Outdoor Gallery
Brisbane City Council's Outdoor Gallery transforms Brisbane's laneways, city streets and car parks into imaginative, curious, and engaging spaces. Comprising of light boxes, banners, vitrines, and evening projections, the Outdoor Gallery displays art outside in city streets, instead of inside on gallery walls. 2023 marked 10 years of the Outdoor Gallery program.
Share your experience of the Outdoor Gallery exhibitions and public programs on social media using #BNEPublicArt.
Coming soon - 'Asia Pacific Triennial Kids: Outdoors' exhibition
From 30 November 2024 to 5 May 2025, we invite you to explore Council’s latest Outdoor Gallery exhibition, Asia Pacific Triennial Kids: Outdoors presented in collaboration with Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA)’s Children’s Art Centre.
Asia Pacific Triennial Kids: Outdoors features eye-catching displays made especially for children and families by artists included in QAGOMA’s 11th Asia Pacific Triennial exhibition (Asia Pacific Triennial Kids).
Join us for an exciting lineup of public programs as part of this exhibition.
Learn more about the 11th Asia Pacific Triennial exhibition, including Asia Pacific Triennial Kids.
Artist: Brett Graham
ARTWORK: wakawaku (2024)
LOCATION: Fish Lane light boxes, south brisbane
Read more
Brett Graham (Ngāti Korokī Kahukura, Tainui, Aotearoa New Zealand b. 1967) creates large-scale sculptures and installations connected to his Māori culture. Many of Graham’s artworks feature traditional Māori patterns, which are often inspired by nature.
Look around your natural environment, what patterns can you see?
Artist: Dana Awartani
ARTWORK: unity within multiplicity (2024)
LOCATION: edison lane banner, brisbane city
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Dana Awartani (Saudi Arabia / Palestine b.1987) uses geometric shapes and patterns to create drawings, installations and videos. Awartani is particularly inspired by sacred geometry, which she describes as ‘a universal language of aesthetics that connects all faiths and cultures’.
Awartani’s Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, Unity Within Multiplicity (2024), references Zellij tile designs, a Moroccan tiling technique celebrated for its sophisticated geometric compositions. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery drawn from the exhibition design of Awartani’s project space.
Look around your environment, what patterns can you see?
Artist: Harold 'Egn' Eswar with workshop participants
ARTWORK: monster of wants (2024)
LOCATION: hutton lane light boxes, brisbane city
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Harold ‘Egn’ Eswar (Malaysia b.1980) draws inspiration from street art to explore personal stories and memories through drawing. He often works in collaboration with other people to create artworks, including maps which link places of personal significance to members of his community.
For his Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, Monster of Wants (2024), Egn has chosen to explore our endless desire for more. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery created by local children who have each drawn a monster with characteristics representing the things they want.
What would your monster look like?
Artist: Harold 'Egn' Eswar with workshop participants
ARTWORK: monster of wants (2023)
LOCATION: giffin lane banner, brisbane city
Read more
Harold ‘Egn’ Eswar (Malaysia b.1980) draws inspiration from street art to explore personal stories and memories through drawing. He often works in collaboration with other people to create artworks, including maps which link places of personal significance to members of his community.
For his Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, Monster of Wants (2024), Egn has chosen to explore our endless desire for more. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery created by local children who have each drawn a monster with characteristics representing the things they want.
What would your monster look like?
Artist: Yim Maline with workshop participants
ARTWORK: a dream for the future (2024)
LOCATION: eagle Lane light boxes, brisbane city
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Yim Maline (Cambodia b.1982) creates fabric soft sculptures that explore her connection with nature and the environment. Yim is also the co-founder of the Blue Art Center in Siem Reap, Cambodia, where she teaches visual art to children.
For her Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, A Dream for the Future (2024), Yim has collaborated with students at the Blue Art Center to create a series of drawings exploring how they imagine the future of Cambodia.
Imagining the future of Brisbane, what would you draw?
Artist: Brett Graham
ARTWORK: wakuwaku (2024)
LOCATION: irish lanE banner, brisbane city
Read more
Brett Graham (Ngāti Korokī Kahukura, Tainui, Aotearoa New Zealand b. 1967) creates large-scale sculptures and installations connected to his Māori culture. Many of Graham’s artworks feature traditional Māori patterns, which are often inspired by nature.
This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery from Graham’s Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, Wakuwaku (2024), which invites children to make rubbings of patterns drawn from his work. The project includes two template shapes – a fantail (a songbird native to Aotearoa) and a fighter plane.
Look around your natural environment, what patterns can you see?
