galleries

galleries, public program

Exhibition: Tony Busch, Closer Horizons II

Image: Tony Busch, Sandstone arch, Sellicks, 2026, hand dyed jute, hand dyed cotton warp, 46 x 68 cm, Photo: Sam Roberts.

May 25 - July 17, 2026

Opening: Friday, May 29, 5:30-7:30pm

Gallery I, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are thrilled to present Closer Horizons II, a new exhibition of woven textiles by Tony Busch. In this exhibition Tony brings audiences into a sense of place, exploring local landscapes; Warripari Sturt Gorge, Aldinga and Sellicks beach. Through the act of walking, Tony has gathered inspiration from the uniquely South Australian landscape- texture, colour, shape are translated through Tony’s chosen material.

Slow and generous appreciation are also part of Tony’s process- his use of hand dyed cotton warp, hand dyed jute and yarn on his hand built frame looms attenuate the pace of creation. This allows for the both the artist and audiences attention to be drawn slowly across the surface of works- we take notice of subtle shifts in tone and texture, and an understanding of the gesture of the artists hand that have skilfully manipulated the raw materials into abstracted forms. Like the act of walking, the slow process of building these woven landscapes creates a deep appreciation of beauty, and reverence for the life-force of the landscape.


galleries, public program

Exhibition: Kathrine Hoffman and Anna Goodhind, You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior

Image: Anna Goodhind, Face to Face (detail), courtesy of the artist

May 25 - July 17, 2026

Opening: Friday May 29, 5:30-7:30pm

Gallery I, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are thrilled to present You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior, a new exhibition featuring work by Kathrine Hoffman and Anna Goodhind. This exhibition explores colour, repetition and form through ceramics and collage, looking at how artists build meaning through layering, repetition and pattern. Both Anna and Kathy are current studio artists at The Mill.

Kathrine's intuitive abstract ceramics are built using the Japanese nerikomi technique, working with coloured clay to build patterns that are embedded into the body of her vessels. Using the slow, repetitive technique Katherine creates unique abstract designs, experimenting with colour theory to draw the eye across the surface of the vessel. She says 'For me working with clay is very tactile. I find the connection between the hand, the eye and the brain and the repetition very calming.'

Anna brings a series of collage works to the exhibition, using found images to build narrative through colour and form. Each collage becomes a window into a world, opening a conversation to themes of life, and death, geology, the passing of time and the universe. We see delightfully unexpected characters on backgrounds of repeated patterns, nature and science brought together with infinite horizons.

This exhibition takes its title from Carolina Ebeid's poem 'You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior', a poem about humanness- made of wilderness & sky, a new anatomy, an overbright comet burning through the infinite. Like the poem, Kathrine's works fold and repeat, creating an infinite and intricate interiority. Nerikomi traditionally reflects the harmony of nature and as an expression of the artist's soul. Likewise, Anna's work speaks to the human condition, the interiority of each of us that is complex and in flux, and part of a web of connection through systems of biology and physics, of community and care.


galleries, public program

Finissage: Closer Horizons II, You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior

Image: Tony Busch, Sandstone arch, Sellicks, 2026, hand dyed jute, hand dyed cotton warp, 46 x 68 cm, Photo: Sam Roberts.

July 17, 2026

Finissage: Friday, July 17, 4:30-6:30pm

Galleries, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We invite you to join us for the closing event for Closer Horizons II and You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior.

Closer Horizons II is an exhibition of woven textiles by Tony Busch. In this exhibition Tony brings audiences into a sense of place, exploring local landscapes; Warripari Sturt Gorge, Aldinga and Sellicks beach. Through the act of walking, Tony has gathered inspiration from the uniquely South Australian landscape- texture, colour, shape are translated through Tony’s chosen material.

