Melbourne: Art Gallery
Places and attractions in the Art gallery category
Categories
- Shopping
- Museum
- Park
- Shopping centre
- Street
- Area
- Church
- Art museum
- Bike path
- Cycling
- Theater
- Bridge
- History museum
- Concerts and shows
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Skyscraper
- Historical place
- Nightlife
- City hall
- Specialty museum
- Shopping district
- Art gallery
- Garden
- Arenas and stadiums
- Architecture
- Music venue
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Concert hall
- Universities and schools
- City
- Cemetery
- Library
- Memorial
- Performing arts
- Modern art museum
- Lake
- Sacred and religious sites
- Music and shows
- Golf
- Cinema
- Monuments and statues
- Market
- Mosque
- Neighbourhood
- Climbing
- Piers and boardwalks
- Entertainment
- Football
- Synagogue
- Event space
- Bars and clubs
- Modernist architecture
- Tennis
- Playground
- Dancing
- Italianate architecture
- Victorian architecture
- Art Deco architecture
- Neoclassical architecture
Montsalvat
Nestled in the leafy outskirts of Melbourne, Montsalvat is a hidden gem that offers visitors a unique glimpse into a European-inspired artist colony. Established in 1934 by Justus Jörgensen, Montsalvat is an eclectic mix of buildings set amidst lush gardens, providing...
Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia
The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia is an art gallery that houses the Australian part of the art collection of the National Gallery of Victoria.
Niagara Galleries
Niagara Galleries shows contemporary and Modernist Australian art in Richmond, an inner suburb of Melbourne, from a terrace which has been substantially remodelled in a postmodern style.
Abbotsford Convent
The Abbotsford Convent is located in Abbotsford, Victoria, an inner city suburb of Melbourne, Australia. The Convent is in a bend of the Yarra River west of Yarra Bend Park, with the Collingwood Children's Farm to its north and east, the river and parklands to its south and housing to its west.
Federation Bells
Federation Bells is an installation comprising 39 upturned bells. Located in Birrarung Marr, Melbourne, they were created for celebrations of the centenary of Australia's federation in 2001.
Arts House
Arts House is a centre for contemporary performance and interactive artforms in Melbourne, Australia. Established in 2006, it is a program of the City of Melbourne. It supports and presents a range of experimental theatre, live art, contemporary dance and similar types of performance, by Australian and international artists.
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art
Contemporary art space with events The Australian Centre For Contemporary Art is a contemporary art gallery in Melbourne, Australia. The gallery is located on Sturt Street in the Melbourne Arts Precinct, in the inner suburb of Southbank.
Backwoods Gallery
Backwoods Gallery is a contemporary art gallery located in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood, Australia. Founded in August 2010 the gallery exhibits Australian and international artists with a focus on urban contemporary art, street art and illustration.
Hawthorn Arts Centre
The Hawthorn Arts Centre is a former civic building located in Hawthorn, a suburb of Melbourne, Australia. Designed by architect John Beswicke in the Second Empire style, the hall was built from 1888 to 1890 and housed the council chambers for the City of Hawthorn.
The Field
The Field, held August 21–September 28, 1968, was the inaugural exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria’s new premises on St Kilda Road, launched by the director of London’s Tate gallery, Norman Reid, before an audience of 1000 invitees.
RMIT Gallery
RMIT Building 8 is an educational building, part of the RMIT University's City campus in Melbourne, Victoria. It sits at 383 Swanston Street, on the northern edge of the Hoddle Grid that defines Melbourne's city centre.
Charterisville
Charterisville is the name given to a property in Ivanhoe, Victoria Australia closely associated with the Heidelberg School of Australian art. David Charteris McArthur, Melbourne's first banker, sportsman and prominent public figure, purchased 84 acres for £350 in 1838 from one Thomas Walker.