News
I’m saying goodbye to artist/activist Richard Bell after an entertaining morning chatting with him at the Museum of Contemporary Art, which will soon host a retrospective of his work.
Indigenous artist and activist Richard Bell’s retrospective show at the MCA until November 7.Credit: Nick Moir That was before the contemporary art market became the multi-billion dollar ...
Richard Bell, who for decades has highlighted the erasure of Australia’s Indigenous culture, will discuss the documentary, You Can Go Now, at the Gene Siskel Film Center Courtesy of Milani ...
In a spacious harbourside apartment, a prosperous gathering talks about art with the Aboriginal activist and artist Richard Bell. Their luxurious catered dinner, however, is interspersed with a ...
Bell began making art in his early 30s, figuring out it was a way to pursue his activism, without getting arrested. Richard Bell's history as an activist informs his firebrand works, which dissect ...
It’s no mistake that in his essay, Decolonisation Now: The Activism of Richard Bell ... a major survey of Bell’s work now in its final week at the Monash University Museum of Art (MUMA). Bell’s ...
Richard Bell, Vincent an’ Gough (From Little Things Good Things Grow), 2017, installation view, You Can Go Now, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, Sydney.(supplied by MCA/ Anna Kučera ...
A new documentary from Larissa Behrendt, You Can Go Now, highlights the life, work and activism of Richard ... how Bell’s work shocks the straight-laced people in the Australian art scene.
A tent festooned with protest placards by the Brisbane-based Indigenous artist Richard Bell will pop ... to be there for the duration,” Bell tells The Art Newspaper. Invited speakers are yet ...
Born in Brisbane in 1953, Richard Bell has been making art, and trouble, for decades now. His work is unapologetically political, and has its roots in activism, which — for Bell — took ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results