Who’s Afraid of Public Space?

Who’s Afraid of Public Space? is a multifaceted project of exhibitions and programs exploring the role of public culture, the contested nature of public space, and the character and composition of public life. The exhibition continues ACCA’s Big Picture series, which explores contemporary art’s relation to wider social, cultural and political contexts. 

Who’s Afraid of Public Space? is organised according to a dispersed, distributed structure, encouraging a polyphonic and polycentric understanding of our increasingly complex public realm. Taking place at ACCA over the summer months of 2021–22, the project also extends across Melbourne with a series of satellite exhibitions in collaboration with cultural partners, as well as installations, events and projects in the public realm.

Discover the exhibition below, or click here to read on about the exhibition theme…

Who’s Afraid of Public Space? engages contemporary art and cultural practices to consider critical ideas as to what constitutes public culture and to ask who is public space for? The exhibition is inspired by, and seeks to animate recent global debates related to the incursion of private interests in the public sphere, politics of land and place, and patterns of urban transformation, gentrification and technological change.

Who’s Afraid of Public Space? also explores the ways in which public institutions, capital and technology impact and transform our understanding of public space, culture and values. As an extension of this, questions of what now comprises ideas of community, collectivity and the commons also underpin this exhibition. The recent radical shift from, and oscillation between, the civic space of the public square to the virtual space of the digital commons – as accelerated by the global pandemic, in tandem with questions of sustainability and access – has added further urgency to these discussions.

Through multiple installations and interventions, the exhibition reflects on the dynamic relations between urban design, safety and surveillance, as well as unsanctioned counter-positions of self-organisation, improvisation and play. Works in the exhibition also span themes of work, housing, democracy and social enterprise as they play out in the intersections and overlaps between private and public, corporate and state, profit and public good.

Who’s Afraid of Public Space? is organised according to a dispersed, distributed structure, encouraging a polyphonic and polycentric understanding of our increasingly complex public realm. It is informed by a series of think tanks, workshops, and offsite projects developed in the lead up to the exhibition that helped shape the thematic concerns and format of the exhibition. Taking place at ACCA over the summer months, the project extends across the city through a number of dedicated off-site projects programmed both in the lead-up to, and throughout, the exhibition, as well as through related satellite exhibitions and events programmed by institutional partners including Abbotsford Convent, Arts Project Australia, Blak Dot Gallery, Bus Projects, Chunky Move, Footscray Community Arts, Metro Tunnel Creative Program and Testing Grounds (supported by City of Melbourne).

Who’s Afraid of Public Space? adopts a collective curatorial model, led by ACCA’s curatorial team – Artistic Director Max Delany, Curator-at-Large Annika Kristensen and Senior Curator Miriam Kelly. The project has been developed in collaboration with a curatorial advisory group comprising the following members: Dr Marnie Badham, Senior Research Fellow, School of Art, RMIT University; E. Flynn, writer, arts worker, community organiser, and PhD Candidate at Queensland University of Technology; Eugenia Lim, artist, editor and Artistic Director of APHIDS; Dr Grace McQuilten, Lecturer in Art History and Theory, and Leader of the Contemporary Art and Social Transformation Research Group, School of Art, RMIT University; Dr Timothy Moore, Director of Sibling Architects, lecturer at Monash University Art, Design and Architecture, publisher and curator of Melbourne Design Week; Professor Nikos Papastergiadis, School of Culture and Communication; and Director of the Research Unit for Public Culture, University of Melbourne; Nur Shkembi, artist, curator and PhD candidate, University of Melbourne; and Jarra Karalinar Steel, artist, First Peoples Arts officer at City of Port Phillip, creative and cultural consultant, and Master of Arts (Art in Public Space), RMIT University.

Artists

Project Partners

Explore the Project

Exhibitions and Projects

Onsite Exhibitions and Projects

In addition to hosting displays of artworks and new commissions, ACCA’s four gallery spaces have been designed to reflect on the role of the art institution as a civic space for gathering, discussion, education and discovery, both within the gallery and beyond, in public space

Offsite Exhibitions and Projects

These offsite artist projects and interventions extend the exhibition beyond the gallery walls into public spaces across Melbourne and encompass satellite projects produced by cultural partners, including Abbotsford Convent, Arts Project Australia, Blak Dot Gallery, Bus Projects, Chunky Move, City of Melbourne, Footscray Community Arts, Metro Tunnel Creative Program and Testing Grounds

Programs

Conversations

Connect with artists and ideas through our program of artist talks, discussions and symposia at hosted ACCA and offsite

Events

Join us offsite for one-off performances and participatory programs with our cultural partners and in public space

Education

Education Space

A hybrid studio, classroom and gallery designed to invite active participation with, and careful consideration of, public art practices and the diverse approaches artists adopt when creating artwork for public space

Podcasts and Videos

Explore our series of podcasts and videos produced as part of Who’s Afraid of Public Space?

ACCA Education

ACCA Education supports innovative arts learning opportunities for students, educators, and caregivers through our in-gallery programs, outreach, online resources, and the ACCA virtual classroom

Curators

Max Delany
Annika Kristensen
Miriam Kelly

Curatorial Advisory Group

Dr Marnie Badham
E Flynn
Eugenia Lim
Dr Grace McQuilten
Dr Timothy Moore
Professor Nikos Papastergiadis
Nur Shkembi
Jarra Karalinar Steel

Exhibition Partners

Cultural Partners

Lead Media Partner

Media Partner

Publication Partner