Previous exhibitions 2008

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Monet 'Meules, milieu du jour [Haystacks, midday] [also known as Meules au soleil, milieu du jour and Grainstacks, midday]' 1890 Painting, oil on canvas Collection of the National Gallery of AustraliaTurner to Monet
The triumph of landscape

14 March – 9 June 2008

Turner to Monet presents an opportunity to experience paintings never before seen in Australia, and only at the National Gallery of Australia.

Works by the finest artists of the time – Turner, Constable, Friedrich, Corot, Courbet, Glover, von Guérard, Church, Streeton, Roberts, Cézanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Monet – have been gathered from public and private collections from around the world.

The exhibition provides a unique opportunity for Australians to see landscape masterpieces in oil and watercolour from the finest collections of the world, including Tate Britain, Royal Academy of Arts, J Paul Getty Museum, National Gallery of Art, Washington, and Kröller-Müller Museum.

nga.gov.au/TurnerToMonet

View the Education Resource

Claude Monet 'Meules, milieu du jour [Haystacks, midday] [also known as Meules au soleil, milieu du jour and Grainstacks, midday]' 1890 (detail) oil on canvas Collection of the National Gallery of Australia

 

Monet 'Meules, milieu du jour [Haystacks, midday] [also known as Meules au soleil, milieu du jour and Grainstacks, midday]' 1890 Painting, oil on canvas Collection of the National Gallery of AustraliaAustralian Surrealism
The Agapitos Wilson collection

16 February to 11 May 2008

Surrealism, the great revolutionary movement originating in France in the 1920s, was to change the course of Australian art in the 1940s. A generation of Australian artists including James Gleeson, Sidney Nolan, Albert Tucker, Arthur Boyd and Max Dupain encountered Surrealism at a formative time in their careers, and its influence transformed their art forever.

Drawn from the recently acquired James Agapitos OAM, and Ray Wilson OAM, collection of Australian Surrealist art, this exhibition shows the extraordinary breadth of Surrealist practice in this country from the 1920s to the 1950s.

 

nga.gov.au/AustralianSurrealism


Clifford Bayliss Man wearing a bowler hat 1945 brush and coloured ink and wash on white wove paper Purchased with the assistance of James Agapitos OAM and Ray Wilson OAM 2007 © Mrs Josephine Bayliss; courtesy Bridget McDonnell Gallery


 

John Brack 'Study for the painting and the lithograph 'Junior Latin American' [Sketch for 'Junior Latin American']' 1969conte crayon, pencil image Collection of the National Gallery of Australia © Helen BrackDrawn in

14 July 2007 – 30 March 2008
Children's Gallery

By looking closely at drawings we can get a powerful insight into the thoughts, ideas and processes that artists explore in their works.

Beginning with the drawings of George Lambert, Drawn in explores some of the ways in which artists use drawing. George Lambert was a master draughtsman, who captured the changing world around him through his pencil impressions and explored new artistic ideas. This exhibition aims to show the way drawing can make thinking visible.

 

nga.gov.au/DrawnIn

 

John Brack 'Study for the painting and the lithograph 'Junior Latin American' [Sketch for 'Junior Latin American']' 1969 conte crayon, pencil image Collection of the National Gallery of Australia © Helen Brack

 

Richard Bell 'Australian Art Its and Aboriginal thing' 2006 synthetic polymer paint on canvas acquired 2006 TarraWarra Museum of Art collectionNational Indigenous Art Triennial 07
culture warriors

until 10 February 2008

The National Gallery of Australia is delighted to present the inaugural National Indigenous Art Triennial. The work of thirty artists has been selected, representing the diversity of regions around Australia and demonstrating the incredible range of contemporary Indigenous art practice. The National Indigenous Art Triennial provides a highly considered snapshot of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander contemporary art practice.

 

nga.gov.au/NIAT07

 


Richard Bell Australian Art Its An Aboriginal thing 2006 (detail) synthetic polymer paint on canvas acquired 2006 TarraWarra Museum of Art collection

 

detail: Robert Rauschenberg 'Horsefeathers Thirteen ? I' 1972 planographic, stencil, collage © Robert RauschenbergRobert Rauschenberg 1967–1978
until 27 January 2008

Robert Rauschenberg moved to New York in 1949, at a time when the avant-garde art scene was dominated by Abstract Expressionism. Right from the beginning, Rauschenberg worked beyond the restrictions imposed by media, style and convention, and adopted a unique experimental methodology that combined gestural mark-making with its antithesis – mechanically reproduced imagery.

His work has been of central influence in many of the significant developments of post-war American art and has provided countless blueprints for artistic innovation by younger generations.

 

nga.gov.au/Rauschenberg

 

Robert Rauschenberg Horsefeathers Thirteen – I 1972 (detail) planographic, stencil, collage © Robert Rauschenberg

 

Otagaki Rengetsu 'Fluttering merrily' hanging scroll [kakemono] 1840s-50s calligraphy, painting Private collection, Zurich

Black robe, white mist
art of the Japanese Buddhist nun Rengetsu
until 27 January 2008

Otagaki Rengetsu (1791–1875), Lotus Moon, was a Japanese Buddhist nun whose tragic life inspired extraordinary creativity. One of a small number of prominent female artists of 19th-century Japan, Rengetsu was a poet, calligrapher, potter and painter.

Largely drawn from international private collections, Black robe, white mist shows contemplative works of paper and clay inscribed with Rengetsu’s elegant poetry and understated calligraphy. Her work reflects the beauty of the imperfect and unconventional.

 

nga.gov.au/Rengetsu

 

Otagaki Rengetsu Fluttering merrily hanging scroll [kakemono] 1840s-50s (detail) calligraphy, painting Private collection, Zurich