Merry Christmas week! Here’s what’s happening in Canberra
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Whether you’ve been dragging yourself to the finish line or counting down the days, we’ve finally made it to the week of Christmas.
And to help you celebrate, there’s still plenty happening in Canberra. From a special Capital Region Farmers Market on Christmas Eve to the final days of Christmas in the City, here’s all the festive fun happening around town.
Don’t miss…
Christmas in the City
Celebrate Christmas in the heart of Canberra with Christmas in the City! Wander through local favourites to look for unique gifts, enjoy long meals with loved ones, and explore the festive activities filling the City Centre. From seasonal treats to family-friendly moments and everything in between, it’s the perfect place to enjoy the season and make new memories. Make sure to visit the website to see what’s happening.
Until Wednesday 24 December | Civic, Canberra | inthecity.com.au/christmasinthecity
Capital Region Farmers Market
Don’t miss this special Christmas Eve Market at EPIC! You’ll find the best of the best of Christmas produce, including Christmas Trees, puddings, minced tarts, baked goods, seafood, meat, cherries, peaches, apricots, bananas, vegetables, honey, dairy and gifts galore!
Wednesday 24 December, 7 am – 11.30 am | Old Well Station Road, Mitchell | capitalregionfarmersmarket.com.au
NFSA Summer Film Series
Arc Cinema presents A Summer of Love, a bold cinematic journey through peace, love and revolution from the 1960s to 2025. The program features films exploring love in chaotic, charming and complicated forms, from documentary Whoopee Blues: The Life and Times of the Conway Brothers to holiday favourite Love Actually.
Highlights include Tennessee Williams spotlight featuring A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Cyberpunk series with Blade Runner and The Matrix, European Avant-Garde program, and school holiday matinees featuring animal adventures.
December 2025 to February 2026 | NFSA Arc Cinema, Acton | nfsa.gov.au
Heaven’s Gate
The Australian premiere of Heaven’s Gate, a video installation by internationally acclaimed artist Marco Brambilla. Free to the public, the work fuses Hollywood glamour and contemporary culture.
The latest chapter in Brambilla’s Megaplex series exploring modern spectacle and excess, Heaven’s Gate takes viewers on a vivid cinematic journey through collaged film imagery featuring Beyoncé, Audrey Hepburn, Leonardo DiCaprio and Christopher Walken. The installation creates a multifaceted dreamscape blurring celebration and critique.
This immersive audiovisual experience continues through March 2026.
Until Sunday, 9 March | National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, McCoy Circuit, Acton | nfsa.gov.au
Hallyu! The Korean Wave
An exhibition exploring Korea’s cultural journey to global influence through 250 objects from the V&A in London. The exhibition spans film, fashion, drama, beauty and music–from BTS to aespa, Squid Game to Parasite, glass skin to bibimbap. Visitors can discover the powerhouse behind Korea’s dramatic cultural transformation and the vibrant world of K-culture as it continues to sweep across the globe. The exhibition examines how creativity, collaboration and cultural ambition shaped Korea’s contemporary identity. Opening 12 December with celebrations including an opening party, the exhibition runs through May 2026.
Until Sunday, 10 May | National Museum of Australia, Lawson Crescent, Acton Peninsula, Acton | nma.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 2030 | National Library of Australia, Parkes | library.gov.au
Festive Fun
The Christmas Spectacular
An extravaganza of music, circus, dance and magic celebrating Christmas joy and excitement. The show pays tribute to Radio City Rockettes and The Nutcracker with a kaleidoscope of Christmas songs, dances and world-class variety performers. The Voice finalist and musical theatre sensation Prinnie Stevens takes audiences on a musical journey through Christmas classics, from traditional songs to Mariah Carey favourites, performed with her unique style. Santa and his friends join the celebration in this spectacular show designed to ignite the holiday spirit. Multiple performances across two days allow audiences to experience this festive theatrical production.
Monday, 22 December–Tuesday, 23 December | Canberra Theatre Centre, London Circuit, Canberra | canberratheatrecentre.com.au
Free merry-go-round rides in Garema Place
Civic’s iconic merry-go-round is offering unlimited free rides. Whether you’ve got little ones who want to ride a dozen times or you fancy a nostalgic spin yourself, this is the kind of simple joy that makes Christmas special.
