulness.


This exhibition has support from

This exhibition received support from Geoff Martin and Sorayya Mahmood Martin