What’s on this weekend? Think: World Dachshund Day, the Queanbeyan Multicultural Festival, and more!
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Canberra’s social scene is heating up this weekend, serving up an absolute blockbuster lineup packed with culture, food, and high-energy entertainment.
From fast-paced ice hockey rivalries at the AIS Arena to lively multicultural festivals and community fetes, the capital is packed with action. Gather your crew, soak up the vibrant atmosphere, and dive into your ultimate weekend guide!
Don’t miss…
The Good Boy Game
Armed with a therapist’s rewards system and a DIY de-radicalisation plan, parents Mary-Beth and Sam are determined to scrub the online hate out of their teenage son James—one gold star sticker at a time. Tied up in their dusty attic, they attempt to chip away at his planned violence, only to face the dark part they played in creating him.
The Good Boy Game is a furious, darkly funny, and deeply uncomfortable black comedy exploring radicalisation, masculinity, and the price we pay to seem like good people. Powered by four of Canberra’s sharpest actors and an unrelenting young director, this satire is brutally relevant.
Until Saturday, 20 June | 253 Crawford Street, Queanbeyan | theq.net.au
Alphabet Lane: Regional Q&A Film Screening
Join independent film company Joe Films at Arc Cinema for a special South East NSW Q&A screening of the unexpected indie breakout drama, Alphabet Lane. Filmed entirely in the stunning nearby Monaro region, this quietly unhinged and oddly romantic feature explores isolation and creativity.
The story follows city-slicker couple Anna (Tilda Cobham-Hervey) and Jack (Nicholas Denton) as they move to the country. To pass the time, they invent imaginary neighbours – but the joke takes on an eerie life of its own when real letters start arriving. Stay after the feature for an exclusive conversation with Cooma-raised director James Litchfield and actor Henry Nixon.
Saturday 20 June. Times vary | Arc Cinema, National Film and Sound Archive, Acton | nfsa.gov.au
Midnight Mass at Capital Brewing Co
Embrace the shadows and lean directly into the winter solstice as the longest night of the year gets a whole lot louder. Following its massively successful debut last year, Capital Brewing Co is bringing back Midnight Mass to transform its Fyshwick taproom into a dark, immersive celebration of heavy music and winter revelry.
The elevated brew deck stage will feature an explosive lineup, headlined by Canberra’s own unapologetically loud five-piece Mac The Knife. Local punk favourites Box Dye and Problem Green will round out the live acts, while DJ Eric Layers soundtracks the transitions. To top off the moody, theatrical energy, a live fire performer will ignite the taproom during the final changeover.
Entry is completely free, making it the ultimate way to toast Canberra’s alternative music scene with a few dark, seasonal brews in hand.
Saturday 20 June, 7 pm–12 am | Capital Brewing Co, Fyshwick | capitalbrewing.co
FIFA World Cup 2026: Australia v USA Live Screening
Set an early alarm and join fellow football fans at the University of Canberra to watch the Socceroos face off against the USA in their second group stage match of the FIFA World Cup 2026. Broadcast live on the big screen, this family-friendly event brings supporters together to create an electric, home-away-from-home atmosphere for the green and gold. While the star-studded USA side enters the match as heavy favorites, the Socceroos are looking to fully embrace their underdog status and cause a massive World Cup upset. Hot food and drinks will be available throughout the early morning to keep the crowd fueled.
Saturday 20 June, 4:30 am–7 am | UC Refectory, Bruce | ucx.canberra.edu.au
Arthur Boyd: Tapestries
Culture lovers have a world-first opportunity to witness a monumental artistic achievement right in the heart of the National Triangle. The National Gallery is presenting the inaugural exhibition of the complete cycle of twenty monumental tapestries by renowned Australian artist Arthur Boyd. Hand-woven in Portugal and acquired in 1975, these breathtaking textiles creatively retell the life of Saint Francis of Assisi. Displayed alongside the original lithographs, pastels, and drawings, this astonishing exhibition illuminates the immense collaborative and technical processes required to translate Boyd’s intensely creative visions into millions of rich, physical stitches.
Saturday 20 June until Sunday 18 October. Times vary | National Gallery of Australia, Parkes | nga.gov.au
Marymead Catholic Care Garage & Plant Sale
Bundle up in your favourite winter knits and head to the southside for the return of the beloved Marymead Garage & Plant Sale. Bargain hunters can explore a massive treasure trove of high-quality plants, home-baked sweets, fashion accessories, books, toys, and unique homewares. Whether you are searching for some green additions to your indoor plant collection or hunting for rare literature finds, there is plenty to explore. Keep your energy up with a classic sausage sizzle, knowing every dollar spent supports vital community programs.
Saturday 20 June, 9 am–1 pm | Marymead CatholicCare, 255 Goyder Street, Narrabundah | mccg.org.au
World Dachshund Day in Canberra
Calling all sausage dogs and their devoted humans! Celebrate World Dachshund Day with a relaxed, incredibly social community walk along the scenic Lake Burley Griffin foreshore. Starting at the National Carillon, the pack will wander along the waterfront over to Commonwealth Park. Participants are highly encouraged to dress their pups in creative costumes or festive winter outfits to add to the fun. This year’s social walk is raising crucial funds and awareness for ACT Rescue & Foster Inc. (ARF), a volunteer organisation dedicated to rescuing, fostering, and rehoming dogs across the region.
Sunday 21 June, Start times vary | National Carillon Bridge, Parkes | facebook.com
Winter Solstice Nude Charity Swim
Embrace a true sense of renewal and brave the elements for an incredibly worthy local cause. At sunrise on the shortest day of the year, courageous Canberrans will drop their towels and dive into the chilling winter waters of Lake Burley Griffin. This annual solstice tradition is all about washing away negativity, refreshing the spirit, and raising vital funds for Lifeline Canberra. Whether you are diving in yourself to welcome the upcoming solar year or cheering from the relative warmth of the shoreline, it is a powerful, community-spirited event that perfectly highlights our local resilience.
Sunday 21 June, 6.30 am–7.30 am | Yarralumla Beach, Lake Burley Griffin, Yarralumla | wintersolsticeswim.com
Canberra Made Series: Matcha Pouring Bowl Workshop
Unleash your inner maker and celebrate the art of functional clay at this cozy weekend workshop. Guided step-by-step by the expert team from The Ceramic Studio, this hand-building session is perfect for matcha enthusiasts and craft lovers alike. Over two hours, you’ll learn to shape, refine, and construct a functional ceramic matcha pouring bowl, a matching tea cup, and a miniature keepsake charm. All premium clay, tools, and professional firings are included, and the adjacent cafe serves up fresh matcha to keep your creative energy flowing.