Until Wednesday 24 December | Garema Place, City | inthecity.com.au/christmasinthecity
Christmas at Canberra Outlet
Canberra Outlet is spreading festive cheer throughout December with daily Santa meet-and-greets from Monday 1 to Wednesday 24 December, running from 11 am to 2 pm outside Decjuba and Kathmandu. No bookings needed – just stop by for free festive photos on your own device, with a dedicated Christmas Helper on hand to capture the perfect moment.
From Thursday 18 to Wednesday 24 December, the magic continues with a sleigh photo moment, where the first 100 guests each day will receive a free Gingerbread Plush keychain – an adorably cute keepsake to remember your Christmas visit.
Pet parents can also get in on the festive fun with Pet Santa Sessions on Wednesday 10, Friday 12, and Wednesday 17 December – these free sessions welcome pets of all shapes and sizes to meet Santa and snap a festive photo, with all donations supporting the RSPCA.
Adding to the seasonal atmosphere, live performances will fill The HUB with Christmas spirit. The Brindabella Chorus delivers stunning harmonies on Sunday 14 and 21 December at 11 am, whilst the Youth Girls Choir brings bright and beautiful Christmas melodies on Saturday 20 December at 11 am.
Until Wednesday 24 December | Canberra Outlet Centre, Iron Knob Street, Fyshwick | canberraoutlet.com.au
National Zoo and Aquarium Boxing Day Weekend
Start the holidays with a celebration of festive family fun. Across the weekend, the Zoo offers live music, lawn games, and special eats that the whole family will enjoy.
Guests can spend their visit discovering the zoo’s animals, enjoying the entertainment or relaxing on the grass with friends and family. With wagyu burgers and sausages to a selection of freshly baked goods from Zoo Conservation volunteers, there is a treat for everyone to enjoy. Entertainment and games are included with admission and are free for members, creating a memorable day out.
All programming is dependent on weather, and updates are shared through the zoo’s socials.
26 & 27 December, 10 am–3 pm | National Zoo and Aquarium | nationalzoo.com.au
Food and Wine
Jazz on the Rocks
Every Tuesday, Molly becomes the heartbeat of Canberra’s jazz scene with live performances featuring the city’s most talented local musicians. These intimate evenings pair smooth, custom-made sounds with favourite tipples, creating the perfect atmosphere for jazz enthusiasts and casual listeners alike.
Whether you’re seeking a sophisticated mid-week escape or simply love the authentic atmosphere that live jazz creates, these Tuesday night sessions offer exactly the kind of genuine musical experience that reflects Canberra’s thriving arts culture. The intimate setting ensures every performance feels personal and immediate.
Tuesdays until 29 December 2026 | Molly, Odgers Lane, City | molly.bar
Havana Nights
Highball transforms Wednesday nights into a sultry Latin celebration that proves the weekend doesn’t have to wait until Friday. Live Latin beats fill the air while luxe cocktail specials flow freely, creating the kind of midweek energy that turns an ordinary evening into something special.
The lineup changes weekly, ensuring each visit offers fresh musical discoveries, while the free entry removes any barriers to joining the fun. Whether you’re dancing the night away or lounging with friends over expertly crafted cocktails, these Havana-inspired evenings offer Canberrans a taste of sultry sophistication in the middle of the work week. The sparkling atmosphere and guaranteed good times make every Wednesday feel like a celebration.
Wednesdays, until 24 December | Highball, 77 London Circuit, Canberra | highball.bar
Twilight in the Gardens
Twilight in the Gardens returns to Hyatt Hotel Canberra’s historic Rose Courtyard gardens. Settle into the weekend with Friday afternoon cocktails by St-Germaine, a live grill, acoustic music and garden games in the beautiful heritage setting. The weekly event provides a relaxed atmosphere for after-work drinks and socialising as the week winds down. The Rose Courtyard’s historic gardens create an elegant backdrop for Friday evening gatherings, combining quality cocktails with live acoustic entertainment. Garden games add playful element to the sophisticated setting. The three-hour session allows flexible arrival and departure times, making it ideal for quick drinks or extended Friday evening socialising in one of Canberra’s most beautiful hotel settings.