Artist: Etson Caminha
ARTWORK: My Kitchen sounds (2024)
LOCATION: king george sqaure car park light boxes, brisbane city
Read more
When Etson Caminha (Timor-Leste b.1984) was a child, making music using found objects was a great source of happiness and fun. Today, he creates sound-based artworks using natural elements (such as hay, bamboo and rocks), traditional Timorese instruments and electronic equipment.
For his Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, My Kitchen Sounds (2024), Caminha recorded a series of videos of himself singing, playing bass guitar and making sounds using objects from his kitchen. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery of Caminha with the different instruments featured in the project.
What objects could you make music from in your kitchen at home?
Artist: Rithika Merchant
ARTWORK: If the seeds chose where to grow (2024)
LOCATION: edward street (corner queen street) vitrine, brisbane city
Read more
Rithika Merchant (India b.1986) creates bold paintings and collages using a combination of watercolour and cut paper elements, drawing on 17th–century botanical prints and folk art.
Merchant is interested in the idea of ‘terraformation’, or ‘earth-shaping’–the process of making a planet, moon or other celestial body fit for human life. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery from Merchant’s Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, If the Seeds Chose Where to Grow (2024), which imagines a new world inhabited by unusual hybrid ‘beings’ and plant forms.
What hybrid creatures would live in your imagined world?
Artist: Harold 'Egn' Eswar with workshop participants
ARTWORK: Monster of wants (2024)
LOCATION: edward street (corner elizabeth street) vitrine, brisbane city
Read more
Harold ‘Egn’ Eswar (Malaysia b.1980) draws inspiration from street art to explore personal stories and memories through drawing. He often works in collaboration with other people to create artworks, including maps which link places of personal significance to members of his community.
For his Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, Monster of Wants (2024), Egn has chosen to explore our endless desire for more. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery created by local children who have each drawn a monster with characteristics representing the things they want.
What would your monster look like?
Artist: Okui Lala
ARTWORK: The sounds of brisbane (2024)
LOCATION: heritage lanes light boxes, brisbane city
Read more
Okui Lala (Malaysia b.1991) creates video works exploring language, verbal communication and what is lost or changed when words are translated from one language into another.
For Asia Pacific Triennial Kids, Lala invited bilingual and multilingual students from Brisbane’s West End State School to participate in a music video. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features images of some of the children performing their song, The Sounds of Brisbane (2024). The lyrics for this song were created from a student workshop exploring sounds and words connected to the students’ experience of Brisbane.
What sounds and words would you use for a song about Brisbane?
Artist: Rithika Merchant
ARTWORK: if the seeds chose where to grow (2024)
LOCATION: howard smith wharves (projection)
Read more
Rithika Merchant (India b.1986) creates bold paintings and collages using a combination of watercolour and cut paper elements, drawing on 17th-century botanical prints and folk art.
Merchant is interested in the idea of ‘terraformation’, or ‘earth-shaping’–the process of making a planet, moon or other celestial body fit for human life. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery from Merchant’s Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, If the Seeds Chose Where to Grow (2024), which imagines a new world inhabited by unusual hybrid ‘beings’ and plant forms.
What hybrid creatures would live in your imagined world?
Artist: Rithika Merchant
ARTWORK: if the seeds chose where to grow (2024)
LOCATION: Cordelia Street banner, south brisbane
Read more
Rithika Merchant (India b.1986) creates bold paintings and collages using a combination of watercolour and cut paper elements, drawing on 17th-century botanical prints and folk art.
Merchant is interested in the idea of ‘terraformation’, or ‘earth-shaping’–the process of making a planet, moon or other celestial body fit for human life. This artwork displayed in the Outdoor Gallery features imagery from Merchant’s Asia Pacific Triennial Kids project, If the Seeds Chose Where to Grow (2024), which imagines a new world inhabited by unusual hybrid ‘beings’ and plant forms.
What hybrid creatures would live in your imagined world?
Celebrate the opening weekend of The 11th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art at Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art with over 45 artists...
Seventy artists, collectives and projects from more than 30 countries will feature in the eleventh chapter of the flagship Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of...
The Queensland Art Gallery │ Gallery of Modern Art (QAOGMA) Children’s Art Centre presents a collection of seven artist projects for Asia Pacific Triennial Kids...
Asia Pacific Triennial artist, Rithika Merchant invites you to imagine you have travelled to a far-away planet in the future that humans have terraformed to...
Asia Pacific Triennial artist, Harold ‘Egn’ Eswar invites you to drop in and take a moment to reminisce. Think of a significant place in Brisbane, how you felt...
Asia Pacific Triennial artist Etson Caminha invites you to drop in and jam with him. Select an ordinary object, experiment with the sound it makes, and play...
Join Triennial artist Brett Graham for a talk about his artworks, Tai Moana Tai Tangata which explore the British colonisation of Graham’s homeland, Aotearoa...
