Ties that bind

Ties that bind

Julie Fragar, Trust 2026, 180 x 135cm. Ipswich Art Gallery Collection

27 Jun 2026  6 Sep 2026

Ties that bind

Julie Fragar, Trust 2026, 180 x 135cm. Ipswich Art Gallery Collection

DatesSaturday 27 June to Sunday 06 September
TimesOpen daily, 10am - 5pm
CostFREE | No bookings are required to visit the exhibition
Booking- Facilitated and organised groups require a booking to visit this exhibition. - Opening Event | 27 June 2026 | 5:30pm-7:30pm | booking link below | RSVP Required.
AgeAll ages welcome
RSVP OPENING EVENT

What binds us to home? What—or who—makes belonging possible? How do we carry our histories with us, and how do they shape the lands we inhabit?

To speak of home is to speak of a place both real and imagined: a geography, a memory, a sensation, an inheritance. For some, home is a fixed point - an anchoring landscape or a network of kinship. For others, it is an unstable terrain shaped by migration, colonial interruption, or historical displacement.

In Ties that bind, a group of Australian artists trace the fragile, resilient, complex threads that connect us to place and to one another. Their works reorient how we understand belonging - not as a singular ideal, but as a constellation of lived experiences shaped by Country, lineage, memory, trauma, and the promise of connection. The exhibition unfolds across intertwined thematic lines, inviting viewers to consider how personal and collective histories are held in the body, the land, and the imagination.

This exhibition proposes that the ties that bind us are made not only of geography, but of memory, care, struggle, imagination, and the enduring human desire to situate ourselves within a larger story. These threads, when woven together, form the map of who we are.

An Ipswich Art Gallery exhibition
African-Tulip-2024.jpeg

Fernando do Campo, African Tulip Tree/Flame of the Forest, Rockhampton/Singapore 2024, 153 x 122cm, courtesy of the artist and Sally Dan-Cuthbert, Sydney, Gadigal

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Lionel Fogarty, Saints are Homeless 2023, 257.5 x 208cm, Ipswich Art Gallery Collection, 2025

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Julie Fragar, Trust 2026, 180 x 135cm. Ipswich Art Gallery Collection

2018.007-Rubaba-Haider-The-stitch-is-lost-unless-the-thread-be-knotted-VII-2016-MDR-1741.jpg

Rubaba Haider, The stitch is lost, unless the thread be knotted VII 2016, 66.5 x 53cm, Ipswich Art Gallery Collection, 2018

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Izabela Pluta, Image after image #6 2023, c-type photograph, 150 x 100cm, courtesy of the artist and Sally Dan-Cuthbert, Sydney, Gadigal Land

Sancintya-Mohini-Simpson-Screen-Shot-2021-03-27-at-12.06.02-pm.png

Sancintya Mohini Simpson, Dhūwã̄ 2021, video projection, 4:3, two-channel sound, 4 minute, 45 second duration, courtesy the artist and Milani Gallery, Meanjin/ Brisbane

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William Yang, Self Portrait #2   2008, pigment print, 79 x 46cm, Ipswich Art Gallery Collection, 2026

Deb-Mostert-Migration-Object-11-Laundry-caddies-2018-20-x-25-cm-watercolour-on-birch-cradle.jpg

Deb Mostert, Laundry Caddy - Migration Object 2018, watercolour on birch cradle, 25 x 20cm, Ipswich Art Gallery Collection, 2024

ARTISTS

Michael Cook

Fernando do Campo

Lionel Fogarty

Julie Fragar

Rubaba Haider

C. Moore Hardy

Juanita McLauchlan

Deb Mostert

Izabela Pluta

Sangeeta Sandrasegar

Sancintya Mohini Simpson

William Yang