Every Friday, 5 pm – 8 pm | Hyatt Hotel Canberra, 20 Commonwealth Avenue, Yarralumla | hyatt.com
Stage and Screen
NFSA Restores: Summer Series at the NFSA
Matinee screenings of Australian classic films restored by the NFSA. The NFSA Restores program digitises, restores and preserves classic and cult Australian films at the highest archival standards for screening in today’s digital cinemas. The collection belongs to all Australians but requires constant care as films, tapes, recordings, photographs and costumes deteriorate over time. The summer series offers families and film enthusiasts the opportunity to experience these restored classics on the big screen during the holiday period. Multiple screenings scheduled throughout late December and early January provide accessible daytime viewing options.
Saturday, 27 December–Saturday, 3 January | National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, McCoy Circuit, Acton | tickets.nfsa.gov.au
Music
Lunchulele
Every Monday lunchtime, ukulele players mysteriously appear at Smith’s Alternative. Some wear lanyards, some work boots, and some the faint smugness of retirement. They arrive on foot, by scooter, via the accessibility ramp or with their carer. Some are beginners and some used to be, because an hour or so a week makes amazing progress. Specialising in coffee-fuelled fractured harmonies, avocado-toast powered asynchronous rhythms and songs from every decade and almost every genre, Lunchulele welcomes everyone. This weekly gathering provides a relaxed, inclusive environment for ukulele players at all skill levels to connect, practice and perform together over lunch.
Monday, 22 December | Smith’s Alternative, 76 Alinga Street, Canberra | smithsalternative.com
Exhibitions
Super Kaylene Whiskey
Super Kaylene Whiskey celebrates one of Australia’s leading contemporary artists, proud Yankunytjatjara woman Kaylene Whiskey. This major survey brings together works from across Whiskey’s career, showcasing her dynamic practice that is grounded in stories of First Nations joy and strength. Drawn from public and private collections, the exhibition features over 80 paintings, video work and installation from her early career to now, as well as a newly commissioned portrait.
With irreverent humour, Whiskey playfully combines everyday life, Aṉangu culture and beloved pop culture icons in her work. Dolly Parton, Cher and Wonder Woman share centre stage with Whiskey and other strong kungkas (women) as together they hunt and collect bush tucker. Through her rich visual stories, Whiskey joyfully connects cultures, Country and celebrity and invites us along for the ride.
Until Monday 9 March 2026 | National Portrait Gallery, Parkes | portrait.gov.au
Questacon Presents: ZAP! CLANK! POW!
Featuring a new take on some old favourites from the past three decades, this exhibition might have been designed with little scientists in mind, but trust us when we say everyone will enjoy a visit to ZAP! CLANK! POW! at Questacon.
Featuring 17 highly interactive exhibits, you’ll get hands-on as you explore the exciting world of electricity, machines, and motion. And with a comic book theme running throughout, it will keep all ages entertained.
Until Sunday 1 February 2026 | Questacon, King Edward Terrace, Parkes | questacon.edu.au
1975: Living in the Seventies
Step back 50 years and immerse yourself in the unforgettable year that was 1975! The National Library of Australia’s fascinating new exhibition explores what it was truly like to live in the seventies, from the dramatic political upheaval of Gough Whitlam’s dismissal to the cultural phenomena that defined the decade.
Discover iconic fashion like flared jeans and platform shoes, relive the magic of Countdown’s glam rockers Skyhooks and ABBA’s infectious pop, and explore groundbreaking Australian films like Picnic at Hanging Rock. This colourful celebration brings together objects exploring politics, conflicts, popular culture, food, fashion, and sport in iconic seventies design, revealing a complex story beyond Baby Boomer nostalgia.
Until Monday 9 March 2026 | National Library of Australia, Parkes Place, Canberra | library.gov.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
subcultures
subcultures is an open exhibition curated by Red Saunders bringing to light the rich tapestry of alternative identities, communities and expressions flourishing outside mainstream society. From punk and goth to skateboarding and street art, creators from across Australia celebrate the creativity, resistance and innovation of those carving out spaces of belonging in subversive ways. Through painting, photography, illustration and collage, subcultures reflects on how fashion, music, political ideals and shared lifestyles converge to create powerful subcultural identities. This diverse exhibition captures unique aesthetic markers and stories of solidarity, marginalisation and rebellion, paying tribute to underground movements challenging the status quo and enriching cultural landscapes.
