South Australian artists in focus as AGSA announces 2026 exhibition program
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 27, 2025


South Australian artists in focus as AGSA announces 2026 exhibition program
Kunmanara (Pepai) Carroll, Pitjantjatjara/Luritja people, South Australia/Northern Territory, born Ikuntji (Haasts Bluff), Northern Territory 1950, died Pukatja (Ernabella), Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands, South Australia 2021, Walungurru, 2014, Pukatja (Ernabella), Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands, South Australia, synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 122.0 x 182.0 cm; Acquisition through Tarnanthi: Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art supported by BHP 2016, © the artist, courtesy Ernabella Arts.



ADELAIDE.- The Art Gallery of South Australia has today announced its full program for 2026. South Australian artists are the focus of three exhibitions, alongside the exclusive international exhibition Monet to Matisse: Defying Tradition, the 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Yield Strength - the country’s longest-running survey of contemporary Australian art – and a major new exhibition that showcases treasures from AGSA’s Indonesian textiles collection.

Jason Smith, Director, AGSA, said, ‘In 2026 the Art Gallery of South Australia offers an inspiring program that celebrates artistic excellence, creative innovation and our rich collection. Anchored by exhibitions that speak to the complexities of our time, AGSA’s 2026 exhibition program champions the enduring power of artists to propose new ideas that transform our sense of self and the world we inhabit.

Highlighting the breadth of artistic excellence in South Australia, AGSA’s program will include a significant solo exhibition of Kaurna artist James Tylor, the work of Guildhouse Fellowship recipient Michelle Nikou, and the major new exhibition Dressed Up, which provides a rare opportunity to see works from AGSA’s collection of historical South Australian dresses alongside early photography. We hope our exhibitions throughout 2026, alongside our flagship public programs First Fridays, Neo and Start at the Gallery, will inspire our visitors young and old.’

Opening on 27 February as part of the 2026 Adelaide Festival, the 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Yield Strength, will reveal how materials, selfhood and society are tested - and transformed - under pressure. Curated by Ellie Buttrose, Yield Strength will assemble intriguing, experimental new work from twenty-four boundary-pushing, Australian artists.

May will see the cross-cultural richness of textiles from Bali and Lombok celebrated in Two Islands, One Thread. The display features previously unseen textiles from the AGSA collection, as well as loans from the West Nusa Tenggara State Museum in Lombok, revealing the remarkable and unique story of the artistic exchanges that occurred between two very different Indonesian societies - Hindu Bali and Muslim Lombok - over the past millennium.

Enriching winter from 8 July will be an Australian-exclusive exhibition of masterworks from the acclaimed Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio, United States, in Monet to Matisse: Defying Tradition, the debut exhibition in AGSA’s new Winter Art Series. Monet to Matisse traces a ground-breaking period in art history through 57 seminal paintings by the most influential European and American artists of the 19th and 20th centuries including Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Helen Frankenthaler, Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian, Claude Monet, Berthe Morisot, Pablo Picasso, Robert Rauschenberg, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vincent van Gogh and James McNeill Whistler.

Presented in partnership with the South Australian Government through the South Australian Tourism Commission, AGSA’s Winter Art Series is a new initiative that brings major international exhibitions exclusively to Adelaide during the winter seasons from 2026 to 2029, celebrating Adelaide’s position as a vibrant cultural destination through exhibitions from world-renowned art collections.

South Australian artists will form the focus of three exhibitions opening in the last half of 2026. Launching in July and presented in partnership with UNSW Galleries, Sydney, James Tylor: Turrangka…in the shadows surveys over a decade of James Tylor’s practice and brings together the most comprehensive selection of his unique daguerreotypes, expansive digital photographic series, hand-made Kaurna cultural objects, as well as furniture, made in collaboration with Rebecca Selleck. This powerful exhibition offers a glimpse into Tylor’s broader practice of reclaiming Kaurna language and cultural practices.

Photography and fashion will converge in the major new exhibition Dressed Up: Fashion & Photography 1850–1920 from 5 December 2026. Dressed Up presents a rare opportunity to view works from AGSA’s rich collections of historical South Australian dress and photography. Drawing on recent research into the makers and wearers of the dresses, the exhibition brings the superb craftsmanship of the dressmakers into dialogue with photography of the period. Spanning from the 1850s through to the 1920s, the works offer a journey into a period of dramatic sartorial and social change.

Finally, the 2024 Guildhouse Fellow - South Australian sculptor Michelle Nikou - will present a display of new works in December 2026, drawing on surrealist techniques to transform everyday domestic objects into sculptures of humour, poignancy and marvel. Presented by Guildhouse, AGSA and the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation, the annual Guildhouse Fellowship offers a transformative opportunity for one mid-career South Australian visual artist, craftsperson or designer, awarding funding to support research and development, travel, the creation of new work and a presentation outcome at AGSA.

The Honourable Andrea Michaels MP, Minister for Arts says, ‘In 2026, the Art Gallery of South Australia will champion the work of South Australian artists across its exhibition program while also bringing rare masterworks to Adelaide through the Winter Art Series delivered as part of our new $80 million State Cultural Policy. The Malinauskas Government is proud to be a continued supporter of our state’s vital cultural institutions and I'm looking forward to a year of innovative and brilliant exhibitions at AGSA in 2026.’

Extending beyond the footprint of AGSA’s building are a number of co-presentations and touring exhibitions including Dangerously Modern: Australian Women Artists in Europe 1890 –1940 at the Art Gallery of New South Wales following its successful season at AGSA, the regional touring exhibition AGSA Screen: Wavelength, and two major touring Tarnanthi exhibitions, Tarnanthi on Tour: Saltbush Country and Too Deadly: Ten Years of Tarnanthi.










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