The University of Melbourne has announced the veil, a major new exhibition at Buxton Contemporary featuring artists Hayley Millar Baker, Hannah Gartside, Aneta Grzeszykowska, Glenda Nicholls, Lisa Waup and Lena Yarinkura, running from 27 June to 1 November 2025.
Curated by Hannah Presley, with Assistant Curator Isabella Hone-Saunders, the veil offers a deep exploration into identity, memory and cultural resilience. Through new and recent works, each artist journeys into the realm of the spiritual, exposing otherworldly experiences that are central to our existence yet often concealed.
Hannah Presley said: "There have always been places described as transitional, spooky, or strange spaces that hum with energy, where the air feels thin and the light is dappled. These uncanny or supernatural qualities are reflected in the exhibition, revealing a familiarity with the spirit world, which in some cases profoundly influences the artists' everyday lives. The artworks in 'the veil' serve as a portal or a liminal space created through the expression of culture, memory, and emotional residue."
Central to the exhibition is a major new film from artist Hayley Millar Baker, titled Eternity the Butterfly. Commissioned by Hannah Presley for the veil, Millar Baker's first film Nyctinasty was commissioned by Hetti Perkins for the National Gallery of Australia and her second, The Umbra by Kimberley Moulton for Rising Festival. This will be the first time all three films will be presented together. Millar Baker belongs to the Gunditjmara, Djabwurrung, and Nira-Bulok Taungurung peoples through her maternal lineage, and has Anglo-Indian and Luso-Brasileiro ancestry on her paternal side. It is this confluence of cultural backgrounds that informs her practice, anchored by a reclamation of the power and agency found in Indigenous spiritual inheritance and ancestral connection.
Hayley Millar Baker said: "Eternity the Butterfly reflects on the transcendence narratives of Aboriginal peoples, grounded in their deep spiritual connections to ancestors and the colonial horrors they continue to endure. The film embodies a cyclical view of life, death and rebirth central to Aboriginal philosophies."
In an Australian premiere, Polish artist Aneta Grzeszykowska will present a specially curated selection of fourteen works from her photographic series Mama, exhibited in Milk of Dreams at the 59th Venice Biennale in 2022. Over the past two decades, Grzeszykowska has been creating performance, photography, sculpture, and video works that utilise the body to investigate sexuality, feminism and the construction of the self, often with a macabre sense of humour. Mama sees the artist's daughter interacting with a hyperrealistic replica of her mother, arranged into a disturbing and subverted narrative of domestic family life. Simultaneously tender and dark, the series captures the intangible relationship between mother and daughter, revealing emotional debris of grief and loss.
A new University of Melbourne acquisition by Waddi Waddi, Ngarrindjeri and Yorta Yorta artist and master weaver Glenda Nicholls, titled The Reflection Net, will be presented at Buxton Contemporary for the first time. Suspended high in the gallery, the large-scale woven work evokes Milloo, the Murray River, reflected in the sky, with hand-crafted feather flowers floating like birds' overhead. Nicholls was gifted her net making technique from her ancestors, waking from a dream with knowledge of the knots required. Since making her first net in 2011, she has gone on to create a strong body of work, reviving her ancestral net making practice, ensuring it is shared and protected for future generations.
Naarm/Melbourne based artist Hannah Gartside will present new and existing sculptural works, spanning a period of ten years. Her work is characteristically sensual and poetic, transforming and in one case animating, found fabrics and clothing to articulate experiences and sensations of longing, tenderness, desire and fury. Gartside has created a new work for the veil, presented alongside earlier pieces, including Sarah, a well-tailored kinetic sculpture paying homage to the formidable French actress Sarah Bernhardt, originally commissioned by Hannah Presley for Primavera at the MCA, Sydney in 2021. By reworking worn materials with care and through meticulous labour-intensive cutting and sewing processes, Gartside harnesses their inherent ability to act as portals to imperceptible experiences, emotions and memories.
Lena Yarinkura is a senior Kune artist whose innovative sculptural practice has played a foundational role in the evolution of contemporary fibre art in Arnhem Land. She is widely recognised for her ambitious pandanus and paperbark sculptures which reimagine ancestral narratives of animals and spirit beings through ambitious, playful and sophisticated textural forms. For the veil, Yarinkura has created a new series of Gnarr (spiders) and two large-scale works that tell the story of Wititj and the Two Sisters and their consequential interaction with Ngalyod the serpent. Living and working between Maningrida and outstations, Buluhkaduru and Ankabadbirri in Arnhem Land, Lena Yarinkura has profoundly influenced the trajectory of fibre-based art in the region.
Charlotte Day, Director, Art Museums, University of Melbourne, said: "Buxton Contemporary is thrilled to present 'the veil', an introspective and immersive exhibition, that brings together a diverse group of artists and makers spanning different cultural backgrounds and generations. Featuring a major new commission as well as recent University art collection acquisitions, the exhibition sees a rich array of works"from photography and film to fibre art, printmaking and sculpture"offering unique perspectives and deep engagements with the otherworldly."
Event Details
27 June 2025 - 1 November 2025
University of Melbourne, Cnr Southbank Boulevard & Dodds Street, Southbank, VIC
Tuesday – Saturday, 11am – 5pm | Free entry
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