Asia Pacific Triennial artist Etson Caminha invites you to drop in and jam with him. Select an ordinary object, experiment with the sound it makes, and play...
Join West End State School Senior Choir for a performance of The Sounds of Brisbane 2024, a song that celebrates the students’ experiences of growing up in...
Outdoor Gallery map
Expressions of interest - Outdoor Gallery exhibitions
Council is seeking Expressions Of Interest (EOIs) from the local creative sector to deliver two exhibitions in Council’s city-wide Outdoor Gallery. This is an opportunity for two separate contractors to deliver one Outdoor Gallery exhibition each.
EOI submissions for Outdoor Gallery are to be submitted via the online form. Submissions close Friday 13 December 2024.
This is a two-part process, where incoming EOIs will be assessed against the selection criteria. Three successful suppliers will then be invited to respond to a Request For Proposal (RFP) for each exhibition opportunity. The RFP will not be made available until the EOI process is complete.
These two opportunities are for the curation and delivery of an Outdoor Gallery exhibition, which involves the following items (although not limited to):
- curatorial rationale
- artist management
- exhibition design
- graphic design
- manage installation, deinstallation and design of the vitrines
communications - work health and safety
- delivery of walking tours
- other outcomes as directed.
Note, we are not seeking EOIs from artists for individual sites. Instead, we are seeking curators, collectives, and exhibition producers to deliver the full program.
Submit your expression of interest online
About the Outdoor Gallery
Council's Outdoor Gallery transforms Brisbane's laneways, city streets and car parks into imaginative, curious, and engaging spaces. Comprising of light boxes, banners, vitrines, and evening projections, the Outdoor Gallery displays art outside in city streets, instead of inside on gallery walls. 2023 marked 10 years of the Outdoor Gallery program.
The Outdoor Gallery aligns with a range of Council policies including Brisbane City Centre Master Plan 2014, Brisbane River Art Framework: Reimagining our Riverfront as an Outdoor Gallery, Creative Brisbane Creative Economy 2013-22 and Design-Led Brisbane, and addresses many of the key policy themes including Expressive City, 24/7 Event City, Vibrant City, and City of Lights.
The Outdoor Gallery infrastructure consists of light boxes, banners, projections, digital screen, and vitrines (glass cabinets of curiosity).
For the upcoming opportunities, the locations in the Outdoor Gallery are:
- Fish Lane - light boxes
- Heritage Lane - light boxes
- Museum of Brisbane - digital screen
- King George Square Car Park – light boxes
- Irish Lane – banners
- Giffin Lane – banner
- Edward Street (corner of Elizabeth Street) - vitrine
- Edward Street (corner of Queen Street) – vitrine
- Edison Lane – banner and projector
- Eagle Lane – light boxes
- Hutton Lane – light boxes
- Howard Smith Wharves – projector
Note: Outdoor Gallery locations are subject to change.
Exhibition opportunities
Opportunity 1: May 2025 to October 2025 (curator-led theme)
Council is looking for EOIs from curator/producers to hit the ground running on delivering a high calibre exhibition throughout the Outdoor Gallery program.
Council will assess incoming EOIs against the selection criteria, and following this, three successful consultants will be engaged to respond to the exhibition Request for Proposal (RFP).
The curatorial theme for this exhibition will be curator-led.
Opportunity 2: November 2025 to April 2026 (all abilities-led exhibition)
Council is seeking EOIs from curator/producers who have the capabilities, experience and networks to curate and deliver an exhibition throughout the Outdoor Gallery program that celebrates local creatives of all abilities.
This exhibition aims to promote, celebrate, and create economic opportunities for our local sector.
Council will assess incoming EOIs against the selection criteria, and following this, three successful consultants will be engaged to respond to the exhibition RFP.
Selection criteria
Incoming EOIs will be assessed against the following criteria:
- capacity to deliver
- approach to the exhibition opportunity
- local benefit.
Terms and conditions
By lodging a submission, you agree to the following EOI conditions:
- Definitions
In this expression of interest:- “Expression of interest” or “EOI” means this document and any attachments.
- “Proponent” means you or another entity that lodges a submission.
- “Submission” means a submission made in accordance with this EOI.
- “You” means the person, partnership or any other body (whether corporate or otherwise) who lodges a submission in accordance with this EOI.
- Two stage process and rights reserved
- This EOI is part of a two stage procurement process. It is anticipated that during:
- stage 1 this EOI is issued to the market; then
- stage 2 a request for proposal (RFP) is issued to a shortlist of proponents (decided by Council) from Stage 1.