Sunday 21 June, 10 am–12 pm | Canberra and Region Visitors Centre, Parkes | visitcanberra.com.au
Life in the Great Barrier Reef 360° VR Documentary
Submerge yourself in a breathtaking underwater world without leaving the inner north. Premiering at the National Museum of Australia, Life in the Great Barrier Reef is an immersive 35-minute cinematic documentary utilising custom-built 8K 360° virtual reality technology. Guided by leading scientists, reef stewards, and Traditional Owners, audiences are transported to the depths of two UNESCO World Heritage sites to encounter manta rays, whales, and rare coral spawning events, while gaining a deeper understanding of current conservation efforts.
Ongoing, Session times vary | National Museum of Australia, Acton Peninsula | nma.gov.au
NFSA’s Winter Film Series
Take a cinematic journey through time and space in the Winter Film Series at Arc Cinema.
From mind-bending time travel and fractured narratives to intergalactic adventures, alien encounters and cosmic odysseys, join us for stories stretching across eras and into the far reaches of the universe.
Whether you’re drawn to contemplative tales or epic escapism, you can explore worlds reshaped by technology, desire and chance.
Until 31 August | NFSA, McCoy Circuit, Acton | nfsa.gov.au
Floral Impressions: Coins in Bloom
The Royal Australian Mint’s exhibition Floral Impressions: Coins in Bloom draws on never-before-seen objects from the National Collection to explore the rich symbolism of flowers on coins from around the world. The exhibition traces how floral designs struck into metal carry stories of national identity, cultural heritage and remembrance — from Australia’s kangaroo paw and the South African protea to the Western Samoan Teuila.
Decorative motifs such as laurel, olive and oak wreaths, used for centuries as symbols of victory, peace and strength, also feature. Commemorative coins in the exhibition show how flowers have honoured significant historical moments and individuals across cultures.
Until March 2027 | Royal Australian Mint, 62–114 Denison Street, Deakin | ramint.gov.au
Special Events and Festivals
Clueless: Murder with a twist
Get ready for an evening of unpredictable murder mystery mayhem where absolutely nothing has been planned or written in advance. Canberra’s premier improvised theatre company, Lightbulb Improv, is taking the stage for a comedic romp with a brilliant twist—the audience gets to choose the victim, and not even the murderer knows who did it. Staging two completely unique plays every single night, the show guarantees that no two motives, victims, or storylines are ever the same. It is a fast-paced, hilarious night out in Civic that showcases local quick-witted talent at its very best.
Until Saturday 20 June. Times vary | Canberra Theatre Centre, City | canberratheatrecentre.com.au
Power & Pulse with JJ launch event
Power & Pulse with JJ is a new Canberra fitness offering launching with a special event at Red Baron café in Symonston. The launch features a 50-minute mat Pilates class suitable for all fitness levels, combining strength and cardio-focused movement with an upbeat, community-driven atmosphere. Attendees can expect a full-body workout set to music from a live DJ, alongside refreshments, gift bags and prizes. A professional photographer and videographer will also be on hand throughout the session. The two-hour event marks the debut of JJ’s ongoing Pilates program in Canberra.
Saturday 20 June, 10 am–12 pm | Red Baron, 2 Faulding Street, Symonston | momence.com
Matinee: Over 30’s Clubbing Experience
If you thought your legendary clubbing days were a thing of the past, Canberra’s favourite daytime party is back to prove you wrong. Returning by overwhelming demand after multiple sold-out events, this nostalgia-fuelled afternoon brings the iconic Mooseheads atmosphere back to life—just with a much friendlier bedtime. Dance the afternoon away to classic anthems from the 90s, 00s, and 10s, mixed by local DJs who lived through the golden era of our city’s nightlife. Sip on themed cocktails inspired by vintage venues, lose yourself on the dance floor, and still be tucked up in bed by ten.
Saturday 20 June, 4 pm–10 pm | Mooseheads Pub, City | mooseheads.com.au
Young Onset Parkinson’s Fundraising Trivia Night
Parkinson’s Connect is holding a dedicated trivia night to raise vital support for individuals diagnosed with Young Onset Parkinson’s Disease. Given that twenty per cent of people diagnosed with Parkinson’s are under the age of 50, all money raised from this community event will directly fund specialised guest speakers and engaging activities for the Young Onset Peer Support Group in Canberra. Gather your smartest friends for a fun, competitive night out packed with great trivia, fantastic community spirit, and meaningful fundraising for a wonderful local cause.
Saturday 20 June, 6.30 pm | Gungahlin Lakes Club, Nicholls | eventbrite.com.au
Queanbeyan Multicultural Festival
Get ready to eat your way right around the world, dance to vibrant new rhythms, and enjoy a spectacular family day out in Queanbeyan Park. The highly anticipated Queanbeyan Multicultural Festival is back to celebrate the beautiful, diverse tapestry of cultures that make up our regional community. The main stage will feature non-stop color, energy, and movement from local multicultural dance and performance acts. Visitors can explore bustling market stalls and sample incredible international street food. To keep the park comfortable for the large crowds, organizers kindly ask that you leave your pets at home.
Saturday 20 June, 10 am–4 pm | Queanbeyan Park, Lowe Street, Queanbeyan | qprc.nsw.gov.au
Sing for the Future, Celebrate the Past
Honouring a remarkable, little-known chapter of shared history, community group Kabbo Kothon presents a beautiful cultural evening of music and storytelling at the Gungahlin Lakes Club. In 1975, everyday Australians united for the historic Australian Concert for Bangladesh to provide critical famine relief; today, Canberra’s Bangladeshi community is paying that generosity forward. Proudly supported by Alo Enlightened Women, this special winter gathering raises vital funds for OzHarvest Canberra to support locals facing severe financial hardship. The evening features moving performances by acclaimed Sydney artist Sirajus Salekin and local musician Nicholas Lee Murphy (Filthy Darlings), complete with hot tea, coffee, and light refreshments. It is a wonderful space to celebrate cultural diversity, connect through shared stories, and give back to the local community.
Saturday, 20 June, 5 pm | Gungahlin Lakes Club, 51 Hinder Street, Gungahlin | events.humanitix.com
World Giraffe Day at the National Zoo and Aquarium
World Giraffe Day is on this weekend, and to celebrate the occasion, the National Zoo and Aquarium will be extending a ‘looong’ invitation to join them for a special Giraffe Keeper Talk and Giraffe Feed on Sunday 21 June to raise funds for the Giraffe Conservation Fund.
All weekend long, young and budding zookeepers can participate in the colouring-in competition and go in the running to meet a giraffe in real life! There’ll be lots of enrichment for the giraffes over the weekend as well! All the activities are free with admission and memberships.
Saturday 20 and Sunday 21 June | National Zoo and Aquarium, Lady Denman Drive, Weston | tickets.nationalzoo.com.au
Food + Drink
Love & Forgetting – Tales from a Young Mixer
Pull up a barstool at the Ambrosia Lounge for a heady mix of flavour, flair, and fantasy. The Rare Bird ensemble brings an intimate cabaret-style experience to life, tracing familiar stories of longing, reinvention, and the delicate art of holding it all together. Praised for its warmth, wit, and irresistible charm, this clever production blends classic jazz with intoxicating hospitality to blur the line between performer and patron. Seamlessly transporting audiences from the banks of the Murrumbidgee to Manhattan, it is a beautiful love letter to life where theatre meets the cocktail bar.
Until Saturday 20 June. Times vary | Ambrosia Lounge, Fyshwick | milltheatreatdairyroad.com
Sneaky Cauldron: Magical Mixology for The Winter Solstice
Celebrate the shortest day of the year with a delightfully wicked twist by stepping into a hidden world of magical mixology. Witches, wizards, and potion enthusiasts are invited to the northside for a spellbinding ninety-minute workshop under the expert guidance of a resident Potions Master. You will learn the secret art of blending mystical ingredients to concoct two bewitching custom cocktails or mocktails. Complete with a complimentary welcome drink on arrival, this immersive and playful experience is the perfect way to unlock your inner sorcerer and toast to the magical turning of the winter solstice.
Saturday 20 June, 5 pm–6.30 pm | The Sneaky Cauldron at Quizzic Alley, Fyshwick | quizzicalley.com.au
German Market Day Breakfast at Knuckles
Start your Sunday morning with a delicious, European-inspired feast before exploring the local stalls. The Zeppelin Room is serving up a hearty, authentic breakfast lineup to run alongside the market day festivities. Foodies can tuck into traditional treats like a Bavarian Weisswurst breakfast or a rich Black Forest breakfast platter. If you prefer the local classics, fresh coffee, smashed avocado, and perfectly poached eggs Benedict are also on the menu. It is the perfect, warming fuel to kickstart your weekend before diving into a day of supporting independent makers and local community vendors.
Sunday 21 June, 8 am–11 am | The Zeppelin Room, Narrabundah | harmonieclub.com.au
Markets
Sly Fox Market
The popular Sly Fox Market is making its grand return this winter at an all-new waterfront location in Belconnen. Set up seamlessly between the Belconnen Arts Centre and the local Scout Hall right by the edge of Lake Ginninderra, the market brings its signature vibrant community energy to the lakeside. Running on the third Saturday of every month, it is an absolute paradise for bargain hunters looking to explore local arts, handmade crafts, vintage clothes, and unique flea market finds. Complete with diverse food stalls and live local music, it makes for a fantastic family day out.
Saturday 20 June, 10 am–3 pm | Lake Ginninderra (between Belconnen Arts Centre and Scout Hall) | facebook.com
Canberra Seniors Winter Fete
Escape the cold and step inside for the annual Canberra Seniors Winter Fete in Turner. This cozy community market is packed with your favourite seasonal treats, featuring a dedicated café serving warm winter comfort food and an authentic Sri Lankan food stall. Visitors can browse a treasure trove of signature homemade jams, custom cakes, and sweet treats, alongside beautifully knitted and crocheted winter scarves, beanies, children’s jumpers, and blankets. There will also be a large range of handmade toys, second-hand books, vintage jewellery, and original works for sale by the Centre’s talented Art Group. Every single dollar raised goes directly toward expanding essential community activities for older Canberrans.
Saturday 20 June, 10 am–2 pm | Canberra Seniors Centre, 10 Watson Street, Turner | facebook.com/CanberraSeniorsCentre
Pandoras Recycled Fashions O’Connor – Everything Half Price Sale
Pandoras recycles high-end designer clothes, shoes, handbags, hats & jewellery. Top quality fashions at reasonable prices Everything you need to refresh your wardrobe from casual, work, evening or wedding. As the season changes Pandoras is having a half price sale to make room for all the fabulous Winter clothes we have ready to go.
Pandoras is based at St Philip’s Church in O’Connor and proceeds support local Canberra charities.
Half price sale dates are for three weeks on Saturday 18 and 25 April and 2 May. This is followed by the Winter launch on Saturday 9 May.
Pandoras is open every Saturday, 10 am–1 pm | Lamerton Centre, St Philips Church, Cnr Moorhouse and Macpherson Streets | facebook.com
Capital Region Farmers Market
This farmers’ market is iconic for a reason.
Go along to sample the region’s freshest produce from over 100 stallholders who bring freshly picked, grown and hand-crafted goods to Canberra and speak directly with growers and learn cooking tips while supporting the Rotary Club of Hall’s community projects.
It will make you appreciate your Saturday morning shopping trip in a whole new way.
Saturdays, 7 am-11:30 am | Exhibition Park in Canberra, Mitchell | capitalregionfarmersmarket.com.au
Old Bus Depot Markets
Lovers of fine hand-crafted wares, clothing collectors, food fanatics and jewellery junkies are just a few of the people who head to Canberra’s award-winning Old Bus Depot Markets every Sunday. In a fabulous old industrial building, you’ll experience the endless colour, tastes, sounds and atmosphere that is “Canberra’s Sunday Best”.
Not your average market, each week you’ll find over 200 stalls of exceptional quality, featuring items all hand-crafted by local and regional creatives. The sheer variety means you’ll discover something unexpected every visit, whether that’s a piece of pottery that speaks to you, a stunning necklace, or the perfect vintage find. There’s simply no better way to spend your Sunday in Canberra.
Sundays, 9.30 am – 2.30 pm | 21 Wentworth Avenue, Kingston | obdm.com.au
Southside Farmers Markets
This village market is located at Canberra College, making it the perfect place to duck in to grab what you need (and maybe a few things you don’t). Order an egg and bacon roll to start the morning as you explore the best of fresh seasonal veggies, handmade pasta, pet treats and more.
Sundays, 7 am -11.30 am | 2 Launceston Street, Phillip | facebook.com/SouthsideFarmersMarketCanberra
Haig Park Village Markets
Another local favourite, spend your Sunday morning browsing delicious cuisines, fresh produce, artisan products and locally handmade crafts while enjoying live music, an artists’ table and family-friendly activities.
It’s the kind of market where you can linger over breakfast, discover a new artist, and stock up on fresh produce all in one lovely morning, making it the perfect Sunday outing in leafy Braddon.
