Untitled 2 by Curtis Taylor
We are incredibly proud to welcome acclaimed contemporary Aboriginal artist Curtis Taylor to our gallery. Working across mixed media, Taylor shares deeply personal stories, cultural knowledge and lived experiences using art as a powerful form of expression, reflection and truth-telling.
His striking sculptures of dogs pay homage to camp dogs from remote communities, while his broader practice explores identity, perception and experiences of racism, offering a powerful insight into contemporary Aboriginal life.
Beyond the gallery, Taylor is also an award-winning filmmaker whose work has been presented at international film festivals.
Having an artist of this calibre exhibiting in our space is truly special and we are honoured to share this experience with you.
Notice to Visitors: Some artwork in this exhibition includes loose materials on the floor. Please watch your step as you move through the space.
Content Warning** Please note that artwork may contain sensitive themes some parents/caregivers may consider unsuitable for young audiences.
Sub Urban Language
Twelve artists from the suburbs use their unique imaginings to express the feelings that arise from their situation and existence.
Through diverse visual concepts and both traditional and experimental mediums, this body of work invites audiences to engage with suburbia in layered and unexpected ways.
From early settlements built around survival to today’s complex lifestyle choices, suburbia carries its own language of parks, coastlines, bushland, isolation and community. As reflected in David Lynch: The Art Life, houses hold unseen stories behind lit or darkened windows. We may choose where we live, but do these sub urban undercurrents ultimately shape who we become?
Small Wonders
Step into a world where the tiniest creatures take centre stage.
Small Wonders brings together a diverse group of artists exploring the beauty, complexity and quiet power of insects through painting, sculpture, photography and mixed media.
From delicate details to bold interpretations, this collective exhibition invites you to slow down, look closer and rediscover the extraordinary life buzzing all around us.
A celebration of nature, curiosity and creative perspective—proof that even the smallest subjects can leave a lasting impression.
Small Wonders, 20 Feb - 19 Apr @ Ellenbrook Arts
A Quiet Place- solo exhibition by Harry Lea
A Quiet Place is a curated solo exhibition by Harry Lea, a collection of paintings that celebrate vibrant colour, natural beauty, and the living character of land and sea in Western Australia.
Each work invites the viewer into a moment of calm, where landscapes and seascapes come alive through Harry’s expressive brushstrokes, offering a gentle pause from the noise of the everyday.
Recent Works Nov 2024 - Jan 2026 by Tron Tonnessen
Recent Works Nov 2024 - Jan 2026 by Tron Tonnessen.
Tron is an artist whose practice is shaped by a rich background in fine art and years of creative exploration.
Drawing on his training and experience across a range of media, Tonnessen’s work reflects a deep engagement with material, process and place. His results in works that balance intuition with discipline, and abstraction with lived experience.
This exhibition invites the viewer into a reflective space, where surface, gesture and structure reveal layers of meaning.
We invite you to join us to celebrate this exhibition and the continuing evolution of Tron Tonnessen’s artistic practice.
Exhibition dates: 20 Feb - 22 Mar 2026
Reframed Horizons
Panizza Allmark: Montral, Canada, 2016, photograph.
'Reframed Horizons’ is a retrospective of Panizza Allmark's thirty-year photographic practice.
This exhibition engages with photographie féminine her methodology, which unites feminist theory and postmodern documentary methods and uses irony and dialectical framing to challenge and critically reframe. It is a dynamic, ethical visual photographic response to the environment that attempts to subvert dominant representations and draws attention to binaries. Familiar landscapes are transformed into sites of tension and ambiguity, through strategies of doubling, where the familiar appear strange and the strange unsettling familiar, oscillating between the natural and constructed, presence and absence, reality and artifice. Panizza’s photography presents a series of works that convey the politics of the uncanny as an aesthetic practice, by challenging dominant visual narratives of people and place, exposing hidden vistas, and reclaiming vision as a space of resistance to the mundane..
The series of works includes street documentary such as ‘Petals and Pavements’, ‘Double Visions: Double Entendre, to a variety of photojournalistic practice on humanitarian issues that spans from Maesot, Thailand, to Venezia, Italy.
About Panizza Allmark
Panizza Allmark is a visualista, born in Perth/Boorloo, Western Australia. Her PhD was the first in Australia to explore feminist photographic practices as a street photographer, developing the concept of photographie féminine. Panizza has spent time working across Asia, Europe, North and South America utilizing the techniques of photographie féminine that she has developed. Drawing on écriture féminine, which traces an embodied writing practice, Panizza has refocused this as photographie féminine which engages in a self-reflexive ethical photographic practice that subverts dominant representations through drawing attention to unacknowledged binaries. The uniting of disparate elements is a motif in Panizza’s work, expressive of the mixed ethnic hybridity that she embodies.
For over thirty years Panizza’s photography has been exhibited in group and ten solo exhibitions across London, New York, Frankfurt, Shanghai, Italy and Australia. Panizza has published extensively on photography, gender, representation, and visual storytelling, as well as given several international keynotes on photography.
Panizza Allmark is Professor of Visual and Cultural Studies at Edith Cowan University, Perth Australia.
Further information: https://panizzaallmark.com/upcoming-exhibition-reframed-horizons