You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior is an exhibition featuring work by Kathrine Hoffman and Anna Goodhind. This exhibition explores colour, repetition and form through ceramics and collage, looking at how artists build meaning through layering, repetition and pattern. Both Anna and Kathy are current studio artists at The Mill.


galleries, public program

Exhibition: Joeulla Coulthard, Juanella Donovan and Lisa Khan, Held

Image: Lisa Khan, Intergenerational Wealth of Knowledge (detail) Photo: courtesy of the artist

July 27 - September 4, 2026

Opening night, Wednesday, July 29, 5:00- 7:30pm

Gallery I, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

For SALA 2026 we are excited to present Held, a new group exhibition featuring new work by First Nations artists Joeulla Coulthard (Adnyamathna, Kuyani), Juanella Donovan (Adnyamathanha, Luritja and Arrernte), and Lisa Khan (Yankunytjatjara/ Antakirinja/ Pitjantjatjara). This exhibition explores the artists practices across painting, weaving, sculpture and ceramics. As mothers, each of these artist’s plays a vital role in caring for family and caring for Country. We know that mothers hold so much strength and tenderness, veracity and knowledge. These qualities are passed down through generations from mother to child, and for these women, their art practices reflect the ongoing practice of holding and sharing knowledge and stories.

This exhibition is presented with support from Ku Arts and the City of Adelaide’s Arts and Community Arts and Cultural grants.


 
 
 

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body

 
 
 

galleries, public program

Exhibition: Nicolas Ottavio Saccardo, A scratch to a whisper

Image: Nicolas Ottavio Saccardo, Untitled, 2026, coloured pencil on found wood and masonite box, 50cm x 91.9cm x 6.5cm, image courtesy of the artist.

July 27 - September 4, 2026

Opening night, Wednesday, July 29, 5:30- 7:30pm

Gallery II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present A scratch to a whisper, a new exhibition by Nicolas Ottavio Saccardo. In this exhibition Nicolas explores materiality, mark-making and trace through a series of works on found surfaces. Using previously discarded panels, boards and pages, Nicolas examines the relationship between surfaces and the body, both as the material of our human ecology and as artefacts of our culture.

Through this body of work Nicolas draws our attention to mark making, honouring found marks- carpenters measurements once hidden on the inside of cabinets, scuffs from use, the wearing away of surface through repetitive touch. Through studio practice, they add layers of text like marks, sometimes referencing writing, scribbles, shopping lists, diary entries, and sometimes gestural, abstract marks across the surface.


 
 
 

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body

 
 
 

galleries, public program

Exhibition: Jen Trantor, CONGRATULATIONS

Image: Jen Trantor, CONGRATULATIONS, on not shooting anyone today, CONGRATULATIONS, you didn’t poison anyone today, CONGRATULATIONS, on taking a great shot, photo: Russell Millard

July 27 - September 4, 2026

Opening: Wednesday, July 29, 5-7:30pm

Foyer Gallery, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present CONGRATULATIONS, a new exhibition by Jen Trantor. With cheeky humour and more than a touch of sarcasm, Jen offers the least of us an opportunity to be celebrated. Her delightful series of medals commemorate mundane and everyday achievements - CONGRATULATIONS, you made it out of bed!!! We all get a chance to be decorated with rich velvet ribbons, embellished beading and gold work.

For Jen this is an opportunity to share about her own small wins. Each of these daily achievements are what add value, enjoyment and creative fulfilment to our lives. Sure, you could go run a sub-two-hour marathon, or, you could celebrate yourself for living your life in line with your values, knowing yourself deeply, and cherishing your friends. Don’t get too mushy about it though, this is all meant to be a bit tongue in cheek!


 
 
 

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body

 
 
 

galleries, public program

Exhibition: Toni Hassan, The Sea is Talking

Image: Toni Hassan, Behold, the Rainbow Cale (Heteroscarus acroptilus), detail, 2025, Photo: Pro Lab, courtesy of the artist

March 27 - May 15, 2026

Gallery I, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present The Sea is Talking, a new exhibition by Toni Hassan. In this exhibition Toni works across multiple modalities to honour the lives of the countless marine creatures, some of which she witnessed dead, or struggling, as the South Australian coastline became impacted by the harmful algal bloom. Her regular walks along the city’s shoreline have revealed the incredible biodiversity of our local waters, sparking curiosity as well as sadness.