Sundays, 8 am – 2 pm | Haig Park, Girrahween Street, Braddon | haigparkvillagemarkets.com.au
Sport and Wellness
Dragons Abreast Canberra Trivia & Silent Auction
Support an incredible cause and test your knowledge at the primary 2026 fundraiser for Dragons Abreast Canberra. This vibrant dragon boat club provides a vital, active support network and a sense of determination for individuals navigating a breast cancer diagnosis. Gather a team for an evening packed with lively trivia, a massive raffle, and a high-stakes silent auction. Tickets are available individually or as full tables of ten, with all proceeds directly empowering the local paddling community.
Saturday, 20 June, 7 pm–10 pm | Ainslie Football Club, Ainslie | revolutionise.com.au
Empower Padel Tournament & Beginners Intro
Get ready for an energetic morning of sport, friendly competition, and socializing at the Canberra Racquet Club. The Empower Padel event brings together local players of all fitness and skill levels for three hours of action-packed court play. True beginners are completely taken care of, with dedicated courts and coaches on hand to teach the basic rules and build match-play confidence. Every sign-up walks away with a welcome pack valued at over $125 full of sponsor goodies, lucky door prize entries, and access to fresh grazing platters.
Saturday 20 June, 9.45 am–1 pm | Canberra Racquet Club, Fyshwick | luma.com/gxxbb4kw
Music
Warm Soup Cool Jazz at Mercure Canberra
One of our city’s most beloved winter traditions is making its cosy return to Braddon. Gather your favourite people and head to the Carlton Room for a relaxed, family-friendly evening that perfectly balances comfort food with soulful music. You can settle in to unwind with steaming, house-made soups and comforting mulled winter drinks while soaking up the smooth sounds of an incredible local jazz trio. Featuring the wonderful vocals of Angela Lount, Leo Joseph on keys, and Lauren Thurlow on saxophone, it is the ultimate free community event to shake off the seasonal chill.
Saturday 20 June, 5 pm–8 pm | Carlton Room at Mercure Canberra, Braddon | mercurecanberra.com.au
Musica Vitae: Music for Life
Take a glorious journey through the foundational eras of Western choral music with Wayfarers Australia’s flagship 2026 concert series, Musica Vitae. Led by acclaimed Canberra Musical Director Judith Clingan AM, the eclectic 40-piece choir will harmonise across Medieval, Baroque, Classical, and modern eras, showcasing innovative vocal techniques. The second half features Clingan’s latest major composition, The Prophet, setting Kahlil Gibran’s poetry to an ensemble of strings, woodwind, and percussion. All event proceeds are directly donated to the Love Works Africa charity.
Saturday, 20 June, 6 pm and Sunday, 21 June, 1.30 pm | Orana Steiner School, Weston | events.wayfarersaustralia.org
Canberra Qwire presents Time and Its Passing
Canberra Qwire, a proudly LGBTQIA+ non-auditioned community choir of more than 150 voices, presents Time and its Passing at Llewellyn Hall. The concert brings together choral music exploring the passage of time, opening with works by medieval composer Hildegard of Bingen before moving through more contemporary pieces on the same theme. Joining Qwire for the performance are musicians from the National Capital Orchestra. The choir has been performing on Ngunnawal land for more than 30 years and received a Critics’ Circle Award for their 2025 reimagined production of Purcell’s Dido & Aeneas.
Saturday 20 June, 3 pm | Llewellyn Hall, ANU, Acton | premier.ticketek.com.au
Stage and Screen
Spiders of Paradise: Movement Lab | Quantum Leap
Experience a striking, site-specific contemporary dance performance as Canberra’s premier youth dance ensemble, Quantum Leap, takes over the gallery space at CMAG. Created in direct artistic response to Maria Fernanda Cardoso’s dazzling Spiders of Paradise exhibition, the young dancers bring the mesmerising colour, complex gestures, and rhythmic motions of the Maratus spider to life. Following the “Pay What You Want” performance, children and teens aged 5 to 15 are invited to stick around for an energetic, hands-on physical workshop.
Saturday 20 June, 2 pm (Performance) & 2:30 pm (Workshop) | Canberra Museum + Gallery, Civic Square | cmag.com.au
Steel Magnolias
The beloved, iconic story that made audiences worldwide laugh, cry, and fall in love with six extraordinary women is coming to the Canberra stage. This dazzling new Australian production, written by Robert Harling and directed by Lee Lewis, features a powerhouse cast of six remarkable actors. Step inside Truvy’s vibrant beauty salon, the beating heart of a small town where local women face life’s ultimate highs and lows with sharp wit, courage, and impeccably styled hair. Bursting with Southern charm, sass, and deep warmth, it delivers an unforgettable celebration of the unbreakable bonds of female friendship.
Until Sunday 21 June. Times vary | Canberra Theatre Centre, City | steelmagnoliasplay.com
South African Film Festival 2026 (SAFF)
Launching right into Mandela Month, the eighth annual South African Film Festival delivers a landmark cinematic program across Australia and New Zealand. Affectionately known as “The Festival with a Conscience,” this entirely volunteer-run event kicks off its online and physical season this June. Film highlights include the critically acclaimed Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, the wildlife documentary Pangolin: Journey to Freedom, and box-office smash My Fk Marelize*. Better yet, all festival proceeds go directly toward youth education and mentorship programs via Education Without Borders.
Sunday 21 June until Sunday, 26 July | Online & Selected Cinemas | saff.org.au
Travelling North
Treat yourself to an evening of classic local theatre with a moving homage to love, family, and the older radicals who shaped our national identity. Canberra REP Theatre is staging a fresh amateur production of David Williamson’s Travelling North, a timeless Australian play that explores relationships and mortality during a season of great personal change. The story follows Frank and Frances as they seek a tropical tree change, embarking on a twilight love affair that deeply unsettles their conventional children. It is a beautifully written, emotionally resonant piece that masterfully balances lighthearted humour with genuine, poignant reflection.
Until Saturday 27 June. Times vary | Canberra REP Theatre, City | canberrarep.org.au
The Deep Blue Sea
Chaika Theatre is bringing a fresh, emotionally charged new production of Terence Rattigan’s masterpiece to the Kingston arts scene. Set amidst the post-war austerity of 1950s London, The Deep Blue Sea follows the turbulent journey of Hester Collyer as she navigates a passionate affair with a troubled ex-fighter pilot while facing intense isolation. This compelling interpretation features intimate staging and powerful local performances that capture the raw, complex undercurrents of human relationships. It is a poignant, gripping piece of live theatre that masterfully balances despair with a fierce battle for self-liberation.
