Image: Anthea Tsigros Jones, The snail and the unicorn (detail), 2026, courtesy of the artist
March 27 - May 15, 2026
Opening event: Friday, March 27, 5:30-7:30pm
Gallery II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta
Free entry, all welcome
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You can find Toni’s exhibition in The Mill’s Gallery I, 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.
We are excited to present Think Differently, a new exhibition by Anthea Jones. In Think Differently Anthea explores personal narratives through a series of fantastical, embellished and slightly surreal paintings, collages and sculptures. Reimagining childhood scenarios, Anthea places versions of herself amongst world filled with strange dolls and unsettling horizons.
In these works Anthea utilises her training in classical realism, slipping seamlessly between crisp renditions and loose, painterly backgrounds that conceal more than they reveal. In Hot Chicks she references the Three Graces of greek mythology, with blonde and blue eyed nude barbie dolls bringing to light Anthea’s experience of misogyny and patriarchy.
Alongside her paintings, Anthea presents new sculptural installations- diorama’s of a life imagined through playfullness. Anthea’s Think Differently- the 3 (dis)graces) places three nude barbies (as seen in the previously mentioned painting) inside a two story gallery and studio, complete with holographic wallpaper, disco lights and an eternally spinning circular platform. We see their blank faces and abject sections of their bodies reflected back at us from the mirror, while outside the walls of the doll house are plastered graffiti style with misogynistic slurs.
Layered paper collages form the third and significant part of this exhibition, showcasing Anthea’s unique process. Through these works Anthea shares the playful, open and responsive process that she uses to develop compositions for her paintings. Artworks in their own right, these multimedia works mirror the themes of the exhibition, speaking about childhood desires, awkward social interactions, and time spent along engrossed in her own world.
Through Think Differently, Anthea speaks to the pressures of women of her generation- the expectations of her immigrant parents, the role she took on as a wife and mother, and now the freedom of expression she experiences as an artist. Alongside the dark and surreal elements, we are also offered joy and play; Anthea’s pleasure is palpable in The pavilion of dreams, a circus tent complete with carousel of unicorns and twinkling fairy lights, made spontaneously with complete submission to her inner child- an absolute delight!
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Anthea is a visual artist born in Millicent, now residing in Adelaide.
Deriving new found pleasure from creating with mixed media, she has fused textiles, paper and found objects to create this body of work, Think Differently, expanding her ouvre beyond self-imposed strictures that limited her exhibited arts practice to drawing and painting.
Think Differently is Anthea’s first solo exhibition since completing formal studies in 2023 and two self-directed residencies in France in 2024/25. Her formal qualifications include an Advanced Diploma in Visual and Applied Art, a Graduate Diploma in Management (Arts), a Graduate Certificate in Art History and a Diploma in Atelier Arts.
Anthea’s formal studies have been supplemented by a summer school at the London Academy of Realist Art and a week of life painting with the acclaimed Shane Wolf in the UK.
Anthea has exhibited in numerous shows and her work is held in private collections in Adelaide, Melbourne, Washington, New York and The Diderot Collection at Château d’Orquevaux.
If there was one word Anthea would use to describe her arts practice it would be meraki, a Greek word meaning the act of doing something with soul, creativity or love, putting “something of yourself” into the work. It signifies leaving a piece of your essence in what you do and describes a total devotion to a project.
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Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high,
There's a land that I heard of once in a lullaby, Somewhere over the rainbow, skies are blue,
And the dreams that you dare to dream really do come true..’This song has always resonated with me. I love rainbows. They are truly beautiful. No one can ever own one. To create a magnificent rainbow we need the rain and the sunshine and to truly appreciate the visual experience one must be fully present in the moment it occurs. Serendipity, synchronicity and magic all come to mind when I think of rainbows and I’m always transported to far away places when I encounter one during an ordinary day.
Think Differently began, earnestly, in 2024 as purely a painting project. This singular mission took a compelling turn when due to personal development work I found myself questioning my life experiences in general and how I used them in the context of self expression, particularly in my art practice. It felt imperative that I address this yearning to invoke my authentic artistic voice, in whatever capacity it was available to me.
Think Differently evolved, organically when I became engrossed in my creative ‘side hustles’ away from the easel and I realised this was where the joy was hiding. By reinventing old art works and creating new narratives I found history in the layers and textures of these works, both conceptually as well as physically.
Thus, it would be fair to say that my authentic practice is structured, academic traditional painting and drawing techniques fused with mixed media collage, sewing and construction.
Reflecting my childhood practice of making do, my aesthetic is Greek Village Chic - start where you are, use what you have, do what you can. Without exception, every piece in the exhibition started life as something else and I relish the challenge of turning trash into treasure.
“Everything begins with a story” - Joseph Campbell
This exhibition has support from

