Australian Premiere Of Archie Moore's Kith And Kin

Dept of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications

Queensland Art Gallery l Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA) will tomorrow unveil kith and kin, an installation by Kamilaroi/Bigambul artist Archie Moore.

This is the first time the artwork has been displayed since it secured the prestigious Golden Lion Award for Best National Participation at La Biennale de Venezia in 2024.

Commissioned by Creative Australia and curated by Ellie Buttrose, Curator of Contemporary Australian Art, QAGOMA for the Australian Pavilion at Venice, the work was subsequently gifted to the collections of both QAGOMA and Tate in the UK by Creative Australia on behalf of the Australian Government.

Minister for the Arts, Tony Burke said he was pleased the Archie Moore piece was going on public display.

"This is not a work that you see, kith and kin is an experience of total immersion.

"In depicting his own family tree, Archie Moore has provided a window to the nation with our success, our failures and our challenges.

"In 2024, Archie Moore took his Australian story to Venice. I'm pleased it's now coming back home to Queensland."

Queensland Minister for the Arts John-Paul Langbroek said the much-anticipated Australian debut of kith and kin at QAGOMA is an exciting event for Queensland.

"Local audiences and visitors will have the opportunity to experience this internationally significant work by acclaimed Queensland artist Archie Moore at QAGOMA before it is shared with the UK's Tate.

"The Queensland Government invests in QAGOMA to share our stories and celebrate our storytellers, provide arts for all Queenslanders and deliver transformative arts experiences that promote our state as a world class cultural destination ahead of the Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games."

QAGOMA Director Chris Saines said he was immensely proud to be presenting kith and kin, a remarkable and deeply affecting artwork, to Australian audiences.

"The artwork comprises a vast genealogical chart capturing Archie Moore's First Nations Australian and convict British and Scottish connections spanning more than 2400 generations over 65,000 years.

"Over several weeks, Archie and a team of installers have meticulously hand-drawn this ancestral map in chalk across a large expanse of four walls in a stand-alone room specially built to replicate the internal dimensions of the Australia Pavilion in Venice.

"The work also confronts the ongoing legacies of Australia's colonial history and the overincarceration of First Nations people, with a collection of coronial reports on deaths in custody suspended above a memorial pool in the centre of the room.

"When I first encountered Moore's installation in the Australia Pavillion at the Venice Biennale in 2024, it was both impressive and moving; resonating with the weight of history, the experience stilled you into silence and reflection.

"It's an unimaginable endeavour to map a personal genealogy through more than two thousand generations, and kith and kin powerfully summons an extraordinary image of human connection through deep time."

Curator Ellie Buttrose said she was honoured to first present Moore's work to an international audience in Venice in 2024 and then for Archie and her to receive the prestigious Golden Lion Award for Best National Participation.

"Receiving the Golden Lion in Venice was a pivotal moment of global recognition for an outstanding artwork by an Australian artist. I am thrilled we can present kith and kin at GOMA for local and visiting audiences to experience until 18 October 2026.

"Archie Moore: kith and kin' will be shown alongside 'Inscribing a Life', an exhibition of works from QAGOMA's Collection celebrating the intensity and wonder of existence, histories, and time through the act of mark making. It includes work by Hossein Valamanesh, Shirley Macnamara, Georg Baselitz, Simryn Gill, Gulumbu Yunupingu and others."

Creative Australia CEO, Adrian Collette AM said "Archie Moore's kith and kin captivated the world in Venice, securing its place in history as the first Australian work to win the prestigious Golden Lion. Now Australian audiences have the chance to experience it for themselves. In collaboration with curator Ellie Buttrose, Archie has created a work that speaks with both personal intimacy and universal resonance, affirming the enduring place of First Nations stories at the centre of our cultural life.

From 10.30-11.30am on Saturday 27 September Djon Mundine OAM will introduce an in-conversation between Archie Moore and Ellie Buttrose in Cinema A, GOMA. The in-conversation is free, no bookings required.

From 1.30-2.30pm on Saturday 27 September, there will be a free and unbooked panel discussion exploring how Archie Moore's work centres on the reparative and powerful act of truth-telling in Cinema B, GOMA. The discussion will be hosted by Larissa Behrendt AO (Euahleyai/Gamillaroi, Distinguished Professor and the Laureate Fellow Jumbunna Institute University of Technology Sydney and host of Radio National's Speaking Out), Cheryl Leavy (Kooma/Nguri writer and poet), and David Marr (journalist and writer).

This project has been assisted by the Albanese Labor Government through Creative Australia, our nation's principal arts investment and advisory body. It is supported by Major Partner, Gadens and a generous group of Exhibition Patrons and Collection Benefactors.

Images and their correct attributions can be found here.

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.