Until Saturday 27 June. Times vary | ACT Hub, Kingston | acthub.com.au
Talks and Workshops
Intro to Beadmaking class at Canberra Glassworks
Step inside the historic Kingston precinct and discover the mesmerising art of manipulating molten glass. Led by expert local flameworking artist Sarah Murphy, this hands-on, three-hour introductory workshop teaches you how to thread hot glass over a torch to create your own vibrant beads. You will master specialist tools and learn essential techniques like glass thread creation, pattern application, and proper annealing. Sarah will guide you through her unique style, helping you build confidence in a warm, creative space. It is a wonderfully tactile opportunity to learn a new craft and take home your own handcrafted treasures.
Saturday 20 June, 10.30 am–1.30 pm | Canberra Glassworks, Kingston | canberraglassworks.com
Artists in Conversation: Of Ravens and River
Spend an inspiring winter afternoon at the Pivot Gallery connecting with the creative minds behind three distinct exhibitions. Join prominent local artists Kerry McInnis, Mike MacGregor, Steve Roper, and Brian Hincksman for a relaxed, deep-dive discussion into their individual art practices. Spanning five decades of Australian landscape painting, intricate forged-metal sculpture, experimental ceramics, and deeply philosophical abstract works, this talk offers a brilliant look at how these makers shape their forms and concepts. Entry is completely free, though online registrations are essential.
Saturday 20 June, 2 pm | Belconnen Arts Centre, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Writing in Conversation with Emma Batchelor | Free INFUSE Workshops
As the winter chill officially settles across the capital, it is the perfect time to head indoors and nurture your creative spark. The popular INFUSE workshop series is back for 2026, inviting local art lovers to explore the many ways creativity can take shape through drawing, collage, music, and poetry. This June, acclaimed local author and journalist Emma Batchelor is stepping up to lead a series of three free interactive sessions designed to help Canberrans expand their creative writing practice.
Participants will gain exclusive insight into working creatively across multiple disciplines, focusing on how to develop prose, poetry, or performance writing in response to visual art, decorative craft, and movement. Through guided discussions, observation, and practical exercises, you will explore how completely different art mediums can inspire the rhythm, tone, and energy of your own words. Tailored specifically for adults of all creative skill levels, these sessions offer a warm and deeply supportive space to experiment, play, and connect with fellow local creatives.
The exact same workshop is running on three separate Saturdays throughout the month in three different local hubs, making it incredibly easy to find a session that fits your weekend schedule. While entry is completely free, registrations are highly recommended to secure your spot at the table.
Workshop Schedule:
- Workshop 1 (Belconnen): Saturday 13 June, 12:30 pm–3:30 pm | Generator Gallery, Belco Arts, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen
- Workshop 2 (Gungahlin): Saturday 20 June, 12:30 pm–3:30 pm | Gungaderra Homestead, Gungahlin Arts
- Workshop 3 (Whitlam): Saturday 27 June, 12:30 pm–3:30 pm | Mingle Community Room, Whitlam
Saturday 20 June, 12.30 pm–3.30 pm | Various Locations | belcoarts.com.au
Young Rangers Program
If you have a young nature enthusiast at home eager to explore the great outdoors, the Jerrabomberra Wetlands are calling this Sunday. The Young Rangers Program invites kids aged seven to fifteen to connect with real ACT Parks Rangers and expert guests to develop practical skills in the natural environment. Participants will explore a variety of engaging, nature-based topics, make like-minded friends, and ask plenty of questions along the way. It is a fantastic, hands-on opportunity for children to discover local wildlife habitats, while parents are welcome to tag along for free.
Sunday 21 June, 10 am–12 pm | Jerrabomberra Wetlands Office, Fyshwick | actparks.bookeasy.com
Exhibitions
LAZE
BLAZE is an exciting group exhibition at Canberra Contemporary, featuring 8 emerging artists from the Kamberri/ Canberra region and beyond. Working across diverse mediums to address various themes ranging from identity and autonomy to the significance of today’s algorithmic culture and its effect on socialisation – the artists in BLAZE signal an exciting direction in contemporary visual arts practices today.
Until Saturday 20 June | Canberra Contemporary, 44 Queen Elizabeth Terrace, Parkes | canberracontemporary.com.au
Rematriate by Jessika Spencer
‘Rematriate’ is a feminist, First Nations reimagining of “repatriate,” recentring matriarchal knowledge, cultural care, and Indigenous sovereignty. Through woven banners and textile installations made from secondhand and naturally dyed materials, Jessika Spencer expands her weaving practise into acts of cultural resistance and craft activism. Grounded in sustainability and ancestral practice, the works speak to survival, healing, and the ongoing rematriation of culture back into Indigenous hands.
Until Sunday 21 June | Platform, 19 Furneaux Street, Manuka | canberracontemporary.com.au
Flutterbry: Worlds Beyond Waste
Worlds Beyond Waste invites viewers into a surreal ecosystem built entirely from discarded plastic laundry hamper lids.
Flutterbry transforms everyday waste into mesmerising sculptural forms that feel both organic and architectural, creating a world suspended between the deep ocean and the outer cosmos.
The exhibition will be visible 24/7, offering a different experience by day and by night, with creative lighting and dramatic shadows bringing the works to life.
Based in Canberra, Flutterbry is a visual artist also known to many locals as the former owner of the iconic Toast Bar nightclub (2001–2007).
Sunday 21 June to Monday 17 August | Canberra Museum + Gallery, Civic Square | cmag.com.au
Beata Tworek: The Pensive Beauty of Absence
Warsaw-born and Canberra-based photographer Beata Tworek presents a deeply moving solo exhibition at Q Gallery. The Pensive Beauty of Absence explores the complex concepts of time, memory, and identity through the poignant visual language of cemeteries. Drawing on her visits to historic burial grounds across Australia, the United Kingdom, and Poland, Tworek utilizes expert photography and traditional photogravure—including modern direct-to-plate techniques—to capture the contemplative atmosphere of spaces where the natural world gradually envelops human memory. Tworek brings over 30 years of elite expertise to her practice as a former National Gallery of Australia conservator.
Until Wednesday 25 June. Times vary | Q Gallery, Ainslie | q-gallery.com.au
Painting Itself / 绘画本身
The Drill Hall Gallery at ANU, in partnership with the School of Art & Design Gallery and Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts, presents a thought-provoking international painting exhibition that asks what it means to look for the “face” of a work–that quality in a painting that looks back at its maker. Curated by Jonathan Nichols, Painting Itself / 绘画本身 brings together five painters from Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and China whose practices collectively reshape long-held assumptions about painting’s history and vitality, challenging the dominance of European and American values in the field. A quietly radical and visually compelling exhibition for anyone who takes painting seriously.
