The Institute of Modern Art (IMA) is a public
art gallery located in the
Judith Wright Arts Centre in the
Brisbane inner-city suburb of
Fortitude Valley, which features contemporary artworks and showcases emerging artists in a series of group and solo exhibitions. Founded in 1975, the gallery does not house a permanent collection, but also publishes research, exhibition catalogues and other monographs. Liz Nowell has been the director of the gallery since 2019.
History
The IMA was founded in 1975 as a public contemporary art, temporary exhibition space, which does not house a collection.[1][2] It has published many artist monographs, as well as art theory and history texts, such as Sue Cramer's 1989 consideration of the appropriation of
Aboriginal imagery, a key text in which various art critics and artists addressed the contested aesthetic and ethical issues surrounding the practice of
cultural appropriation.[3]
The Institute was supportive of anti-establishment positions; in June 1990, in protest against inflation of international art, the then director Nick Tsoutas staged The Bigger than Ben Hur Art Prices Auction there a couple of weeks ago, for which 35 local artists produced *an original reproduction of an original Renoir or Van Gogh", with the product auctioned for the benefit of the IMA.[4]
In 2001 the IMA became Resident Cultural Organisation in the Judith Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts, and in 2006 was Queensland's largest contemporary art space.[5]
In 2014 the Berlin-based Studio Miessen refurbished all the public areas,[6] and in the same year the organisation appointed a new, internationally-focused advisory committee comprising
Maria Lind of Stockholm's
Tensta Konsthall, Nikos Papastergiadis of the
University of Melbourne and New Delhi-based art group Raqs Media Collective.[7]
The building is
minimalist, located under and behind the Judith Wright Centre,[20] in the inner-city suburb of
Fortitude Valley in Brisbane.[1] Entrance is free to the public, and it is open from Tuesdays to Friday 10 am–5pm.[21][22] It offers free guided tours.[23]
The IMA features contemporary artworks and showcases emerging artists.[24] Its temporary exhibitions and projects have presented all media from local, regional, national and international visual artists. It publishes It presents an annual program of
art exhibitions as well as public programs, featuring local and international artists.[1][2][25] Its exhibitions have been described as "cutting edge", including items such as
video installations and large-scale sculptures.[21] Past exhibits have included
multimedia installations,
mirror art by
Yoko Ono from the 1960s, the
surrealist work of
Peter Madden and
video montages of early 20th century hard labour.[20]
The institute has also hosted screenings, residencies,[26] forums, lectures, and conferences.[27] There is a large range of art books, as well as local design objects and gifts in the gallery shop.[25]
The IMA is also committed to research, and publishes catalogues,
monographs, and academic articles.[28]
Since 2019, the IMA has hosted
the churchie emerging art prize,[23] a non-acquisitive art award established in 1987,[29] with a prize pool of A$25,000 (major prize A$15,000), to help the careers of emerging artists; all finalists' work is displayed at the gallery in a curated exhibition.[30]
1975, 1–30 August: solo exhibition of the work of
John Olsen[33] (the first verified exhibition at IMA[31])
1982, September; Australian Screenprints 1982, 15 artist screenprinters, presented by the Print Council of Australia; Ray Arnold,
Sydney Ball,
John Coburn, Bruce Latimer,
Alun Leach-Jones, Sandra Leveson-Meares,
Mandy Martin, Greg Moncrieff,
Ann Newmarch,
Sally Robinson, David Rose, Stephen Spurrier, Arthur Wicks,
Normana Wight and Paul Zika. Coincident with Festival '82 Warana and Commonwealth Festival and with the Commonwealth Games, proceeds donated to the Aboriginal Legal Aid Service. Toured 12 venues throughout Australia.[34]
1985: Recession Art & Other Strategies, a group exhibition curated by artist and then-director Peter Cripps and featuring work by him,
Gunter Christmann, Robert MacPherson, and John Nixon; accompanied by a catalogue,[35] and the subject of a lecture in 2020 by Peter Cripps at
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in
Melbourne, citing the exhibition as a "defining moment" in Australian art exhibition history[14]
IMA published a
periodical, initially named IMA Bulletin, from 1990 to 2001,[45][46] and then IMA Newsletter, from October–January 2001/2002 until October–January 2005/2006.[47]
^
abc"Recession Art & Other Strategies". ARI Remix. 25 September 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2022. ...part of a suite of IMA exhibitions, including Q Space and Q Space Annexe and Know Your Product staged in 1986.