Through large scale coloured pencil drawings, video, and mixed media installation, Toni creates a feeling within the gallery akin to the emotional response she has had on the beach. We feel the physicality of the experience: a sense of awe, coupled with grief. We get a sense of the tide as it often was, washing in with creamy foam, and we observe an eel in a gripping dance, fighting for breath. Toni ponders our current environmental realities, positioning the algal bloom as a barometer for our world, asking, 'If the sea is talking, who's listening?' Further, 'What does it mean to truly listen?'


galleries, public program

Exhibition: Anthea Tsigros Jones, Think Differently

Image: Anthea Tsigros Jones, The snail and the unicorn (detail), 2026, courtesy of the artist

March 27 - May 15, 2026

Gallery II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present Think Differently, a new exhibition by Anthea Tsigros 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, she 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, she presents new sculptural installations - dioramas of a life imagined through playfulness. 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, showcase Anthea’s unique process. Through these works, she 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 alone engrossed in her own world.

Through Think Differently, Anthea speaks to the pressures of women of her generation - the expectations of her 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!


galleries, public program

FORUM: Our coast - creativity, responsibility and response

Image: Toni Hassan, Behold, the Rainbow Cale (Heteroscarus acroptilus), detail, 2025, Photo: Pro Lab, courtesy of the artist

Artist Forum

When: Friday, May 15, 5:30-7pm

Galleries, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, bookings essential

We invite you to join us for an artist led forum discussing the impact of the South Australian algal bloom, and opening a discussion about climate, ecologies, and our place in the world.

This forum builds on The Sea is Talking, a new exhibition by Toni Hassan currently Showing in Gallery I. Speakers include Toni Hassan, ecologist Dr Faith Coleman, and curator Lindl Lawton. The forum will also include a short performance by artist Sandy Marion in response to Toni Hassan’s exhibited video work Death Dance (Longfinned worm eel, Scolecenchelys breviceps).

As chair of the panel, Toni brings her curiosity, advocacy background and creative insights to a lively conversation with a panel of special cross-disciplinary guests, exploring how creative practice can open new ways of thinking, feeling and responding to environmental change.

She asks; In the wake of South Australia’s devastating algal bloom, how can art help us make sense of ecological loss? And as the planet warms, what practical and imaginative roles can South Australians play in caring for our marine ecosystems?

About the artists:


This forum has support from a Human.Kind Ripple Effect grant

public program, galleries

Finissage: Hasta La Raíz, Kosh-Chenar, The House of a Thousand Faces

Photo: Daniel Marks.

March 20, 2026

Finissage: Friday, March 20, 4:30-6:30pm

Artist Spotlight with Carmen Alcedo: 4:30pm

Galleries, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We invite you to join us for the closing event for Hasta La Raíz, Kosh-Chenar, and The House of a Thousand Faces, and an Artist Spotlight from exhibiting artist Carmen Alcedo.

Hasta La Raíz has been developed through our Photographer in Residence program by artist Carmen Alcedo, presented with support from the Ana and Christopher Koch Foundation and Black and White Photographic. Through layered digital and analogue collage, Carmen creates atmospheric images referencing her personal experience of migration from Spain to Australia.

Kosh-Chenar has been developed through our Visual Arts Studio Residency program by artist Nadera Rasulova, presented with support from Drs Geoff Martin and Sorayya Mahmood Martin. Nadera draws on the cultural lineage of handwoven ikat, its motifs, colours, and tribal symbolism while reflecting both Australian and Central Asian landscapes.

The House of a Thousand Faces is a solo exhibition by multidisciplinary artist Christian Best. The first instalment in his series of photographic portraits, Christian introduces us to 36 of his planned 1000 portraits; each joyful personality captured is a contact or connection from Chris’ life and travels.


