Tony Albert appointed Artistic Director of 5th National Indigenous Art Triennial
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MEDIA RELEASE
24 JUL 2024
The National Gallery has announced one of Australia’s foremost contemporary artists – Tony Albert – as the Artistic Director of the 5th National Indigenous Art Triennial.
Showcasing the work of contemporary First Nations artists from across Australia, the 5th National Indigenous Art Triennial: After The Rain will open at the National Gallery in Kamberri/Canberra in December 2025, before embarking on a national tour in 2026.
Tony Albert (Girramay/Yidinji/Kuku-Yalanji peoples) has a long-held interest in the cultural misrepresentation of First Nations people. Drawing on both personal and collective histories, he has developed a unique language expressed through his multidisciplinary art practice that seeks to rewrite historical mistruths and injustice.
The National Indigenous Art Triennial was established in 2007 as an exciting contemporary art event, celebrating the vitality and diversity of First Nations art in Australia. To date, over 450,000 visitors in 11 locations across the country have experienced the National Indigenous Art Triennials.
Albert will bring new perspectives and intention to his presentation – After The Rain. Albert hopes to celebrate intergenerational legacies by working closely with First Nations artists to present new immersive projects that resonate with the idea of rebirth and cycles of cleansing. The first four iterations have been led by a First Nations curator, the most recent exhibition Ceremony by Hetti Perkins (Arrernte and Kalkadoon peoples) in 2022. Revealing how ceremony is at the nexus of Country, of culture and of community, the exhibition has been seen by over 135,000 people in six locations across Australia.
Albert exhibits internationally and nationally and in 2023 was announced as the inaugural Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain First Nations Curatorial Fellow, a role that involved working closely with 14 artists to realise their works for the Sydney Biennale. Albert has a history of working closely with artists including as a founding member of the Queensland Indigenous art collective proppaNOW which was set up in 2003 to give urban-based Aboriginal artists a voice and supportive environment to explore social and cultural issues through art.
Albert’s appointment as Artistic Director of the 5th National Indigenous Art Triennial speaks to the National Gallery’s continued commitment to elevate First Nations art and artist’s voices, and to explore contemporary ideas that have global resonance. Albert’s own work has been exhibited in two Triennial exhibitions at the National Gallery, unDisclosed (2012) and Defying Empire (2021), the significance of which is noted by the artist.
Tony Albert said: ‘I am thrilled to be appointed Artistic Director of the 5th National Indigenous Art Triennial, over a decade after my work was first exhibited in the Triennial. I’ll be working with leading contemporary artists from around the country to present a new vision - a homage to the culture warriors of the past, present and future.’
Dr Nick Mitzevich, National Gallery Director, said: ‘I am excited for Tony Albert to bring his creative vision to the next National Indigenous Art Triennial. In this moment, when First Nations art and cultures are receiving more attention on the world stage than ever before, appointing an artist committed to championing other emerging and established First Nations artists was a clear choice. Albert has achieved extraordinary visibility and critical acclaim for his art practice and perhaps more significantly he has sought and taken every opportunity to platform First Nations art.'
The 5th National Indigenous Art Triennial: After The Rain is made possible through the continued generosity of the National Gallery’s First Nations Arts Partner Wesfarmers Arts and key philanthropic supporters. Wesfarmers Arts has supported the National Indigenous Art Triennial since 2009, each time enabling an extensive presentation in Kamberri/Canberra, an ambitious national touring schedule and expansive artist engagement through public programming.
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E | jessica.barnes@nga.gov.au or media@nga.gov.au
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ABOUT TONY ALBERT
Tony Albert (Girramay/Yidinji/Kuku-Yalanji peoples) born 1981, Townsville, Queensland is one of Australia’s foremost contemporary artists with a long-held interest in the cultural misrepresentation of Aboriginal people. His work is held in numerous private and major public collections worldwide. 2014 he was awarded the Basil Sellers Art Prize and the Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award. Albert was recently announced as. He is the inaugural Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain First Nations Curatorial Fellow, and the first Indigenous Trustee for the Art Gallery of New South Wales and member of the Art & Place Board at the Queensland Children's Hospital. In January 2023 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by Griffith University for his significant contribution to the arts.
ABOUT THE NATIONAL INDIGENOUS ART TRIENNIAL
The National Indigenous Art Triennial is the National Gallery’s flagship exhibition of contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art. The National Indigenous Art Triennial is made possible through the continued generosity of the National Gallery’s First Nations Arts Partner Wesfarmers Arts and key philanthropic supporters. The National Gallery presented the first triennial Culture Warriors curated by Brenda L Croft in 2007, followed by unDISCLOSED curated by Carly Lane in 2012, Defying Empire curated by Tina Baum in 2017 and most recently, Ceremony curated by Hetti Perkins and Kelli Cole.