ELSEWHERE: Kirralee Robinson

Kirralee Robinson, Pipe Mirror DETAIL, 2024, found galvanised steel ducting pipe and mirrored glass. Image courtesy of the artist.

Kirralee Robinson, Pipe Mirror DETAIL, 2024, found galvanised steel ducting pipe and mirrored glass. Image courtesy of the artist.

25 May 2024  4 Aug 2024

Kirralee Robinson, Pipe Mirror DETAIL, 2024, found galvanised steel ducting pipe and mirrored glass. Image courtesy of the artist.

Kirralee Robinson, Pipe Mirror DETAIL, 2024, found galvanised steel ducting pipe and mirrored glass. Image courtesy of the artist.

DatesSaturday 25 May to Sunday 04 August
Times10am — 5pm daily
CostFree
BookingBookings are not required to visit the exhibition Opening Event: 1 June 2024 | 5:30pm - 7:30pm *RSVPs ESSENTIAL* via link below
AgeAll ages welcome

A sculptural exhibition of light, optics and found objects, where materiality meets daydream.

Explore Elsewhere by Tulmur/Ipswich-based artist Kirralee Robinson, and enter a world where discarded objects are transformed into art that challenges disposability and celebrates curiosity and care.

This exhibition features a series of minimalist, futuristic sculptures crafted from industrial materials, merging seamlessly with the gallery space while evoking the essence of science fiction. Robinson's pieces, animated by light and movement, draw viewers into alternate dimensions and unseen phenomena of our world. 

Through mirrors, metals, and motion, she captures the extraordinary in the ordinary, embodying her ecofeminist ethos and commitment to sustainability.

Photography by Kelley Sheenan

Photography by Kelley Sheenan

Photography by Kelley Sheenan

Artist portrait photography by Abigail Robinson, courtesy of the artist.

Artist portrait photography by Abigail Robinson, courtesy of the artist. 

About the artist

Kirralee Robinson

Based in Tulmur/Ipswich, Kirralee makes sculptures that engage with elemental phenomena such as light, optics, kinetics, and tactility.

Kirralee is influenced by science fiction, ecofeminist theory and material conservation, Kirralee works intrinsically and explicitly exploring concepts and methodologies relating to material waste.

Photography by Kelley Sheenan

Photography by Kelley Sheenan