Until Sunday, 28 June | Drill Hall Gallery, ANU | drillhallgallery.anu.edu.au
Yvonne Poole: Small Works and Scribbly Gums
Immerse yourself in layered interpretations of place with a stunning exhibition by artist Yvonne Poole at Strathnairn Arts. Inspired by the unique colours, textures, and forms of the Australian environment, this collection brings together two-dimensional and three-dimensional works reflecting on waterways, vegetation, and geological formations. A distinctive aspect of Poole’s practice is the dialogue between painting and ceramics, highlighted by her recognisable Scribbly Gum ceramic pieces. The exhibition also features intimate, 9×5-inch landscape paintings inspired by Australian Impressionists, some beautifully rendered on repurposed, irregularly shaped wooden boards.
Until Sunday, 28 June. Times vary | Strathnairn Arts Homestead Galleries, Holt | strathnairn.com.au
Relics and ruins: Thomas Bucich at Grainger Gallery
Thomas Bucich presents Relics and Ruins at Grainger Gallery in Fyshwick. Drawing on a lifelong practice of collecting talismans, objects and visual memories, the works explore the collision of classical and sacred references with the raw physicality of the human figure and natural landscape. Bucich works across cast bronze, carved stone, manipulated found objects, and works on paper and canvas. A New York native and long-term Australian resident, his commissions include the Thredbo Sculpture Prize and the Moss Vale Veterans War Memorial. The exhibition opens Thursday 11 June at 6 pm, with an artist talk on Saturday 13 June at 2 pm.
Until Sunday 28 June | Grainger Gallery, 1/34 Geelong Street, Fyshwick | graingergallery.com.au
Step Into The Limelight | ‘Break Through’ Exhibition
Now celebrating its milestone 20th year, Step into the Limelight 2026 invites the community to experience ‘Break Through’—a bold and imaginative art exhibition. Spanning three gallery spaces and Chutespace at M16 Artspace, this showcase highlights the immense talent, diverse perspectives, and vivid imaginations of Canberra’s K–12 public school students. From striking abstract interpretations of pushing boundaries to deeply personal reflections on overcoming life’s obstacles, the collection features a dynamic mix of painting, sculpture, digital art, textiles, and mixed media that celebrates the profound value of creative learning.
Until Sunday, 28 June. Times vary | M16 Artspace, Griffith | exhibitions@m16artspace.com
Of Ravens and Rivers: Kerry McInnis and Mike MacGregor
Kerry McInnis and Mike MacGregor are two Canberra artists united by a shared interest in the environment, landscape, wildlife and waterways.
McInnis’s paintings of waterways explore the river as a conduit of life and a metaphor for survival, depicting the interconnectedness between river and earth. MacGregor’s drawings and sculptures juxtapose the forms of Man and the Raven, illustrating the remarkable connection between the two.
Together, their works form a conversation about the natural world and our place within it. Of Ravens and Rivers opens at the Pivot Gallery on Friday 22 May and runs through to 5 July.
Until Sunday 5 July, 10 am–4 pm Tue–Sun | Belconnen Arts Centre, West Gallery, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Abstract Connotations: Brian Hincksman
Brian Hincksman’s Abstract Connotations presents a body of work that pushes back against rapid technological and social change by turning attention to the natural environment. Hincksman’s process moves between contemplation and action, responding to the fluidity of paint through colour, form, tone and varied mark-making. The resulting works aim to inspire respect for common humanity, explore the beauty and power of the natural world, and imagine ways of living in greater harmony with each other.
Until Sunday 5 July, 10 am–4 pm Tue–Sun | Belconnen Arts Centre, West Gallery, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Becoming Now: Barbara Dawson
Barbara Dawson’s Becoming Now uses botanical forms as the central language for exploring the human journey. Across charcoal drawing, stitched textiles and photographic silk pieces, the exhibition examines themes of endurance, presence and emotional resonance–using plants as vessels to reflect lived experience. Dawson’s work explores the tension between strength and vulnerability, suggesting that human experience is layered, evolving, and shaped by connection, memory and time.
Until Sunday 5 July, 10 am–4 pm Tue–Sun | Belconnen Arts Centre, West Gallery, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Dear earth…
Dear earth… is an open A5 unframed exhibition bringing together artists from throughout Australia to explore the concept of “earth”–our home, the environment, soil, land, and all that lives within it. Artists of all ages, viewpoints and levels of experience respond to this theme through drawing, painting, printmaking, photography and mixed media. The resulting collection provokes awareness, dialogue, political activism, experimentation and deep contemplation. Visitors are invited to vote for their favourite work in the People’s Choice Award.
Until Sunday 5 July, 10 am–4 pm Tue–Sun | Belconnen Arts Centre, West Gallery, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Works
Explore the expressive possibilities of line and colour in this exhibition by artist Steve Roper. Featuring a collection of abstract works across pencil, ink, crayon and watercolour, the exhibition reflects an ongoing exploration of form, movement and perception. The pieces invite viewers to interpret shapes and patterns in their own way, creating a personal connection with the work. It’s a thoughtful and quietly engaging showcase that highlights the evolving nature of artistic practice.
Until Sunday 5 July | Belconnen Arts Centre, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Abstract Connotations
This exhibition delves into the relationship between human experience and the natural world through a series of contemporary abstract works. Using colour, form and fluid mark-making, the artist explores themes of change, connection and coexistence. Each piece reflects a balance between contemplation and spontaneity, encouraging viewers to consider their own place within a shifting environment. It’s a visually engaging and reflective exhibition that speaks to both personal and shared experiences.
Until Sunday 5 July | Belconnen Arts Centre, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Becoming Now
Through layered materials and delicate textures, this exhibition reflects on ageing as a process of growth and transformation. Drawing on plant life as a central metaphor, the works explore cycles of change, resilience and renewal. Combining charcoal drawings, stitched textiles and photographic elements, the pieces offer a quiet, contemplative experience. It’s an exhibition that invites viewers to pause and consider the richness of lived experience through both subtle and striking visual forms.
Until Sunday 5 July | Belconnen Arts Centre, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Of Ravens and Rivers
This collaborative exhibition brings together two artists exploring shared themes of landscape, wildlife and connection to place. Through painting, drawing and sculpture, the works reflect on the relationship between natural environments and human experience. From interpretations of river systems to studies of the raven, each piece offers a layered perspective on coexistence and observation. It’s a considered and immersive exhibition that highlights the depth of long-term creative practice.
Until Sunday 5 July | Belconnen Arts Centre, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Works: Steve Roper
Steve Roper’s Works brings together a collection of abstract drawings on paper, made using pencil, crayons, ink and watercolour. Line and colour have long been the foundation of Roper’s practice–he tends to draw with line rather than tone, producing works that are not necessarily representations of things but that may evoke subjects. For Roper, the appeal of abstract art is that it offers anyone the opportunity to experience it and interpret it on their own terms.
Until Sunday 5 July, 10 am–4 pm Tue–Sun | Belconnen Arts Centre, West Gallery, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Good Neighbour
Belconnen Arts Centre presents an offsite group exhibition at SLA Display Village and Innovation Precinct, Whitlam, curated by Brooke McEachern. A printmaker, glass blower, ceramist, mark maker and knifemaker come together celebrating local makers and quiet creative lives unfolding around us. Estelle Briedis, Hugo Curtis, Jacky Lo, Isobel Rayson and Dan Venables live and work in our neighbourhoods as familiar dog-walkers, corner café regulars or simply good neighbours. Through functional objects and considered craftsmanship, the exhibition presents works feeling personal and lived-with, as though gathered over time from friends and neighbours. The collaboration highlights the creative talent existing within everyday community spaces, making visible the artistic practice happening in homes and studios throughout Canberra’s suburbs.
Until Sunday, 13 July | SLA Display Village, Whitlam | belcoarts.com.au
Edge of Presence | Brenda Page
Indulge your cultural curiosity in Civic with a striking new contemporary glass art exhibition. Developed during a creative residency at Canberra Glassworks and expanded in her own studio, artist Brenda Page presents Edge of Presence at Craft + Design Canberra. This beautifully resolved, sculptural body of work utilises the delicate and reflective qualities of glass to examine mortality, transition, and the broader human condition. The exhibition holds a powerful space for stillness and quiet pause, inviting viewers to contemplate what shapes us thoughtfully, what we carry through life, and how we might gracefully meet our endings.
Until Saturday 18 July. Times vary | Craft + Design Canberra, City | craftanddesigncanberra.org
[Un]common Ground: Paul Davis & Jacqueline Clayton
Immerse yourself in a sophisticated new exhibition at the Canberra Potters Gallery showcasing internationally recognised ceramic artists and 2026 Artists-in-Residence, Paul Davis and Jacqueline Clayton. Operating together as StudioJam—celebrated for crafting custom culinary ceramics for world-class restaurants like Quay, Bennelong, and Noma Australia—this exhibition highlights their distinct individual practices. Rooted in shared histories of elite training across Japan and Australia, the works offer a deep contemporary exploration of raw material, process, and place. The official opening preview on Thursday evening is hosted by Minister Yamaguchi of the Embassy of Japan.
Until Sunday 19 July | Canberra Potters Gallery, Watson Arts Centre | canberrapotters.com.au
Group Exhibition: Iltja Ntjarra Art Centre and Jordan Benson
A remarkable cross-cultural dialogue opens at Canberra Glassworks in Kingston, bringing together Iltja Ntjarra Many Hands Art Centre artists Vanessa, Kathy, Dellina and Raelene Inkamala from Mparntwe (Alice Springs) alongside Melbourne-based artist Jordan Benson. The exhibition celebrates the enduring watercolour legacy of Albert Namatjira while placing it in conversation with Benson’s contemporary approach to traditional stained glass techniques. Together, they explore light, colour and transparency across two very different mediums – an expansion of their celebrated collaboration for the National Indigenous Art Triennial at the National Gallery of Australia. A genuinely special and culturally rich exhibition.
Until Friday 26 July | Canberra Glassworks, Kingston | canberraglassworks.com
Through the Window: Iltja Ntjarra Art Centre and Jordan Benson
A rich cross-cultural dialogue opens in the main gallery at Canberra Glassworks in Kingston, expanding on a celebrated collaboration first seen at the National Gallery of Australia’s National Indigenous Art Triennial. Artists Vanessa, Kathy, Dellina and Raelene Inkamala from Iltja Ntjarra Many Hands Art Centre in Mparntwe (Alice Springs) bring the enduring watercolour legacy of Albert Namatjira into conversation with Melbourne-based Jordan Benson’s contemporary approach to traditional stained glass techniques. Together they explore light, colour and transparency across two very different mediums, sharing skills and stories in an exhibition that honours culture while engaging boldly with the present.
Until Sunday 26 July | Canberra Glassworks, Kingston | canberraglassworks.com
Ngura Puḻka–Epic Country
One of the most ambitious exhibitions to open at the National Gallery of Australia this year, Ngura Puḻka–Epic Country showcases major works by senior First Nations artists and collectives from the APY Lands, Coober Pedy, and Adelaide. These large-scale paintings depict Country while celebrating the powerful Tjukurpa–the law and cultural stories–that lies within, rendered sometimes in explosions of colour, sometimes in muted, contemplative palettes. From the beginning of the APY art movement, these artists have embraced monumental works as the ultimate expression of cultural freedom. The result is an exhibition that is genuinely epic in both scale and significance.
Until Sunday, 23 August | National Gallery of Australia, Parkes | nga.gov.au
Trent Parke: The Christmas tree bucket
Trent Parke’s photographic series The Christmas tree bucket 2006–09 is a tender and darkly humorous portrayal of his extended family coming together to celebrate Christmas. The series showcases Parke’s distinctive and acclaimed visual style and his skilful use of light and colour, to transcendent effect.The Christmas tree bucket is a candid, unsettling and often absurd portrait of family life—centred on the chaos, rituals and contradictions of the suburban Australian Christmas. It is a fond, insider’s view—sharp but affectionate—and one that the participants, after initial bemusement, actively embraced.
Parke draws from the legacy of postwar American photography while retaining a distinctly personal visual language, using light and colour to transform the everyday. The resulting photographs are both intimate and theatrical, sometimes hilarious, sometimes poetic and haunting. The exhibition also features a small selection of work from Parke’s black-and-white series Minutes to midnight 2003‒04 and a number of his handmade concertina photobooks, which he sees as a central part of his practice.
Until Sunday 6 September | National Gallery, Parkes Place East, Parkes | nga.gov.au
2XX People-Powered Radio: Celebrating 50 Years
For five decades, 2XX has carried the distinct voices, grassroots politics, and community stories of the capital over the airwaves. This winter, the Canberra Museum + Gallery (CMAG) is marking this massive milestone with a brand-new exhibition celebrating Canberra’s very first community radio station and the passionate people who shaped it. Tracing its evolution from its early beginnings as Radio ANU in 1976 to a modern broadcasting pillar, the exhibition brings together archival audio, vintage equipment, photographs, and vibrant, screen-printed posters made in collaboration with Megalo. Visitors can even step back in time inside a faithfully recreated 1970s and 1980s radio studio to listen to historic broadcast excerpts. It is a nostalgic, physical celebration of local music, multicultural programming, and the independent media movements that helped define modern Canberra.
