Brenda L. Croft

Brenda L. Croft’s expansive wall-based installation from her acclaimed series Naabámi (thou shall/will see): Barangaroo (army of me) pays tribute to Barangaroo, the Cammeraygal woman known for her unwavering stance as an unceded sovereign First Nations woman during early settler-colonial contact.
The series features portraits created using tintypes — a photographic process introduced in Australia in the 1870s, historically used to document Australian First Nations Peoples through a colonial, ethnographic lens. In Croft’s work, contemporary First Nations women and girls are represented via tintype, then re/presented at a monumental scale. This strategic use of a medium once employed to marginalise and control reclaims its power. Through Croft’s collaborative lens-based practice, her subjects command space and presence, asserting histories that demands recognition.
 
Naabámi (thou shall/will see): Barangaroo (army of me) was first presented at Sydney Festival 2023, along the Barangaroo waterfront and at Old Government House, Parramatta. Iterations were also exhibited in The National 4 at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2023; the Museum of Sydney, Museums of Heritage NSW, 2023; the Australian Embassy, Washington DC, USA, 2024-25; and in ON COUNTRY: Photography from Australia at Les Rencontres, Arles, France, 2025.
Brenda L. Croft is represented by Niagara Galleries (Naarm/Melbourne). 

Fiona Hall

Fiona Hall’s two major series, Barbarians at the Gate (2010) and Fall Prey (2012), come together through a smaller curation of works that explore the political interface between nature and culture, and the complex relationships between ecology and economy.
Barbarians at the Gate, originally created for the Biennale of Sydney, comprises a series of architectural models mounted on beehives, each painted in the military camouflage of its corresponding nation. The models include the Brandenburg Gate, the Arc de Triomphe, Westminster, the Pentagon, the Parthenon, the Pantheon, and various imperial obelisks and ziggurats. Originally active beehives containing colonies of Sugarbag bees—native, stingless bees of Australia—the installation was first displayed in the Sydney Botanical Gardens. Now inactive, the work draws attention to the threat facing native species such as the Sugarbag bee, which has become endangered in Sydney but is gradually being reintroduced. By juxtaposing symbols of imperial power with fragile ecosystems, Hall reflects on the ongoing impact of colonisation on First Peoples and comments on the ecological consequences of introducing foreign species.
Fall Prey, created for dOCUMENTA (13), features sculptures of endangered animals from the United Nations Red List. Each creature is constructed from the military fatigues of its native country, resembling hunting trophies or taxidermy specimens. Hall combines traditionally masculine materials with feminine craft techniques such as sewing, weaving, and beading, to explore the entanglement of war, power, and environmental destruction. Military uniforms—emblems of national might—are transformed into poignant reminders of the disregard for nature, wildlife, and human life in the pursuit of dominance. Together, these works question humanity’s impact on the planet and contemplate the precarious future of its species.
 
Fiona Hall is represented by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery (Gadigal Country/Sydney). 
 

Judith Wright

Judith Wright’s installation showcases an extension of her Tales of Enchantment series that formed a key component of the 2020 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Monster Theatres. The series, with additional new works, invites viewers on a mesmerising journey through the artist’s imagination, where mythic creatures take flight and mysterious tableaux emerge. Drawing on her background as a dancer, Wright creates a theatrical and poetic odyssey in which winged eyes, ethereal figures, and echoes of ecclesiastical imagery converge in dreamlike scenes. The mixed-media installation animates the inanimate, bringing props and objects to life in a world that feels both sacred and surreal.
A multidisciplinary artist, Wright explores themes of love, loss, and the impermanence of life. She began her career as a dancer with The Australian Ballet before transitioning to the visual arts, working across painting, drawing, video, sculpture, and installation. Her dance experience has endowed her with a deep sensitivity to spatial relationships and the psychological interplay between bodies, objects, and light. This understanding underpins the theatricality of her practice, where choreography, emotion, and material form coalesce into a deeply affective visual language.
 
Judith Wright is represented by Sophie Gannon Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne).