EXHIBITIONS
TAC Program | Jan – Jun 2025
Welcome to 2025! We are delighted to bring, once again, a diverse range of creative activities across art forms, and for all ages.
Steven Holland | Moonsnake | 7 Feb – 5 Apr
Steven Holland brings together a recent series of yellow-snake dream drawings with a selection of his bronze Serpent sculptures created over several decades.
UNCONDITIONAL | JOHN BROOKES | 7 FEB – 5 APR
“unconditional” is a mixed-media examination of loves many forms… joyful, painful, life-affirming, difficult at times, but invariably unconditional.
This is Studio& | 7 Feb – 5 Apr
This is Studio&’s debut exhibition as a collective, celebrating two years of making together.
Peter McLean & Sharon Peoples | Walking with the Gardener | 11 Apr – 7 Jun
Responding to Mt Wilson in embroidery, prints and drawings, these two artists, an embroiderer and a printmaker, set out to be immersed in, and record, the same lush environment.
Lynne Flemons | Meander | 11 Apr – 7 Jun
This body of work explores the creeks that flow through this valley through drawings made on site and paintings developed in the studio.
Networks Australia | Pixel and Thread | 11 Apr – 7 Jun
Pixel and Thread is an exhibition showcasing the diverse ways digital technology can enhance creativity for textile artists and makers.
Rechelle Turner & Megan Daley | From Country | 13 Jun – 9 Aug
A collaborative art exhibition by Megan Daley (Ngunnawal/Wiradjuri) and Rechelle Turner (Wiradjuri) that delves into their deep-rooted connection to Country and the timeless stories it holds.
True: Kevin Gilbert 1933 – 1993 | 13 Jun – 9 Aug
An exhibition of prints and poetry by Kevin Gilbert, that recalls the artist, the writer and the activist, beginning in what would have been his 92nd year. Celebrate his life and art with images and poetry created during his lifetime along with some works editioned for the first time.
Community Postcards | Wish You Were Here | 13 Jun – 9 Aug
Curated from an open call out for small works – up to A6 size, artists have been invited to reflect on the Tuggeranong Valley environment and communicate through their work, things that are special, unique and remembered or that just bring every-day joy and delight to people that reside, work or visit Canberra’s South.