Past Exhibitions 2025
Past Exhibitions 2025
Unfolding Futures
7 July to 31 October 2025
Unfolding Futures presented contemporary artwork by recipients of the Rupert Bunny Foundation Visual Arts Fellowship (RBFVAF) across the past 20 years.

Image Credit: Orobotics, Studio Matthew Gardiner

Image Credit: Ella Hooper, Red Hot Summer Tour, Rochford Winery. Photography by Brittany Long.
ROAR
Celebrating Women in Music
7 February to 16 May 2025
Through 80+ iconic portraits and performances captured by Australia’s best female music photographers, this exhibition celebrated women, non-binary and Gender Non-Conforming musicians both on and off the stage.
The exhibition featured photography by Brittany Long, Jacinta Keefe, Michelle Grace Hunder, Suzanne Phoenix and Tiffany Garvie; alongside reproductions from the Australian Performing Arts Collection and local herstory curated by music sub-culture researcher Melynda Von Wayward.
Presented by the City of Port Phillip in partnership with ROAR FEST.
Where Ends Meet
Michael Fikaris
9 December to 28 January 2025
Where Ends Meet is not about beginnings or endings, but the things in between.
The exhibition featured 50 new art pieces by Fikaris and 100 interpretations of his character – ‘The Worker’ - by artists from all over the world, as part of the Human Work (book) project.
Exploring the themes of human connection through an array of drawings, paintings, printmaking and artists books, visitors contributed to the exhibition through drawing their own interpretation of 'The Worker'.

Image credit: Michael Fikaris
Where Ends Meet
Michael Fikaris
9 December to 28 January 2025
Where Ends Meet is not about beginnings or endings, but the things in between.
The exhibition featured 50 new art pieces by Fikaris and 100 interpretations of his character – ‘The Worker’ - by artists from all over the world, as part of the Human Work (book) project.
Exploring the themes of human connection through an array of drawings, paintings, printmaking and artists books, visitors contributed to the exhibition through drawing their own interpretation of 'The Worker'.

Image credit: Michael Fikaris