When it launched in 1988, Prospect Gallery was the
first council-run community gallery in South Australia. In October this year
the gallery relaunched in a brand-new location at Payinthi, Prospect council’s
community hub on Prospect Road. Renamed the Newmarch Gallery, it has lifted the
profile of the community-run space and cemented Prospect as an artistic community
of the future.
Thanks
to an $18 million development of the Community Hub, Library and Innovation
Centre (CLIC), the gallery has gained a prime spot at the front of the
building. The project began in 2015, when Prospect council was advised that the
state government would not be renewing council’s long-term lease on the Thomas
Street Centre in Nailsworth (which housed the library, gallery, digital hub and
community programs for 40 years), due to a planned expansion of the adjacent
Nailsworth Primary School.
The
community and council worked with architects JPE Design Studio on the design of
the new building on Prospect Road with the aim to create an innovative and
activated space which provides opportunities for all members of the community
to visit, collaborate, engage and learn.
The
new gallery space was renamed the Newmarch Gallery in honour of local artist,
Ann Newmarch, OAM, reflecting the community’s long history as a creative hub
and recognising Newmarch’s contribution both visually, through the murals and
Stobie poles projects, and culturally, putting Prospect on the map as a
culturally significant suburb in Adelaide.
Since
opening in 1988, the gallery has grown to be a recognised art space with a
diverse exhibition program, reflecting its role as a contemporary public
gallery with a longstanding community focus. It will continue to exhibit solo
and group shows across a range of media, supporting both emerging and
established artists. Edward James, the City of Prospect’s gallery and public
art coordinator says: “It’s a community gallery but it has a contemporary focus
– this is a difficult balance to get. How do you keep the community engaged but
also be contemporary and modern? We are going to do a lot more workshops and
artist talks to engage with the community in that way.” The new gallery space
has more exposure and presence than the previous space that was tucked behind the
library at Thomas Street. It now has a prime spot on Prospect Road and the gallery
has day and night viewing.
Newmarch
Gallery launched with Watch this Space, seven artists exhibiting over seven weeks, including
artists such as James Dodd, Laura Wills and Daniel Connell. This project was
designed to activate and test the space, to see how the audience reacted to
used it. It was also an opportunity to see how artists utilised the space, as
they were given free rein.
Up
next is the 10th Prospect Portrait Prize which opens on Thursday 5 December and runs through
until early 2020. The new space has lifted the profile of the gallery,
resulting in a high calibre of artists programmed for 2020, including, Seb
Humphreys, Eleanor Zecchin, and Scott Coleman (KAB101).
The
new space on Prospect Road is extremely inviting and it’s clear that a lot of
thought has gone into the design of the space to engage with all members of the
community. The inclusion of the Newmarch Gallery is important to the community
and this has been recognised by the council giving it prime position at the
front of the building, honouring the legacy of the art that has happened and
making a commitment to the future.
“We have had a lot more people through than I have ever seen in the space,” says James. “It’s already doing a great job putting art in front of people, you can’t miss it.”
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