These exhibitions have support from

 
 

galleries, public program, photog in res outcomes

Exhibition: Carmen Alcedo, Hasta La Raíz (to the root)

Image: Carmen Alcedo, Poner el mundo boca abajo (detail), 2025, courtesy of the artist

January 27 - March 20, 2026

Opening event: Friday, February 6, 5:30-7:30pm

Gallery I, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present Hasta La Raíz, a new exhibition by Carmen Alcedo developed through our Photographer in Residence program, presented with support from the Ana and Christopher Koch Foundation and Black and White Photographic.

Through layered digital and analogue collage, Carmen creates atmospheric images referencing her personal experience of migration from Spain to Australia. Archival images and elements from her hometown of Sevilla are layered with portraits of her grandparents, nieces and her younger self, and contrasted with photographs taken over her four years of living here in Australia. The opera house, iron rich red dirt and twisting branches of gum trees sit alongside images of her children in makeshift La Semana Santa costume; Carmen’s beloved nieces play under the watchful eye of a golden winged angel; petals open portals to connection and play.

Deeply complex, and brimming with symbolism and personal narrative Carmen’s new body of work invites us into an emotional reflection. What are the emotions that we feel when we think of home? What happens when the idea of home that we long for is no longer a physical place that we can visit? How does identity ebb and flow through our every day life? What anchors us in culture, identity and memory?


This exhibition has support from

galleries, public program

Exhibition: Nadera Rasulova, Kosh-Chenar

Image: courtesy of the artist

January 27 - March 20, 2026

Opening event: Friday, February 6, 5:30-7:30pm

Gallery II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present Kosh-Chenar, a new exhibition by Nadera Rasulova developed through our Visual Arts Studio Residency program, presented with support from Drs Geoff Martin and Sorayya Mahmood Martin.

The exhibition title refers to the Uzbek plane tree, a longstanding symbol of resilience and continuity in Central Asia. Nadera draws on the cultural lineage of handwoven ikat, its motifs, colours, and tribal symbolism while reflecting both Australian and Central Asian landscapes.

Through large-scale abstract oil paintings, she examines how visual traditions migrate, adapt, and settle in new contexts. Rather than reconstructing inherited narratives, Nadera charts the points where cultural memory, place, and personal experience converge. Her palette and mark-making evoke the tonal shifts of desert light, the rhythm of woven textiles, and the layered terrain of diasporic identity.

‘It’s a conversation between inherited culture and the land I live on; a meditation on memory, belonging, and identity,’ she notes. ‘Kosh-Chenar is an exploration of the spaces we inherit and the ones we forge. It reflects the quiet work of reconciling where you come from with where you are, and finding new ground between the two.’


This exhibition has support from

 
 

galleries, public program

Exhibition: Christian Best, The House of a Thousand Faces

Image: Courtesy of the artist

January 27 - March 20, 2026

Opening event: Friday, February 6, 5:30-7:30pm

Gallery I, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present The House of a Thousand Faces, a new solo exhibition by multidisciplinary artist Christian Best. The first installment in his series of photographic portraits, Christian introduces us to 36 of his planned 1000 portraits; each joyful personality captured is a contact or connection from Chris’ life and travels.

In The House of a Thousand Faces we are greeted by street performers in Scotland, film crew in Fiji, housemates, friends, artists and collaborators. Each image is a point of connection with Chris, who visually shares stories about community and friendship from around the globe. Together the images create a multiplicity, within which there is beauty in the non-hierarchical. Every face represents a moment of generosity, the subject shares a smile or pose, as they hand trust to the photographer to capture their essence.

As the first iteration of an ongoing project, there is a sense of infinite possibility. Each portrait is framed in a hand made frame, a new skill acquired by Chris in the making of this exhibition.


This exhibition has support from

 
 

galleries, public program, workshop

Workshop: Abstract painting with Nadera Rasulova

Image: Courtesy of the artist

Workshop

When: Saturday, March 14, 12:30-2:30pm

Gallery II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: $45 (+ booking fee)

Join artist Nadera Rasulova for an abstract painting workshop exploring inherited stories.

