News
Back 16 Aug '22

First Nations artist creates giant art garden for Queen’s Wharf Brisbane

An enormous 15 metre floating art garden depicting native plants by exciting First Nations artist Tony Albert has been unveiled, adding to the growing multi-million-dollar collection of public art earmarked for the transformational Queen’s Wharf Brisbane.

Titled Inhabitant, the bold, botanical artworks of Australian flora, including Banksia, Desert Pea and Waratah, will be fabricated in marine-grade aluminium and raised four metres above the porte-cochere drive-through entrance to Brisbane’s new entertainment precinct.

A background greenery of live native plants will extend the full length of the William Street underpass.

Tony Albert, the Brisbane based contemporary artist behind the revamped Sydney Football Stadium’s high profile blue seating artworks, said he was “honoured” his “epic in scale” garden was included in the iconic public art project.

“Brisbane is part of my heart and I’m so grateful to be accepted and work and consult with the local community,” he said.

“As an artist these kinds of opportunities are unprecedented, especially in the way in which you can communicate with an audience.

“We need aspirations for our children and need that visibility as part of the landscape.”

Mr Albert described Inhabitant as multi-layered and included a playful twist in his selection of flora.

“I wanted something bright and vibrant that people will identify with Australia and also the indigenous people, but there’s a deeper story to it,” he said.

“When you look at the way the oldest surviving culture has looked after, maintained, and cherished the landscape, it has these beautiful and symbolic ideas of caring for country.”

The Townsville-born aboriginal artist has built an impressive portfolio of prestigious commissions and accolades, including a sculpture to commemorate indigenous soldiers for the Sydney Hyde Park War Memorial and representations in the National Gallery of Australia and Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art.

Director of the Institute of Modern Art Liz Nowell, part of the Specialist Arts Advisory panel, which is curating the comprehensive collection of artworks to be installed across the tourism precinct’s 7.5ha of public space said Inhabitant carries “an important and powerful message.”

“Tony Albert is one of Australia’s foremost contemporary artists, and his international career began right here in Brisbane. It seems fitting that such a significant work, by an artist who is so embedded in this city should take pride of place in Queen’s Wharf Brisbane,” Ms Nowell said.

“It’s critical that these statues are counterbalanced with public art from First Nations people.”

The Specialist Arts Advisory panel is being led by highly regarded art figure Philip Bacon and as well as Liz Nowell includes leading Indigenous curator and arts administrator Avril Quaill.

All artworks will be in place for the development’s planned staged opening from the second half of 2023.