Newcastle Art Gallery opens with double the original footprint

Image: Megan Cope, Kinyingarra Guwinyanba (Off Country), 2022. Installation view, Newcastle Art Gallery, Mulubinba/Newcastle. Courtesy the artist and Milani Gallery, Meanjin/Brisbane. Photo: Matthew Carbone.

Newcastle Art Gallery will officially reopen to the public on 28 February with a $48 million expansion designed by Clare Design in collaboration with Smith and Tzannes Architects, and Arup.

The existing gallery building, which was funded by a bequest in 1945 and designed by former Newcastle City Council architect Brian Pile with John Baker, was opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 11 March 1977. It currently holds a public collection of more than 7,000 works of art, valued at $145 million.

More than doubling the gallery’s original footprint, the new expansion draws on the original building’s brutalist architecture, adding 1,600 square metres of exhibition space across two levels: the lower level dedicated to the gallery’s collection, and the upper level catering for travelling exhibitions. It also includes a new multi-purpose program space and learning studio, a cafe, a retail shop and a secure loading dock.

According to a press release from the gallery, “The expanded gallery will become the largest public art institution in New South Wales outside Sydney, marking a bold new chapter for the city’s cultural landscape.”

“The redevelopment enables the gallery to present long-term displays of its world-class permanent collection for the first time, alongside ambitious Australian and international exhibitions,” the release reads.

To mark the reopening, the gallery has commissioned several works by Australian architects, installed across the site. These include two sculptures by Fayen d’Evie that improve accessibility to the original floating staircases, incorporating tactile versions of key artworks; a work by Wiradjuri and Wongaibon artist Renae Lamb, installed at the threshold of the old gallery and new expansion; a four-metre-high sculpture within the entrance atrium of the gallery, comprising 30 cast-aluminium fish in a spiralling school, created by seventh-generation Novocastrian and proud Awabakal descendant Shellie Smith alongside Newcastle sculptor Julie Squires; and 44 poles adorned with rock oyster shells by Quandamooka artist Megan Cope, suspended in the central atrium space. A sonic Acknowledgement of Country at the entry by composer Adam Manning, born on Awabakal/Worimi Country with Kamilaroi kinship, will feature five distinct soundscapes drawn from Awabakal and Worimi Country in areas surrounding Newcastle.

Image: Megan Cope, Kinyingarra Guwinyanba (Off Country), 2022. Installation view, Newcastle Art Gallery, Mulubinba/Newcastle. Courtesy the artist and Milani Gallery, Meanjin/Brisbane. Photo: Matthew Carbone.

City of Newcastle CEO Jeremy Bath described the project as “a bold and striking celebration of art for our city, state and nation,” commenting, “The full reopening of Newcastle Art Gallery in February represents a landmark moment for … the city’s cultural landscape. It will mark the completion of the largest capital works project and most significant commitment to cultural infrastructure in the City of Newcastle’s history, a feat achieved on the back of more than 16 years of fundraising and perseverance.”
Newcastle Art Gallery director Lauretta Morton OAM said, “The reimagined gallery allows us to present more of our works, collaborate with leading artists nationwide, and host major Australian and international exhibitions that were previously beyond our reach.

“As we open our doors on 28 February 2026, we look forward to welcoming visitors from across Australia and abroad into this exciting new chapter.”

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