Upcoming exhibitions
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nature + nurture
Bachelor of Contemporary Australian Indigenous Art Graduate Exhibition
Queensland College of Art and Design, Griffith UniversityOPENING NIGHT 6-9PM 23rd OCTOBER
Performed Feminine, 2025, explores visual languages for the female gaze. Understanding that the male gaze is based on objectification of women, the bedazzled, disposable objects create a sculptural narrative flip of the male gaze, beautifying the abject. Cinematic photographs encompass blue eyeshadow tropes and delve into glitter and ‘male repellent makeup’ as protection from men.
Serinah Williams
Rachel Bywaters
Belinda Fraser
23 OCTOBER 2025
EXHIBITIONS
Performed Feminine
The exhibition will critique the inescapable influence of the male gaze and its consequent effects on the female gaze and experience. It will explore the pressures exerted by the male gaze, which demand that women conform and perform to gain validation. Williams examines the complicated relationship between the naive and the sexual by placing the viewer in a voyeuristic position. She presents the uncomfortable truths that many women continue to experience.
to be continued… QCAD GRAD SHOW 2025












mosaic memories
Mosaic Memories is an exploration of memory through the lens of contemporary photography, bringing together diverse artists whose work illuminates the multifaceted nature of memory as a timeless reservoir of human experience. Each artist offers a distinctive perspective on memory, underscoring its enduring significance in their lives. The exhibition features works that evoke personal and collective recollections, delving into the essence of what it means to remember and be remembered. From the symbiotic interplay between natural elements and cherished memories to the profound resonance of forgotten traditions and ancestral legacy, the artists each invite the viewers to ponder a unique aspect of the intricate tapestry of our past experiences. They beckon viewers to question and reflect on the fleeting and the enduring aspects of memory, exploring its capacity to both fade and persist. Traversing through layers of photographic memory, the works force viewers to encounter the tangible and the intangible, the abstract and the concrete, the past and the future. Mosaic Memories celebrates the power of contemporary photography in preserving, reimaging and redefining our relationships with memory, where each click of the shutter resonates with the echoes of our shared human experience.







dis(connections)
Serinah Williams is a Yiman artist living on Gubbi Gubbi land. She uses photography as a medium of truth telling, shedding light on the negative effects of colonialism.
In this exhibition, she explores decolonising notions of time and memory. She displays artwork that addresses her own personal disconnection from Country, and her work towards reconnection and repatriation of culture.





