
Moving Exhibition
WP_Post Object ( [ID] => 32529 [post_author] => 5087 [post_date] => 2025-09-19 02:05:06 [post_date_gmt] => 2025-09-18 16:05:06 [post_content] => Hannah Brontë, Katthy Cavaliere, Lottie Consalvo, Dennis Golding, David Greenhalgh, Wade Marynowsky, Ida Sophia, Jodie Whalen. Moving brings together works by Australian artists exploring the dynamic intersection of water, performance and the moving image. The exhibition considers water as subject, medium and metaphor. It celebrates durational works that explore water's capacity to carry emotion, hold memory and reflect lived experience. The works featured utilise elements of performance art through actions and perspectives that engage the body and time in unique ways. Artists embrace tenets of performance, with many directly featuring the body, voice, or gesture. Other works convey lived experience through language, layered imagery, and intimate visual detail that echoes human perception and sensory experience. In distinct and nuanced ways, the works in the exhibition reflect on the psychological and physical relationship to water, its capacity to erode, to heal, and to propel. Moving features dynamic installations of moving image works, alongside complementary works by featured artists spanning photography, textiles and painting that deepen the exhibition's material language. Together, these diverse forms create immersive experiences that allow audiences to consider how water, like time and the moving image, is both transient and persistent. Image: Jodie Whalen, 'We already know how to build a time machine', 2023, video still, HD video, with sound, 16:9, 4:58 min. Image courtesy of the artist. [post_title] => Moving Exhibition [post_excerpt] => [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => closed [ping_status] => closed [post_password] => [post_name] => moving-exhibition [to_ping] => [pinged] => [post_modified] => 2025-09-19 02:05:06 [post_modified_gmt] => 2025-09-18 16:05:06 [post_content_filtered] => [post_parent] => 0 [guid] => https://www.goulburnaustralia.com.au/event/moving-exhibition/ [menu_order] => 0 [post_type] => tribe_events [post_mime_type] => [comment_count] => 0 [filter] => raw )
19th Sep 2025 – 8th Nov 2025
Next Date: 19th Sep 2025
184 Bourke Street Goulburn NSW 2580
Contact Details
[email protected]
0248234494
Event Details
Time: 9:00am – 5:00pm
Frequency: Daily
Status: Confirmed Event
Hannah Brontë, Katthy Cavaliere, Lottie Consalvo, Dennis Golding, David Greenhalgh, Wade Marynowsky, Ida Sophia, Jodie Whalen.
Moving brings together works by Australian artists exploring the dynamic intersection of water, performance and the moving image. The exhibition considers water as subject, medium and metaphor. It celebrates durational works that explore water’s capacity to carry emotion, hold memory and reflect lived experience.
The works featured utilise elements of performance art through actions and perspectives that engage the body and time in unique ways. Artists embrace tenets of performance, with many directly featuring the body, voice, or gesture. Other works convey lived experience through language, layered imagery, and intimate visual detail that echoes human perception and sensory experience.
In distinct and nuanced ways, the works in the exhibition reflect on the psychological and physical relationship to water, its capacity to erode, to heal, and to propel. Moving features dynamic installations of moving image works, alongside complementary works by featured artists spanning photography, textiles and painting that deepen the exhibition’s material language. Together, these diverse forms create immersive experiences that allow audiences to consider how water, like time and the moving image, is both transient and persistent.
Image: Jodie Whalen, ‘We already know how to build a time machine’, 2023, video still, HD video, with sound, 16:9, 4:58 min. Image courtesy of the artist.
Moving brings together works by Australian artists exploring the dynamic intersection of water, performance and the moving image. The exhibition considers water as subject, medium and metaphor. It celebrates durational works that explore water’s capacity to carry emotion, hold memory and reflect lived experience.
The works featured utilise elements of performance art through actions and perspectives that engage the body and time in unique ways. Artists embrace tenets of performance, with many directly featuring the body, voice, or gesture. Other works convey lived experience through language, layered imagery, and intimate visual detail that echoes human perception and sensory experience.
In distinct and nuanced ways, the works in the exhibition reflect on the psychological and physical relationship to water, its capacity to erode, to heal, and to propel. Moving features dynamic installations of moving image works, alongside complementary works by featured artists spanning photography, textiles and painting that deepen the exhibition’s material language. Together, these diverse forms create immersive experiences that allow audiences to consider how water, like time and the moving image, is both transient and persistent.
Image: Jodie Whalen, ‘We already know how to build a time machine’, 2023, video still, HD video, with sound, 16:9, 4:58 min. Image courtesy of the artist.
Facilities
- Actively welcomes people with access needs.
What’s on
There are lots of things happening.

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