As an extension of Nadera’s exhibition Kosh-Chenar, she will be leading a workshop that invites participants to bring a textile or object of cultural, familial or personal significance. These items will act as starting points for creating abstract paintings through colour, pattern, texture or a more intuitive emotional response. The workshop reflects the intentions of Kosh-Chenar: to explore how the things we inherit carry stories, and how those stories can be reinterpreted and made new through the act of painting.

What to expect:

Seated within Nadera's exhibition, this two-hour workshop invites participants to explore abstract painting through memory, material, and intuition.

Working with a personally significant object or textile as a reference point, participants will be guided to translate story and emotion into colour, gesture, and texture - without the pressure of representation or a finished outcome. The focus is on process: layering, responding, obscuring, and revealing.

All materials are provided, including a canvas board and acrylic paints. Participants will take their artwork home on the day.

Guests are asked to bring one object or textile of cultural, familial, or personal significance.

Tea, coffee, and light refreshments will be available.


This exhibition has support from

 
 

galleries, public program

Artist talk: Nadera Rasulova, Kosh-Chenar

Image: courtesy of the artist

Artist Talk

When: Friday, February 20, 4:30-5:30pm

Gallery II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

Join exhibiting artist Nadera Rasulova in conversation with The Mill’s Visual Arts Curator Adele Sliuzas for a chat about her exhibition, Kosh-Chenar. Hear the artist speak about process, material and making work about belonging and place.  


This exhibition has support from

 
 

galleries, public program

Exhibition: CHARTS Community Housing Art Awards

Photo: Sam Roberts

December 5 - 16

Galleries, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present the third iteration of CHARTS, the Community Housing Art Awards. We love having this exhibition in our galleries, and congratulate all of the artists involved.

The Community Housing Art Awards (CHARTS) were created to celebrate and showcase the creative diversity, depth and talent of tenants in community and social housing. This is the third CHARTS Awards event, the first in 2021, and another event in 2023, held here at The Mill.

This year’s CHARTS has been a collaborative effort between Community Housing Industry Association SA and 9 Community Housing Providers: Access2Place, Believe Housing Australia, Common Equity Housing SA, Community Housing LTD, Junction Australia, Unity Housing Company, Uniting SA Housing, Westside Housing, YourPlace Housing.

Community Housing Providers are not-for-profit organisations that provide affordable, stable, secure, and safe housing to people living on low to moderate incomes, facing disadvantage and/or with specific needs.

CHARTS is an event that has been open to all tenants of these Community Housing Providers and incorporates four award categories: 2D/Painting/Drawing; 3D/Sculpture Art/Textiles/Craft; Photography/Digital; Poetry and Literature, with 15 awards being given out, including the People’s Choice Awards, Artist Living with A Disability and First Nations Artist.

We hope CHARTS helps tenants find a sense of belonging – we know art brings people together, and by displaying tenants’ artwork in this exhibition at The Mill, and by making it accessible to the public, we hope it inspires engagement and a feeling of belonging to the community.


galleries, public program

LIMITLESS 2025 Fundraiser Exhibition

Photo: Bri Hammond

September 17 - October 10

Opening event: Friday, September 19, 5:30-8pm

Finissage: Friday, October 10, 4:30-6:30pm

Galleries, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

Please note we are not open on Monday, October 6, due to the public holiday.

We are excited to present LIMITLESS, our annual fundraising exhibition shining a light on over 200 local artists.

This exhibition will raise funds for The Mill; a vibrant, creative home where artists collaborate, experiment and take risks. It will also celebrate the abundance of artistic talent within the South Australian visual arts community, including work by our studio artists and alumni, visual arts students and graduates and local artist studio collectives.

We invite you to find your favourite piece to add to your collection.

All A5 artworks are priced at $100, with artists working in diverse mediums and styles. This year, the exhibition also features a selection of larger works, priced at a higher level, from our studio artists, program alumni and invited contributors.

