'Future River - when the past flows' programing.
Read MoreWe are pleased to announce FUTURE RIVER – When the Past flows , has been Short listed for the 2024 Victorian Museums and Galleries Awards in the First Nations Project.
Read MoreBlak Dot Gallery and Siteworks are excited to announce the redevelopment of our site in 2023.
Read MoreMAYA HODGE
In the position of Assistant Curator - Exhibitions & Programs, Maya is a proud Lardil/Yangkaal woman.
This exhibition situated itself at the intersection of Indigenous knowledge, exchange and embodiment.
Read MoreIn November 2019 Blak Dot will host the first of our exhibitions supporting emerging to mid-career Pacific artists for NZ.
Read MoreCommissioning four First Nations artists to create new screen-based work to exhibit in the 2019 Channels Festival.
Read MoreEver had any ideas that you have wanted to explore within a supportive and encouraging environment? YIRRAMBOI, in partnership with Blak Dot are looking for submissions from curators ahead of YIRRAMBOI Festival 2019.
Read MoreA Critical Mass collaboration between Blak Dot Gallery, Brunswick Mechanics Institute, Siteworks & Testing Grounds.
Read MoreBlak Dot was happy to host the Kimberley Bush Dyes and Medicines workshop with over 30 participants.
Read MoreAs part of this years Melbourne Art Fair, the Blak Dot Gallery Project Room brought together the beautiful works of five strong women.
Read MoreWe had a overwhelming response to our first Artist Market part of Sydney Rd Street Party.
Read MoreCongratulations Genevieve Grieves Lament - 3-channelvideoinstallation Best Emerging Artist
Read MoreCommunity Cinema Nights: The Sapphires
Read MoreWe would like to welcome up and coming artist Tyson Campbell to our volunteer team!
Read MoreOur Director has been selected to be part of the Victorian Team…
Read MoreIf we never met: A wānanga on curating indigenous art brought together curators and artists from Aotearoa New Zealand, Australia and Canada…
Read MoreBlak Dot Gallery’s ‘Fifty Shades of Blak’, an exhibition exploring the voices of First Nations women from across Australia and the world, won the ‘Best Visual Arts’ category for the 2016 Melbourne Fringe Festival.
Read MoreEight cutting-edge Aboriginal and Pacific Islander artists where invited to explore the many layers of meaning in the term 'native' through photography, painting, installation and performance.
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