Until Sunday 6 September | Canberra Museum + Gallery, Civic Square | cmag.com.au
Wangka Wakaṉutja: the story of the Papunya Literature Production Centre
Between 1979 and 1990, the Papunya Literature Production Centre produced hundreds of illustrated bilingual books–funny, moving, extraordinary documents of Pintupi-Luritja language and culture, guided by community Elders who were also pioneers of the Western Desert art movement. Many of those books have been held in the National Library’s collections ever since, and this landmark new exhibition finally brings them to life. Featuring stories, drawings, photographs, manuscripts, and oral histories drawn from multiple collections, it’s a profoundly significant celebration of Aboriginal literary culture, collective creativity, and the remarkable human effort to keep language alive across generations.
Until Sunday, 11 October | National Library of Australia, Parkes | library.gov.au/whats-on/exhibitions/wangka-wakanutja
Rear Vision: The Holden Collection
Take a nostalgic drive through the history of an absolute Australian icon with Rear vision: the Holden collection at the National Archives. This fascinating exhibition traces Holden’s journey from a humble 19th-century saddlery to ‘Australia’s Own Car’ and its permanent impact on the nation’s economy, industrial landscape, and cultural identity. Visitors can explore historical archival records, rare artifacts, blueprints, and photographs that reveal the innovations, challenges, and people behind General Motors-Holden. Developed by the State Library of South Australia and expanded with national records, the exhibition also offers daily gallery talks.
Until Sunday 11 October | National Archives of Australia, Parkes | naa.gov.au
Hop In! an immersive world of play
Canberra Museum and Gallery launches one of its most delightful exhibitions this April–and it’s designed for the youngest visitors. Hop In! turns the familiar family home inside out, shifting rooms in scale and perspective to invite children aged 3–12 to move, build, crawl, splash, and imagine in surprising new ways. Stretch out beneath a sky of clouds, create secret worlds under oversized furniture, or wander through reimagined kitchens and backyards where creativity has completely taken over. At the heart of the experience is Bunny Dearest, a gentle guiding companion created by artist Beci Orpin.
Until Sunday, 11 October | Canberra Museum and Gallery, London Circuit, Canberra | cmag.com.au
Illuminate: How Science Comes to Light
Questacon presents an interactive exhibition exploring the science of light through 13 hands-on exhibits. Visitors can experiment with light refraction, colour blending, shadow manipulation and reflection across multiple activity stations. The exhibition demonstrates how light travels, reflects and refracts, alongside displays of tools humans have developed to harness light. Activities include bending light, using sensors to create music, and working with lenses. The exhibition is designed for hands-on engagement with scientific concepts. Illuminate: How Science Comes to Light is a Museums Victoria Touring Exhibition running until November 2026.
Until Sunday, 22 November | Questacon–The National Science and Technology Centre, King Edward Terrace, Parkes | questacon.edu.au
Behind the Lines 2025: ‘Are We Rolling?’
Behind the Lines 2025: ‘Are We Rolling?’ celebrates the year’s best political cartoons.
Featuring established and emerging cartoonists from across Australia, this exhibition highlights the significant contribution they make to cultural and political debates through witty, insightful and often poignant satirical drawings.
This year our Behind the Lines theme is the cinema, acknowledging that, like some of our favourite movies, 2025 has been full of thrills and spills, romance and heartbreak, with plenty of unexpected plot twists. Australia’s cartoonists and illustrators have tackled many of the issues that made news, including the federal election, the cost of living, energy policy, interest rates, housing security, the economy, climate change and stories from overseas.
Until December 2026 | Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House | moadoph.gov.au
Gurindji Freedom Banners
A powerful new exhibition commemorating the pivotal 1966 Wave Hill Walk-off opens at the Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House. Gurindji Freedom Banners: Mumkurla-nginyi-ma parrngalinyparla–From the darkness into the light unites all ten hand-painted banners for the first time in years, telling the story of when Gurindji and neighbouring peoples, led by Vincent Lingiari AM, walked off Wave Hill Station on 23 August 1966.
Their demands for fair working conditions and return of traditional lands sparked landmark change, leading to the first handback of Aboriginal land in 1975 and paving the way for the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1976. The textile banners were created in 2000 by 35 Gurindji people, many walk-off participants, with one recently recreated after going missing.
Now showing until late 2026 | Museum of Australian Democracy, Old Parliament House | moadoph.gov.au
Know My Name: Kee, Jackson and Delaunay
Know My Name: Kee, Jackson and Delaunay showcases two of Australia’s leading fashion designers: Linda Jackson and Jenny Kee, in conversation with international, multidisciplinary artist Sonia Delaunay (1885–1979).
The iconic and vibrant early designs of Kee and Jackson from the 1970s and early 1980s were directly inspired by the dynamic legacy of Delaunay, who was a member of the School of Paris and co-founder of Orphism, an art movement noted for its use of intense colours and abstract, geometric forms. As well as working in traditional mediums such as painting and printmaking, Delaunay’s practice also included textile, fashion, and theatre design.
For Jackson and Kee, who were beginning their shared journey in creating clothes as works of art, the discovery of Delaunay was revolutionary. This powerful display feature a rarely-seen collection of Kee and Jackson’s garments from their archives and are shown with the National Gallery’s collection of Delaunay’s prints, drawings, textiles and costumes.
Showing now | National Gallery of Australia, Parkes Place East, Parkes | nga.gov.au
National Library of Australia Treasures Gallery
The National Library has millions of books, and the Treasures Gallery answers the frequently asked question, ‘Where are they’. They also collect other items. From maps and manuscripts to photographs and paintings, the Treasures Gallery is where you can find highlights from their vast physical and digital collections. Behind-the-scenes videos, pages from William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice from the First Folio, a cedar bookcase carved by Dorothea Mackellar, photographs from the nation’s photo album, and a display of The Wiggles’ websites from 1997 to today from the Australian Web Archive are among the new additions.
Until December 2030 | National Library of Australia, Parkes | library.gov.au
Illustra: 50 Women for 50 Years
Illustra: 50 Women for 50 Years is a permanent portrait exhibition celebrating 50 years of women as residents at John XXIII College. Featuring fifty alumni, the exhibition pairs portraiture with personal reflections to capture the evolving experience of women across five decades. Photographed by ANU School of Art graduate Bronte Morel across Australia and internationally, each work is set in a location of personal significance. Together, the collection forms an intergenerational narrative of leadership, identity and community, recognising the enduring contribution of women to the College and beyond.
Permanent exhibition, open 9 am–5 pm daily | Front foyer, John XXIII College, 51 Daley Road, Australian National University, Canberra | johnxxiii.anu.edu.au