Until Saturday, 1 February 2026 | West Gallery, Belconnen Arts Centre, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Dialogue with Dissonance
An exhibition exploring the human disposition to live with contradiction. Local artists working in a range of media and approaches interpret the disparity between what is seen and what is expected. The series considers how people express themselves collectively and individually by creating tension through different forms, relationships and meaning. Viewers only see completed artworks, observing them with their own internal attitudes, behaviours and unconscious bias. What goes on behind the scenes–concept, composition, colour choices, deciding when a work is finished–manifests in the audience’s decision to stop and make sense. Through dissonance, audiences develop thought-provoking experiences tapping into human desire to make order from disorder.
Until Saturday, 1 February 2026 | Pivot Gallery, Belconnen Arts Centre, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Disclosed Impressions
New works by the Migrant Women’s Art Group highlighting diverse artistic contributions in Gungahlin. These culturally relevant works explore colour, composition and personal stories using wide variety of mediums and techniques. The Migrant Women’s Art Group, presented by Gungahlin Arts, supports women who have migrated to Australia and live in the Canberra region to develop and share their unique creative voice. Throughout 2025, the group has worked with textiles, wearable art, sculpture, drawing and painting. This exhibition presents a snapshot of session outcomes and a record of social connections and relationships developed through the program celebrating cultural diversity through art.
Until Saturday, 1 February 2026 | Window Gallery, Belconnen Arts Centre, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
The Art of Celebration: Reflecting 50 years plus of Canberra Art Workshop
Canberra Art Workshop celebrates over 50 years of art making. This exhibition enables diverse and talented CAW members to celebrate their enthusiasm for art by sharing it with others through public exhibition. BelcoArts’ annual single-subject exhibition is advertised well in advance, with members responding in a variety of media and techniques. Working with BelcoArts allows CAW members to dialogue with a wide ACT and regional New South Wales audience. Be surprised and delighted at the rich array of works this talented group brings. Expect experimental and traditional art using wide range of media–drawing, painting, pastel, mixed media, watercolour in two-dimensional, three-dimensional and digital formats.
Until Saturday, 1 February 2026 | Generator Gallery, Belconnen Arts Centre, 118 Emu Bank, Belconnen | belcoarts.com.au
Skin Deep by Gabriella Bisetto
Canberra Glassworks concludes its 2025 exhibition program with a major solo exhibition by Adelaide-based glass artist Gabriella Bisetto, winner of the 2024 Tom Malone Glass Prize. Curated by Margaret Hancock, Skin Deep invites viewers to consider how beauty resides in imperfection.
Bisetto’s sculptural forms carry quiet evidence of their making–heated, cooled, slumped, scarred and pressed into being. Like human skin, every blemish and fine cut becomes an intimate record of contact, making visible the coexistence of fragility and endurance.
Bisetto interprets mechanisms and ideologies of the human body through blown glass, hot sculpting and collaborative making. Her influence is visible in the next generation of celebrated glass artists including Yhonnie Scarce, Jessica Murtagh and Liam Fleming.
Until Saturday, 25 January 2026 | Canberra Glassworks, Kingston | canberraglassworks.com
Masked Memory by Rosalind Lemoh
Canberra Contemporary presents new works by NSW-based Sierra Leonean-born artist Rosalind Lemoh focusing on personal cultural objects from her family home. The exhibition reflects on her connection to Mende and Themne cultures from West Africa, bringing the African diaspora in Australia into focus. Lemoh threads together ideas of arrival, cultural masking, shifting senses of place and the blending of myth, fact and fiction through family storytelling.
Spanning sculpture and photography, the works continue her practice of using memorial and remembering to understand present and future identities. This thought-provoking exhibition explores fragility, power and gender through sculptural assemblage influenced by Arte Povera and Confessional Art.
Until 24 January 2026 | Canberra Contemporary | canberracontemporary.com.au
Australia’s Home Front: 1939-1945
Explore everyday Australians’ vital role during WWII on the home front, from “make do and mend” to war bonds and women’s auxiliary work. Features unique objects and stories from Canberra and beyond, including the city’s surprising Manhattan Project connection. Presents resilience, innovation, and quiet heroism of those who supported the war effort, marking 80 years since the conflict’s end.
