Media

Spirit Healing: HOSSEI at Verge Gallery

👤 Performance Art Museum

📅 May 2024

June Miskell recounts the “euphoric” live performance and speculative ecosystem of ESSSENSSSE, an exhibition by HOSSEI about letting go and being one with the spirit.

Mitchel Cumming and Kenzee Patterson

👤 Artforum

📅 June 2023

Toni Ross writes on the collaborative exhibition A redistribution by Mitchel Cumming and Kenzee Patterson, which combined the artists' distinct practices.

Nicholas Aloisio-Shearer and Ruth Ju-Shih Li

👤 MeMO Review

📅 June 2023

Emily Best identifies the preoccupied canons of memory, whether indulging in its fallibility, or drawing upon it as a resource - creating alternate realities that Li and Aloisio-Shearer investigate within their solo exhibitions.

Destruction or Rebirth? Taiwanese-Australian young female artist Li Rushi's new exhibition

👤 VCT News

📅 June 2023

Mitchel Cumming and Kenzee Patterson:
’A redistribution’

👤 MeMO Review

📅 February 2023

Nicholas Croggan evaluates the object and text-based works of Cumming and Patterson that centre around a pair of historical basalt millstones.

There is no fire

👤 Un Projects (Online)

📅 January 2023

Jemi Gale writes a poem in response to Sab D'Souza’s exhibition, There is no fire, exploring the trauma surrounding loss of space and digital affective cultures. Sab was a prolific artist in thought as much as they were in practice. 

Screwball

👤 MeMo Review

📅 June 2022

Screwball hesitates to show all its cards at once. Veronica Tello reviews their experience walking into Verge Gallery and exploring EO Gill’s transformation of space and play.

Students’ ways of seeing

👤 Honi Soit

📅 November 2024

Victoria Gillespie explores the gentleness and curiosity of student artists featured in the 2024 USU Creative Awards. “Through art, they implore us to live more softly, to eke out the sentimental, whimsical, or record the minutiae.”

Wei Leng Tay’s ‘Abridge’

👤 ArtAsiaPacific

📅 June 2021

Chloe Morrissey reviews Wei Leng Tay’s Abridge at Verge Gallery, which featured distorted imageries of protests in Hong Kong. According to Morrissey, the exhibition “spatially and temporally displaces the viewer from their own past and present.”

For further media enquires contact Anneka Scholtz at vergeassistant[at]usu.edu.au.