- Despite 2.1, Council reserves the right to:
- issue the stage 2 RFP to all proponents from stage 1 or issue the RFP publicly;
- utilise a process during stage 2 which is not an RFP; or
- negotiate directly with one or more proponents from stage 1 without issuing a RFP.
- This EOI is part of a two stage procurement process. It is anticipated that during:
- Prior to the submission deadline
- Clarification prior to submission deadline
If you wish to seek clarification regarding this EOI, you must do so:- prior to the submission deadline; and
- only by email to the Council contact officer.
- Variation to the EOI
Council may vary or amend this EOI at any time before or after the submission deadline.
- Clarification prior to submission deadline
- Your submission
Your submission must comply with the requirements of this EOI.
- Evaluation of submissions
- Communication in relation this EOI process
Any communications from you about this EOI must be by email to the Council contact officer. - Clarification of EOIs
You must provide any additional information as and when requested by Council to clarify your submission. - Enquiries of referees and others
Council may make enquiries of any person, company or organisation, without advising you, to:- verify any information provided in your submission; or
- to ascertain the suitability of you or your submission.
- Shortlisting, negotiation, evaluation and selection
- At any time during the evaluation process (and on one or more occasions), Council may:
- shortlist one or more proponents and in so doing exclude the remaining proponents from further consideration; and/or
- negotiate with one proponent, all proponents or a shortlist of proponents.
- Council may evaluate submissions on any criteria that Council considers appropriate, including but not limited those criteria listed in this EOI.
- Should Council select a submission(s), Council will select the submission(s) which Council considers to be most advantageous for Council.
- At any time during the evaluation process (and on one or more occasions), Council may:
- Communication in relation this EOI process
- General conditions
- Costs to be borne by you
You must bear all of the costs you incur by participating in this EOI, irrespective of whether:- your submission is successful, unsuccessful or excluded as non-conforming; or
- the EOI process (or any subsequent process) is suspended, terminated or abandoned.
- Non-conforming submission/proponent
A submission or proponent which does not comply with the requirements of this EOI may be classified by Council as ‘non-conforming’ and may be excluded by Council from further consideration. - Collusion
You must not collude with any other proponent or prospective proponent (during the preparation or evaluation of your submission). - Your conduct
You must not:- offer any bribe, gratuity, bonus, discount of any sort of enticement to any Councillor or employee of Council; or
- discuss the EOI, your submission or Council’s evaluation with any Councillor or employee of Council (with the exception of the Council contact officer and any officer(s) nominated by the Council contact officer).
- No obligation to enter into a contract
By issuing this EOI, Council is under no obligation (whether equitable or legal) to proceed either in whole or in part with the procurement to which the EOI relates. Council is not committed contractually or in any way to any person who may receive the EOI or lodge a submission. - Media liaison
You must not communicate with the media about any aspect of this EOI. - Council discretion
Any decision, choice, election or finding made by Council during this EOI process, will be made by Council in its sole and absolute discretion. - Suspension or termination of EOI
Council may vary, suspend, terminate or abandon this EOI process (and any subsequent RFP/other process) at any time, before or after the submission deadline.
- Costs to be borne by you
Enquiries
For any enquiries, email publicart@brisbanecitycouncil.com
Paradise Gloss - Online tutorials
Experience the benefits of arts participation anywhere with these free artist-led online tutorials from the previous Outdoor Gallery exhibition Paradise Gloss curated by Laura Brinin.
With clear instructions and minimal materials needed, you can easily recreate the artworks at home. Whether you’re a beginner or an experienced artist, these tutorials aim to make the process accessible and enjoyable for all.
DIY - Bin chicken embroidery
Artist Lindsay Stiches shares her creative process and teaches basic embroidery stitches. It’s a great opportunity for beginners and experienced embroiderers alike to dive into a fun and rewarding crafting project.
Download the bin chicken design outline (PDF - 16kb).
DIY - Still life and collage
Artist Frances Powell guides you through her creative process, offering simple techniques for capturing moments through still life and collage.
DIY – Pinch pot and blob dog: clay basics
This video serves a dual purpose: first, to offer a glimpse into the creation process of the featured artwork, and secondly, to impart fundamental clay techniques to viewers.
Artist Bonnie Hislop will empower you to try your hand at recreating a clay pot at home.
DIY – Scribble drawings: the art of play
Artist Sunday Jemmott explores the joys of creativity and the therapeutic benefits of play. You will have the opportunity to experiment with various art materials and techniques while learning to appreciate the journey of creation rather than focusing solely on the end product.
Discover how engaging in creative play can enhance your overall well-being.
Colouring-in activity
Download the Flowah Powah (PDF - 1.1Mb) colouring-in activity by Alice Lang.
Creative opportunities
For future exhibition and creative sector opportunities with Council, join the Creative Register.