Until 1 February 2026 | Canberra Museum + Gallery, 176 London Circuit, Canberra | cmag.com.au
Taglietti: Life in Design
Discover the world of The Global Architect, Enrico Taglietti (1926–2019), a visionary whose design principles shaped modern Australian architecture and left an indelible imprint on Canberra, the city he and his wife Franca chose to call home. Celebrating the centenary of Taglietti’s birth, Taglietti: Life in Design explores the life, philosophy, and legacy of one of Australia’s most original architects.
Until Sunday 22 February 2026 | Canberra Museum + Gallery, 176 London Circuit, City | cmag.com.au
Enjoy this trip: the art of music posters
Journey back to the Summer of Love and be transported to a time when the music was funky, the art was kaleidoscopic and psychedelia was in full swing. Drawn from the National Gallery’s expansive collection of Australian and international music posters spanning the 1960s to 1980s, Enjoy this trip: The art of music posters captures the spirit of the times as an era of experimentation.
Until Sunday 22 February 2026 | National Gallery, Parkes Place East, Parkes | nga.gov.au
Women Photographers 1853–2018
Women Photographers 1853–2018 highlights the transformative impact of women artists on the history of photography.
Since its inception, the National Gallery’s photography collection has reflected the vital place of women in the medium’s history. Some of its earliest acquisitions were major works by women.
As a result, the National Gallery is uniquely placed to consider how photography has changed the worlds in which women live, and how women have changed photography. As the great modernist photographer Lucia Moholy wrote, ‘Photography has not only changed the way we see the world but also how we see ourselves.’ For women artists, making photographs has always been an act of resistance. Photography has given women access to spaces of knowledge, artistic practices and technology from which they were previously excluded.
This exhibition features work spanning more than 160 years of women working with photography.
Until Sunday 1 March | National Gallery, Parkes Place East, Parkes | nga.gov.au
A Total Work of Art: Sidney Nolan and the Stage
Celebrate 50 years of Nolan’s cultural legacy with the Canberra Museum and Gallery’s year-long program of exhibitions, concerts, talks, and a symposium. A Total Work of Art: Sidney Nolan and the Stage showcases Sidney Nolan’s dynamic stage designs for opera, ballet, and theatre. You’ll discover costumes, set designs, and the iconic “Lyrebird” costume from The Display, 1964.
Until Sunday 8 March 2026 | Canberra Museum + Gallery, City | More information here.
1975: Living in the Seventies
Step back 50 years and immerse yourself in the unforgettable year that was 1975! The National Library of Australia’s fascinating new exhibition explores what it was truly like to live in the seventies, from the dramatic political upheaval of Gough Whitlam’s dismissal to the cultural phenomena that defined the decade.
Discover iconic fashion like flared jeans and platform shoes, relive the magic of Countdown’s glam rockers Skyhooks and ABBA’s infectious pop, and explore groundbreaking Australian films like Picnic at Hanging Rock. This colourful celebration brings together objects exploring politics, conflicts, popular culture, food, fashion, and sport in iconic seventies design, revealing a complex story beyond Baby Boomer nostalgia.
Until Monday 9 March 2026 | National Library of Australia, Parkes Place, Canberra | library.gov.au
50 Years on the Beat: The Legacy of Constable Kenny Koala
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Constable Kenny Koala, the AFP Museum presents a major temporary exhibition honouring the iconic community policing mascot held at the National Capital Exhibition, Regatta Point.
Known for educating children about safety since 1975, Kenny Koala is beloved by generations of Canberrans. This exhibition captures his origins, evolution, and ongoing impact on public trust and community engagement. Visitors will experience five decades of memorabilia, puppets, costumes, media, and interactive learning tools that showcase the enduring values of kindness, education, and public service.