The exhibition features emerging alongside established artists, with all artists’ names kept anonymous in the exhibition. Artists’ names and details will be revealed when the buyer takes the work home. 

Sales from this fundraising exhibition support the artist and The Mill, helping us to continue championing artistic experimentation in our fantastic state.


galleries, public program

Finissage: LIMITLESS 2025 Fundraiser Exhibition

Photo: Bri Hammond

Finissage

When: Friday, October 10, 4:30-7:00pm

Galleries, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We invite you to join us for the finissage event for LIMITLESS 2025, an opportunity for artists and creative industry professionals to network, and celebrate the work of over 200 local artists.

This exhibition will raise funds for The Mill; a vibrant, creative home where artists collaborate, experiment and take risks. It will also celebrate the abundance of artistic talent within the South Australian visual arts community, including work by our studio artists and alumni, visual arts students and graduates and local artist studio collectives.

We invite you to find your favourite piece to add to your collection. This closing event is a last chance to buy a work from LIMITLESS 2025.

All A5 artworks are priced at $100, with artists working in diverse mediums and styles. The exhibition features emerging alongside established artists, with all artists’ names kept anonymous in the exhibition. Artist’s names and details will be revealed when the buyer takes the work home. 

Sales from this fundraising exhibition support the artist and The Mill, helping us to continue championing artistic experimentation in our fantastic state.


galleries, public program

Exhibition: Shane Cook, Which Way Next Here

Image: Shane Cook, Landscape Scars, 2025, courtesy of the artist

October 17 - November 28, 2025

Opening event: Friday, October 31, 5:30-7:30pm

Gallery I, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

For Tarnanthi 2025 we are excited to present Which Way Next Here a new collection of photography by Wulli Wulli and Koa (Guwa) artist Shane Cook. The exhibition invites you to slow down, and take a moment to connect with Shane’s storytelling - a visual narrative through mark making, and connection to Country. 

Shane has been mentored by artist, arts worker, community facilitator and advocate Jo-Anne Driessens, (Guwa Koa, Gungarri, Kuku Yalanji) through the support of the Guildhouse Catapult + Tarnanthi mentorship. We are thrilled to have collaborative works by both Shane and Jo-Anne in the exhibition, layering images of Guwa Koa Country with Shane’s signature graphic elements. With a background in street art and tattoo, Shane brings a unique approach to the work. Bold colours and complex textures meet with mark making that reference movement, body and connection. 

At the heart of this exhibition is Shane’s connection with the landscapes of his ancestors, and contemporary connection with family and Country. His journey as an artist reflects the time he has invested in collecting archival materials, and in conversation and exchange. All of this has laid the groundwork for him to be present and intuitive when on Country and in the studio. The resulting images are powerful statements of grounding and openness. 


This exhibition has support from

Shane received support from Guildhouse’s Catapult + Tarnanthi Mentorship

 
 

galleries, public program, kayangan outcome

Exhibition: 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

October 17 - November 28, 2025

Artist talk: Friday, November 28, 5:30-6:30pm

Gallery II, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Free entry, all welcome

We are excited to present alONEness - một, a new exhibition of sculptures and installations by Vietnamese artist Dai Trang Nguyen.

Developed through our Kayangan Residency, with support from donors Geoff Martin and Sorayya Mahmood Martin, the exhibition explores identity, connection, and the spaces between, using mindfulness as a compass. một, meaning “one” in Vietnamese, reflects Dai Trang’s journey through aloneness, loneliness, and oneness. The work flows from a place of authenticity and vulnerability, where the tension between solitude and connection becomes visible.

Through large-scale textile-based sculptures, she transforms the gallery into a multifaceted environment. The installation embodies the solidity of being alone, the struggles of isolation and the universal longing for connection. It invites viewers to reflect on their own experiences of being alone and together, offering a quiet moment of shared understanding amidst life’s chaos. 


This exhibition has support from