Tag exhibitions

Craft Victoria: Launch of COOKBOOK north/south

29 November, 6-8pm
Craft Victoria, 31 Flinders Lane, Melbourne

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Images (L-R): Printing of COOKBOOK north/south, photography: Dave Carswell

Chefs, artists and writers interpret their favourite Melbourne suburb in hand printed cookbook.

Craft Victoria is hosting the launch of not-for-profit COOKBOOK north/south. This unique, unbound publication has been letterpress printed by hand in a limited edition of 500. It features an inquisitive exploration of ten Melbourne suburbs via recipes, original artwork and short stories. Facilitated by the designers at Wolfgang, Shlomo & Max, this collaborative project is a platform for Melbourne’s chefs, artists and writers to personally and creatively interpret their city.

COOKBOOK north/south’s eclectic array of contributors give life to this humble publication. From Andrew McConnell’s tales of stealing fresh figs in the back alleys of Fitzroy, to Robert Castellani‘s description of his mother’s famed Ragu, their voices fill the pages with charm and localised eloquence. Contributors were asked to find inspiration in their suburb and creatively interpret their surroundings.

Whether internationally renowned or local gems, chefs were chosen via suburb research, word of mouth and SecondBite recommendations. The result is a colourful group of chefs whose delicious recipes sit alongside artwork and short stories by established and emerging local talent.

Each of COOKBOOK north/south’s ten suburb-inspired chapters feature a lino-cut artwork, short story and three recipes. A unique collection of letterpress forms, typography and colour create the visual identity for each suburb chapter. An unbound publication, COOKBOOK north/south comprises of hand printed individual cards, first offset and then letterpress printed at the Melbourne Museum of Printing.

COOKBOOK north/south retails for $100 with all proceeds going to SecondBite, a not for profit organisation committed to the redistribution of surplus food to those experiencing hardship within the community.

More at Craft Victoria here

Moses Tan

Of a Time and Place in Australia and Japan

EXHIBITION DATES
2 December 2010–28 February 2011
Sofi’s Lounge, Level 1 Sofitel Melbourne On Collins
25 Collins Street, Melbourne VIC 3000

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Moses Tan © 2010

Moses Tan is an educator, photographer, graphic artist and designer with a wealth of experience behind him. He divides his time between teaching and time spent in front of the computer, creating work for exhibition or for a growing clientele. Tan has had a twenty year association with Box Hill TAFE delivering short courses which include “Photoshop for Photographers” and “The Complete Digital SLR Camera Course.” An ardent traveller, Moses has had regular exhibitions of his travel photographs since the early eighties, much of which has also been published in travel journals. These include “An Italian Journey” and “Journey to Jerusalem.” Illustrator is the software that he uses to create complex but timeless images of urban landscapes of here and from abroad.

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Moses Tan © 2010

“‘Of a Time and Place in Australia and Japan’ is a celebration of two great countries, two neighbours, two friends and trading partners, both located on the Pacific Rim. The first of these, I have called home since 1968 when I arrived here as a student. The second, I had the opportunity to visit for the first time in 2008 – hopefully it won’t be the last. However, I must point out that I have had a long-standing love affair with Japan and all things Japanese – my first three exhibitions were of haiku-inspired photographs”

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Moses Tan © 2010

“Of a Time and Place” is, in a sense, a collection of “postcards” – albeit, large ones. Like most good postcards, they are a retroactive view of the present.  The camera is an instrument par excellence in the search for images pregnant with meaning, and of places that reek of the past. But as Susan Sontag so succinctly puts it, “a way of certifying experience – by converting it into an image, a souvenir – is also a way of refuting it.” In our image-choked world, where a touch of the finger suffices to confer immortality to an experience, I think it is important to slow down and to really see. And when one draws one can claim to really see. The real instrument of my choice is Adobe Illustrator, a vector-based computer program. “Of a Time and Place” pays homage to the great cities of Melbourne, Sydney, Tokyo and Kyoto, but it is no mere document of urban life, nor is it a record of famous sights. To borrow a phrase from Peter Quartermaine on Jeffrey Smart, I am interested in “the familiar world in which we have lived for so long, but whose beauty we could not or would not see.” This exhibition owes much to Hiroshige’s monumental “One Hundred Famous Views of Edo,” Eugene Atget’s old Paris and Berenice Abbott’s changing New York.  I hope that my images, like theirs, go beyond documentation, and become poetic utterances of places and time, all given permanence by drawing” – Moses Tan

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Moses Tan © 2010

Craft Victoria and Regional Arts Victoria present Places and Pieces

6 December 2010 – 9 January 2011, enCOUNTER 24/7 window
Launching Saturday 11 December, 2-4pm
Craft Victoria, 31 Flinders Lane Melbourne

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Images (L-R): Meagan Parry, Bendigo Senior Secondary School (2010), Simone Hope, Bendigo Senior Secondary School (2010)

Young people work with Craft Victoria professional members to define their sense of place.

Places and Pieces is a joint Craft Victoria and Regional Arts Victoria initiative developed to engage a wide range of students and emerging community members in the craft of jewellery making. Participants included students from Bendigo Senior Secondary College, Castlemaine Secondary Collage and young members of the Karen Community, refugees from areas in and around Burma who have settled in Bendigo.

Led by Craft Victoria professional members Anna Davern, Tamara Marwood and Sarah Fowler, participants were encouraged to explore and develop their creative skills via the production of jewellery pieces constructed from nonprecious materials found within their own localities. The idea of ‘Place’ can be interpreted in many ways; as an abstract concept, a physical location, a point of view or a designated social level or situation. All interpretations are informed by the individual’s perception of their position in the world around them.

Artists and participants in Places and Pieces have been guided by this commonality, the resulting artworks providing invaluable insights into the similarities and differences between the groups. A selection of the artworks developed throughout the project will be exhibited in Craft Victoria’s window gallery enCOUNTER from December 6.

A Craft Victoria mentorship will be offered to one Places and Pieces participant to further develop their jewellery practice in 2011.

More at Craft Victoria

Melbourne International Arts Festival 2010 – Highlights

This year’s Melbourne International Arts Festival was overflowing with incredibly diverese performances, installations, exhibitions and events. We are looking forward to next year already.

Just a couple of our favourite acts were…

Tomorrow, In A Year

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Tomorrow, In a Year, Photography by Claudi Thyrrestrup

The beauty of Hotel Pro Forma’s striking visuals accompanied by Scandinavian electro-pop masters The Knife’s extravagent soundtrack provided a modern exploration of what opera can be pushed to be. The use of lasers, smoke machines and video all added to the exciting and unique atmosphere of which consumed the audience throughout the performance.
Directed by Ralf Richardt Strøbech and Kirsten Dehlholm, the performance creates an experience of Charles Darwin’s travels, inspired by his perception of nature and time. We are shown “our image of the world as a place of incredible variation, similarity and unity is re-discovered in this revolutionary electronic feast for the senses”.

John Cale – Noises in My Head

pic © Dan Tuffs tel-001 310 774 1780

To spend an evening with John Cale to hear him speak about his musical career in a youth orchestra in Wales; writing his first composition in primary school; developing a penchant for avantgarde at a London art college; being guided to New York by the hand of Aaron Copland and John Cage; honing in his signature drone palate at the feet of LaMonte Young and then begin his underground noise bending attack on rock and roll from The Velvet Underground to his current genre-bending music: we felt more than privileged. Of course, by the end we wished there was much more time sit and listen to the man who has created some of the most beautiful chaos in music.

Boredoms – BOARDRUM

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Boredoms (Japan), have become known for their “noice, chaos, tribal experimentation, remixing, trance-inducing feats of rythmic intensity, line-up changes, collaborations, and doing whatever they want regardless of trends and fashion”. Since 2007, Boredoms have performed their BOARDRUM set annualy. On the 7/7/2007 they had 77 drummers play together, on the 8/8/2008 it was 88 and last year on the 9/9/2009 it was 9. Boredoms featured 10 drummers for the 10/10/10 show, plus a guitarist and Bordeoms’ ringleader EYE playing two seven-necked guitar mutations.

More information on the Melbourne International Arts Festival 2010 here

Gestalten.tv Podcast feat. Established & Sons

Gestalten.tv podcast featuring Established & Sons and the designers and artists behind the ‘Design Against the Clock’ show during London Design Festival 2010.

“Established & Sons hosted a series of exciting installations and events during London Design Festival, including a pop-up Gestalten book shop. So while we were on location, Gestalten.tv also documented the design process and interviewed some of the designers and artists – among them Committee, Richard Woods, Gavin Turk and Tord Boontje – using their vision and energy as well as their own bare hands to design against the clock.”

Source:Gestalten
See more at Gestalten here

Illustrators Australia (IA) 15th Annual 9×5 Exhibition

Online invite

Semi-Permanent Melbourne 2010 – Launch

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Run in conjunction with Melbourne’s GPO and Ambush Gallery, the Semi-Permanent Launch consists of a popup gallery featuring the work of Beastman & Shannon Crees, an exhibition of Semi-Permanent speaker work, and art created for the launch by the Everfresh Studio crew. There will be bands, DJ’s and plenty of drinks.

Melbourne’s GPO, 350 Bourke St, Melbourne
15 September 2010. 6pm to 10pm. Free.

More information here

Gorker Gallery: Jae Copp

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“My Illusions Architect” is a new series of works that sees the introduction of a dramatic and exciting Jae Copp. For the past 12 Months Jae has undergone an experimentation process of both medium and technical skills, involving various paper treatments, hand stitching and intricate brush based illustrations. Jae has long used allegories and abstract twists to take personal and social views both good and bad out of context, into a surreal, and at times almost semi- nonsensical way. Through this series the artist evokes stories of a non-definitive space in time that that reflect a post-apocalyptic era, as central figures take form to mimic learning’s of a bygone civilization, in pursuit of redeeming social harmony, respect and understanding for one another and responsibility for the planet they now inhabit. Armed to the teeth with the much needed strength and environmental compassion, his characters begin repairs on the broken in prospe cts of a new beginning.

‘My Illusions Architect’ RUNS UNTIL THE 19 SEPTEMBER
GORKER GALLERY
OPENING HOURS 
3PM – 7PM WEDNESDAY – FRIDAY 
11AM – 7PM SATURDAY & SUNDAY
WINE TASTING WEDNESDAY THE 16 SEPTEMBER 
(BROUGHT TO YOU BY AUSTIN WINES)

See more of Jae’s work here, and at Gorker here

Semi-Permanent, Melbourne

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Semi‐Permanent a celebration of all things art and design is back in 2010 to inspire Melbourne’s thriving creative community yet again. While some may think it’s the forum where design nerds gather to fight against the evils of Comic Sans, Semi‐Permanent offers an eye‐opening insight into the broad streams of design, and where those varying crafts can take you.
Designed to inspire and educate, renowned artists and specialists in their field will come together at the Melbourne Convention Centre on Friday 17 September and Saturday 18 September to share their knowledge and passion for their work. Semi‐Permanent Melbourne 2010 boasts a line‐up of 12 speakers including newly announced Simon Allen from Academy Award winning animators Pixar, photographer Claire Martin, Art Director for Girl Skateboards Andy Jenkins, UK post production house Framestore, Melbourne based visual artist Leif Podhajsky and creative agency and artists representatives Big Active.

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Buck, Semi-Permanent 2010

Brought to life by Sydney’s Design is Kinky, Semi‐Permanent is a conference which unites exceptionally talented artists and designers to speak at a conference which sits within a broader program of side events including exhibitions, workshops and parties. “It’s not only our speakers that make the event special. It’s the atmosphere and spirit that the audience brings with them,” said Design is Kinky’s Andrew Johnstone. “It’s a casual atmosphere where new friends are made and new colleagues discovered. It’s this that sets Semi‐Permanent apart from other conferences, a shared feeling that you belong to a community.”

Now in its eighth year and with 22 conferences under it’s designer belt, Semi‐Permanent is the internationally acclaimed conference of its kind, year on year, proving an exciting line‐up of talented speakers spanning the art, film, motion graphics, illustration, photography, and visual effects disciplines.

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Framestore, Semi-Permanent 2010

Semi‐Permanent is on at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre on Friday 17 September and Saturday 18 September 2010. The official program is yet to be released but for regular updates and tickets check here

No Vacancy: Planetes – New Works by Acorn

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The word “planetes” is Greek for “wanderers,” just as planets wander across the sky. The drawings presented in this show portray nomadic peoples roaming, gathering, and socializing in a seemingly endless forest where all possibilities are considered. Drawings from the forest series are an ongoing project, and they themselves are always expanding, evolving and changing with experience and time. “Embracing a new, folksy, semi-spiritualist aesthetic, Acorn’s show is an obsessively drawn world of beings who are roaming, gathering and socialising in a seemingly endless forest where all possibilities are considered. Here modern tribalism is evoked and the force of folk art mixes with hyper-detailed penmanship.” Gemma Jones, The Vine

Originally from the west coast of North America, acorn has been working and living in Melbourne for more than two years. With a focus on traditional mediums he has spent most of his drawing time developing his craft with an ensemble of pens and inks. The characters and patterns in his work stem from no single culture or religion, but are part of an ongoing focus for creating something unique all together. An endless task.

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Planetes, Acorn
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Planetes, Acorn

No Vacancy Gallery
34-40 Jane Bell Lane, QV, Melbourne
Opening night: Thursday 12th August: 6:00pm ‐ 9:00pm
Exhibition Runs Untill: 12th – 22nd August
Trading Hours:
Monday: Gallery Closed
Tuesday – Friday: 11:00am – 5:00pm
Saturday: 11:00am – 5:00pm
Sunday: 12:00am – 5:00pm

Go Font Ur Self #5

The next installment of Australia’s typography exhibition GO FONT UR SELF* takes place on Thursday 19th August at new space LO-FI Collective, Taylor Square, Sydney from 6pm.

Proudly presented by Kirin© GO FONT UR SELF* is back for another round with Chapter 5. The touring exhibition, which is a calendar event in the wonderful world of type, brings you 13 artworks from the world’s most critically acclaimed typographers, illustrators and graffiti writers.

FEATURING:
MORNING BREATH / WE BUY YOUR KIDS / GARY/ FIODOR SUMKIN / MICHAEL DORET / TWO ONE / JEREMYVILLE / ALEJANDRO PAUL / MAURO GATTI / OKAY /AMUSE SWB / FRIENDS OF TYPE
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We Buy Your Kids, Go Font Ur Self* Chapter 5
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Morning Breath, Go Font Ur Self* Chapter 5
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Mauro Gatti, Go Font Ur Self* Chapter 5

LO-FI COLLECTIVE
THUR 19.08.10
LV 3, 383 BOURKE ST, TAYLOR SQUARE, 6PM (ENTRANCE UPSTAIRS ABOVE KINSELAS HOTEL)
See more
here

Firstdraft: Colony Collapse; Slide
; How to draw sex, violence and death the Luke Thurgate way; Twist

Emerging artists create a micro honey farm, reflect on the “collective hallucination of cinema”, teach visitors how to draw “the Luke Thurgate way” and test the potential of First-Person Shooter games in 4 new exhibitions at Firstdraft in July.
Exhibition opens: Wednesday 7 July 2010, 6-8pm
Exhibition continues: to 25 July 2010
Artist talks: Sunday 25 July 2010 at 4pm

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Colony Collapse

Gallery 1
Tessa Zettel and Karl Khoe

Colony Collapse continues Zettel and Khoe’s ongoing collaborative project to micro-farm pockets of the city, setting up temporary site offices from which to launch sensible and/or absurd experiments in urban self-sufficiency. At Firstdraft the artists will be investigating the possibilities for small-scale mobile honey production, as they research and construct a hybrid beehive-food cart destined for Sydney’s Circular Quay. With food crisis, suburban sprawl and the colony’s precarious histories (and futures) on their minds, Zettel and Khoe invite audiences in to smell the flowers and talk to the bees.

As part of the Firstdraft Emerging Artists Studio Program supported by Australia Council for the Arts

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Slide

Gallery 2
Bronwyn Carter

Carter began this work with a specific question; what can Painting say as distinct from other media? The artist posits that the whole process of making a painting cannot be separated from image generating technologies that began with the invention of photography and continues with digital media. The paintings reflect, as well as critique, something about the sea of images which surround us, and specifically the collective hallucination of cinema. The source imagery is film stills /photography. In the artist’s palette there is a colour heightening and saturation, a drama of light and dark, and the paint is kept present; it is sometimes visceral, sometimes controlled; which draws attention to its use.

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How to draw sex, violence and death the Luke Thurgate way

Gallery 3
Luke Thurgate

How to draw sex, violence and death the Luke Thurgate way is about public collaboration, interactivity, drawing and the nature of authenticity, reproduction and the graphic signature. The work invites the viewer to physically experience the production one of Thurgate’s drawings. Over the course of the exhibition it is hoped that viewers will collaboratively fill the blank surfaces over which the filmed drawings have been projected as a guide. The images themselves explore notions of masculinity, trauma and love. The drawings form part of an ongoing series of self-portraits in which exaggerated notions of masculine expression are played out. The participant becomes the means through which these notions find a permanent physical form.

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Twist

Gallery 4
Baden Pailthorpe

Twist furthers Pailthorpe’s interest in video games as a subject matter. The video work explores the aesthetic anomalies in First-Person Shooter games (FPS) that are activated through glitches and by using cheats. Resisting the narrative drive of these games (where the player is the protagonist) through inaction, Pailthorpe found that the game falls into a state of perpetual regeneration. The graphics engines endlessly repeat their cinematic loops. Through this political act of stasis, resisting the game’s violent narrative pull reveals the subtle beauty of the game’s virtual architecture. Perpetual action is activated by inaction. Whereas the insatiable desire to continue killing leaves a true gamer in a carrot and stick scenario of always wanting more, the true path to satisfaction perhaps lies in resistance. In stopping to smell the proverbial, virtual roses, the performative potential of these virtual spaces emerges.

Firstdraft is a non-profit gallery run on a voluntary basis by a group of practicing artists. It is one of the longest running and most successful artist-run initiatives in Australia. Firstdraft asserts the importance of contemporary art production, dissemination and discussion in society, providing a stimulating exhibition space that is professional and accessible for a diverse range of artistic practices and projects.

Firstdraft
116-118 Chalmers St.
Surry Hills NSW 2010
t: +61 (0)2 9698 3665
mail@firstdraftgallery.com
www.firstdraftgallery.com
open: Wed to Sun, 12-6pm

No Vacancy: Wooden Foundations

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Bonsai (Scottie Neoh), OH54 (Paul Milecharane), Nails (Niels Oeltjen) and Twoone (Hiroyasu Tsuri) are Wooden Foundations. Sharing the common bond of the spray can, these artists have each developed vibrant art and design practices. For this show they will create an installation which explores artistic oin-gallery collaboration as an extension of their street-based collabs.

As collectors of miscellany and users of recycled material in their artwork, the collective has gone one step further and committed to creating installation almost entirely out recycled/reclaimed/re-used material.

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No Vacancy Gallery
34–40 Jane Bell Lane, QV, Melbourne.

Opening night: Thursday 1st July: 6:00pm ‐ 9:00pm
Exhibition Runs Untill: 2nd July – 16th July

Trading Hours:
Monday: Gallery Closed
Tuesday – Friday: 11:00am – 6:00pm
Saturday: 11:00am – 5:00pm
Sunday: 12:00am – 5:00pm


View the project evolution here
More info
here

Gorker Gallery – The Forty Thieves 3: The Third Offence

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Gorker Gallery 2nd Birthday celebrations will be kicking off this Thursday 1st July with The Forty Thieves 3: The Third Offence

The Forty Thieves 3: The Third Offence group exhibition is the third installment of the popular annual group exhibition series ‘The Forty Thieves’. Curated by Luke Matthews and Lauren Biedrzycki, The Forty Thieves 3: The Third Offence showcases an exciting line-up of forty of the best leading local and international street and fine artists, each asked to create a work in the theme of a mug shot.

ACORN // ALASTAIR MOONEY // BEC WINNEL // BEN FROST // BRETT CHAN // BRETT MANNING (USA) // BRIDGE STEHLI // CAMELLIE (UK) // CAT RABBIT // DARREN HENDERSON // DEB // DREWFUNK // EAMO // EARS // HAW // ILYA MILSTEIN // JAGI // JAMES JIRAT PATRADOON // JULIA RICH // JUSTIN LEE WILLIAMS // JUSTIN WALLIS (USA) // KAREENA ZEREFOS // KELLY THOMPSON (NZ) // MAKATRON // NATE HOLMES TRAPNELL // NIOR // OTIS CHAMBERLAIN // REGAN TAMANUI // RIK LEE // SASKIA PANDJI SAKTI // SEAN MORRIS // SEAN EDWARD WHELAN (JPN) // SLOW DEATH // STABS // STEFF WILSON // SUTU // TOBIAS J // TRISTAN JALLEH // TWOONE // VEXTA

Be prepared to see some of the finest, dirtiest, and in some cases most unsuspecting crims around. To help with the celebrations, Gorker Gallery will be hosting it’s very own mug shot wall, complete with a special guest photographer to snap away at all the opening night repeat offenders.

More info here

Gorker Gallery – Leah Bartholomew

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Leah Bartholomew’s second solo exhibition These are the Days, at Gorker Gallery, 17 – 27 June.

Following the success of her debut solo exhibition Where the Dry Leaves Fall, Leah Bartholomew is set to impress us all with her new body of work.
These are the Days is an intimate exploration of the small, special moment that bind us together in friendship and create a sense of place. The prints, collages and paper sculptures delicately handcrafted by Bartholomew tell the story of a protracted coming of age, anchored in the landscapes of both experience and imagination.

From poetics scenes such as the group of friends lazing in a sun-drenched field, to the bonding of the shared beer in city back streets, to the quiet moment of solitude amongst prismatic trees, these works honour the events and emotions that can seem almost insignificant at the time, but go on to become important memories and dreams. They convey a similar feeling to that of discovering the smell of bonfire on a pair of jeans that you haven’t worn for weeks.

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Girlfriends, Leah Bartholomew

Opening Night Thursday 17 June, 6:30pm – 8:30pm
Show runs until Sunday 27 June
Gorker Gallery opening hours:
3pm – 7:00pm Wednesday – Friday
11am – 7:00pm Saturday & Sunday
Wine Tasting Wednesday 23 June 6:00pm – 7:00pm
(Brought to you by Austin Wines)

See more at Gorker Gallery