Until Wednesday 18 March 2026 | National Capital Exhibition, Regatta Point | nca.gov.au
A Loving City: Queerberra Revisited
A Loving City: Queerberra Revisited explores love, identity and resilience within Canberra’s LGBTQIA+ community. In 2017, photographer Jane Duong and producer Victoria Firth-Smith created Queerberra to document queer Canberrans during the national postal vote on marriage equality. Over 100 portraits captured moments of pride, exhaustion, defiance and hope when love itself was publicly debated. Eight years later, this exhibition returns to those portraits to reflect on personal growth, community strength and the enduring power of love. The exhibition invites visitors to consider progress made and work remaining in the city that voted yes more strongly than any other in Australia.
Until Saturday, 5 April 2026 | Canberra Museum + Gallery, 176 London Circuit, Canberra | cmag.com.au
In Bloom
In Bloom explores the beauty and symbolism of flowers. Featuring more than 50 portraits from the National Portrait Gallery collection, new acquisitions and selected loans, you will discover how flowers have long been used in art to express emotion and convey messages of personal, cultural and religious significance.
The show is a weird and wonderful floral extravaganza that includes much-loved and lesser-known works from the collection. See socialites, chefs, musicians, actors, doctors and politicians who are all unified by their accompanying floral markers.
Until Sunday 19 April 2026 | National Portrait Gallery, King Edward Terrace, Parkes | portrait.gov.au
Bilong Papua New Guinea: 50 years of Independence
Bilong Papua New Guinea marks the 50th anniversary of Papua New Guinea’s independence and the birth of a new nation on September 16, 1975. The National Gallery holds the largest collection of Papua New Guinea urban art outside the country. Each of the works selected for Bilong Papua New Guinea presents a story, reflecting on cultural heritage, historical moments, the influence of ancestors, Christianity, kastom, societal changes and new technologies.
Until Sunday 19 April 2026 | National Gallery, Parkes Place East, Parkes | nga.gov.au
5th National Indigenous Art Triennial
The National Indigenous Art Triennial brings together commissioned work by established and emerging First Nations artists from across Australia. Artistic Director Tony Albert (Girramay/Yidinji/Kuku-Yalanji peoples), one of Australia’s foremost contemporary artists, leads this iteration. After the Rain presents new immersive projects resonating with ideas of rebirth and cycles of cleansing, celebrating inter-generational legacies and cultural warriors of past, present and future. Made possible through the continued generosity of Wesfarmers Arts and key philanthropic supporters, the Triennial creates an important platform for art and ideas. Following its Kamberri/Canerra presentation, After the Rain will tour nationally.
Until Saturday, 26 April 2026 | National Gallery of Australia, Parkes Place East, Parkes | nga.gov.au
In real life: inventors, innovators and opportunists
Celebrate Australian innovation at National Archives’ latest exhibition in Canberra, In real life: inventors, innovators and opportunists. Explore the history of Australian invention, from First Nations creativity to 150 years of patents, designs and trademark registrations.
See life-changing inventions, iconic designs and household brand names with original design drawings and trademarks from the national archival collection alongside their real-life counterparts.
Australians from all walks of life have pursued their ideas in the laboratory, at the drafting table and in the humble backyard shed. Learn about the innovators behind advances such as the baby capsule, spray-on skin and the stump-cam. Discover the origins of everyday products and national icons such as the Victa lawnmower, Hills Hoist and ‘goon bag’.
From pedestrian crossing buttons to dual flush toilets, see how the Australian Government played a vital role in supporting inventions and designs that you regularly see, hear, use – and flush. Spark your own imagination and be inspired by stories of bold dreams, determination and Australian ingenuity.
Until 17 May 2026 | National Archives of Australia, Kings Avenue, Parkes | naa.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 2026 | National Gallery, Parkes Place East, Parkes | nga.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
Reflection: 50 Years of the Australian Honours System
Discover the remarkable story of Australia’s honours system through a fascinating exhibition at the Royal Australian Mint. “Reflection” celebrates five decades of recognising extraordinary Australians, featuring original medal sketches by Stuart Devlin, finished medals, and commemorative coins from the National Coin Collection.
Explore the journey from design concept to final recognition, including the 2003 Volunteers Fine Silver Proof Set, Afghanistan Medal displays, and stunning wattle-themed collectables. This free exhibition honors over 500,000 Australians who have contributed to our nation’s spirit.
Now open | Royal Australian Mint, Deakin | Free entry | ramint.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