BROOK ANDREW | ROLLERCOASTER: winhangadurinya in motion

Brook Andrew is an artist whose conceptual practice shifts across photography, performance, moving image, installation, public space and research, often through deep collaboration with artists, communities and friends. Working between places, histories and systems of representation, he brings together images, objects and ideas to question how stories are constructed, circulated and lived.

His practice is informed by his experiences as a Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal, kweer (queer) person from south eastern Australia, as well as an ongoing curiosity about the intersecting relationships between people, memory, culture and place. Across his work is a sustained engagement with visibility and invisibility, cultural inheritance, reciprocity and the often messy realities of human relationships with each other and the nonhuman world.

Image: Brook Andrew. 'This year, hold to madness... 2020'
Image: Brook Andrew. 'This year, hold to madness... 2020'
 

ROLLERCOASTER: winhangadurinya in motion presents a new commission alongside works from the Museum of Australian Photography’s collection, together with artworks, objects and archival materials from the artist’s own collection. Spanning more than three decades of research, experimentation and making, the exhibition reflects Andrew’s long engagement with photography as both a storytelling device and a contested archive. It considers photography’s relationship to colonial witnessing, evidence and the construction of historical narratives.

The title ROLLERCOASTER suggests erratic movement, emotional shifts, bodily sensation and the simultaneous pull of fear, joy and uncertainty. Winhangadurinya is a Wiradjuri concept from Andrew’s matrilineal language group in western New South Wales. Often understood as meditation, contemplation or deep reflection, it proposes a slower and more attentive way of looking, feeling and thinking. It asks us to stay with complexity, even when meaning is unresolved, and to allow understanding to emerge gradually.

The exhibition foregrounds two recent series that continue Andrew’s engagement with the archive as both a site of institutional power and cultural agency. This Year demonstrates Andrew’s experimental approach to collage and interruption as a way of unpacking the archive, where colonial histories collide with current news cycles, personal memory and popular culture. Through layering, fragmentation and juxtaposition, the work reflects on the unstable relationship between past and present, and how historical narratives continue to shape contemporary life.

GABAN: House of Strange reflects the artist’s personal experiences working with museum collections internationally. Originally developed through his theatre script GABAN and realised in collaboration with Black, Indigenous and kweer communities of diaspora, the work speaks to the emotional, political and spiritual weight carried by cultural objects and the deep yearning for their return.

ROLLERCOASTER: winhangadurinya in motion asks us to consider what remains – what we carry with us, what we let go of, and how meaning is shaped within an increasingly unstable and hypermediated world. At a time of accelerating digital culture, social media and artificial intelligence, the exhibition creates space for pause, reflection and imagination. It reminds us that the future is not fixed, but something still in motion. We can choose to shape our lives through attention, care, responsibility and collective thought.

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February

Canberra: Until 6 Sept 2026. Trent Parke’s photographic series The Christmas tree bucket 2006–09 is a tender and darkly humorous portrayal of his extended family coming together to celebrate Christmas.

March

Sydney: Until 7 Feb 2027. From his archive of more than 200,000 images, Close Up celebrates the historic moments and pivotal people he famously captured.

Melbourne: 5 March – 7 August 2026. Between the mid-1970s and early 1990s, artist and social documentary photographer Viva Gibb (1945-2017) documented the suburbs of North and West Melbourne, where she lived.

May

Sydney: Until 16 August 2026. PIX, Australia’s first pictorial news weekly, is brought to life in this exhibition, showcasing its archived images and stories for the very first time.

Melbourne: Until March 2027. Rehearsing the City presents archival photographs from Victoria’s government collections, alongside new work by contemporary street photographers.

Coffs Harbour: 28 May – 29 June 2026. West Of Somewhere East is a photographic series tracing a cinematic journey through the interior of New South Wales, shaped by long drives, fleeting encounters, and the reflective rhythm of return.

June

Sydney: June 6 – 19 July 2026. The World Press Photo Exhibition 2026 is returning to the State Library of New South Wales from 6 June to 19 July, offering Sydney audiences an uncompromising view of of the unending challenges that humans, and our planet face.

Melbourne: 6 June – 28 June 2-26. We Built a House Out of Water is a deeply personal body of work that draws on memory, family, and culture – while understanding healing as an ongoing process.

Melbourne: 26 June – 2 August. Through analogue photographic processes, Dylan Negri aims to immortalised fragments of life that would otherwise disintegrate.