ELEGY opens Feb 22 / FLIP OUT in the window
ELEGY: Lizzie Hall and Kate Stevens
22.2.25 – 22.3.25
OPENING 3pm SATURDAY 22 FEBRUARY
Elegy is a response to personal and collective grief made by two artists whose works are in conversation with each other in a way that reflects their daily conversations on paint and life.
Lizzie Hall’s paintings are of the Aral Sea, now a desert because of Soviet mismanagement. Her late father worked there as part of a remediation effort to try and save what was left. Hall’s source material are her photos taken during a visit to the region with her father in 2001. “I have been painting the absence, the distance between then and now, in an attempt to retrieve my father and to retrieve a missing sea and in doing so, let the salt pour out.”
Kate Stevens’ paintings are of drone footage shown on Russian and BBC news of Aleppo, Syria from 2016. Missing from these images of empty ruins is the devastating human toll of bombing civilian populations. Stevens’ work considers how we respond to distant conflicts.

Aral Sea, 2001 (diptych 4)
114x182cm (2 panels)
oil, oxide on linen, 2022

Selective Sympathy (Aleppo)
125x223cm (2 panels)
oil on canvas, 2022
Also opening Thursday 27 February at Canberra Contemporary Platform, Manuka, is The Reckoning, a powerful series of paintings by Kate Stevens examining the impact of alleged war crimes committed by Australia’s Special Forces during the war in Afghanistan, and exploring how these events shape Australian cultural identity, questioning the narratives we uphold and the voices we silence.
Lizzie Hall and Kate Stevens live and work in Braidwood, NSW and both studied at the ANU School of Art.
Lizzie Hall has been a finalist in multiple art prizes, including the Brett Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship (2007), the Mosman Art Prize (2013/2024), the Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize (2017), The Alice Prize (2022) and the KAAF Art Prize (2022-Highly commended/2023/2024). Her work has been shown at Monash University, Albury Regional Art Gallery, Tuggeranong Arts Centre, numerous ARIs and was included in the Canberra Biennial in 2020 and 2022.
Kate Stevens focuses on Australian narratives of distant conflicts, most recently with works addressing the failures of Australia’s involvement in the war in Afghanistan. Her work has been shown in numerous group and solo exhibitions including at Sydney Contemporary and the Canberra Contemporary Art Space, and she received the 2021 Evelyn Chapman Art Award. Her paintings are held in the collections of Artbank, ACT Legislative Assembly, ACT Health, Canberra Museum and Gallery and numerous private collections, and she has twice been the recipient of the prestigious Portia Geach Memorial Award for portraiture.
MATT GREEN: Flip Out
Now showing in the window gallery*
Civic Art Bureau presents Flip Out an Exhibition of Skateboard Art by Matt Green in the Art Bureau Window, celebrating Belco Bowl Jam.
Matt Green is a Geelong born, Melbourne based artist, skateboarder and musician. He has produced many album covers and band posters, dating back to Signs of Satanic Youth by fellow Geetroit rockers Magic Dirt in 1993. His most recent solo show birds eye views in 2024 explored the Australian landscape and climate in crisis. USA based FLIP skateboards commissioned Matt to paint a six-board series depicting FLIP’s pro riders, released internationally in 2022. Myths, homelands and personality traits are the focus of these works.


* The window gallery is on the street directly beneath the upstairs space, formerly maintained by Smiths, now curated by the Bureau.
Please join us on Saturday afternoon for Lizzie and Kate’s opening. Stay tuned for more bureaucratic outputs: Jonas Balsaitis DHG pop-up, Lucie Thorne, Leo Loomans & Peter Vandermark, Benny Chop + friends.
Cheers from Adam
PS.
For anyone wondering why we’ve been slow to kick off this year, we delayed the start of our 2025 program because of the expected arrival of our baby boy Lewis. He was born week before last, he’s fabulous and his Mum Barbara is incredible.
