Webb Gallery

The Echo You Can See: Nina White
04 Sep

The Echo You Can See: Nina White

The Echo You Can See is a solo exhibition by Grffith HDR candidate Nina White. Bringing together hoarded language from scholarship, pop culture, news media, advertising, and politics this exhibition shares a novel and overtly bias archive which highlights the tropes of family which obscure the complex, nuanced and subjective experiences we are familiar with.
Holding: Ally McKay and Emily McGuire
19 Jul

Holding: Ally McKay and Emily McGuire

In their joint exhibition Holding, Ally McKay and Emily McGuire present new works that grapple with concepts of potential and fulfilment. Through their considered use of materials, light and space they each explore the relationships between balance and tension in order to unpack power dynamics within organisational systems
Becoming: Dr Ellie Coleman and Dr Linda Clark
13 Apr

Becoming: Dr Ellie Coleman and Dr Linda Clark

Becoming is a group exhibition from Dr Ellie Coleman and Dr Linda Clark that explores notions surrounding transitional spaces in physical and intangible states of being.
QCA Thursdays 2023
23 Mar

QCA Thursdays 2023

QCA Thursdays are a space for the presentation and interpretation of contemporary visual arts and design practice, and a site for gathering, conversation and learning. This year we have an exciting schedule of exhibitions from current and past Queensland College of Art, Griffith University, along with a selection of external exhibitors.
Hear/Here: Katrina Garvey & Lisa Kurtz
14 Mar

Hear/Here: Katrina Garvey & Lisa Kurtz

Working in collaboration, photo-video-installation artists Katrina Garvey and Lisa Kurtz have used attentive listening and responsive iterative visual production as a methodology, largely removing the privilege of the spoken word for sense-making.
Protecting kanalaritja: Andrew Gall
20 Feb

Protecting kanalaritja: Andrew Gall

Protecting kanalaritja is an exhibition of my doctoral journey-a journey of knowledge seeking and knowledge gaining to find a solution to the question:
If climate change hits as hard as the scientific evidence indicates, what will happen to my Pakana culture's practice of kanalaritja (shell necklace making)?