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Ever collected things, like postcards or bottletops?

Ever been to the Art Gallery and wondered how artworks get to be in exhibitions? And how the text panels on the walls get written?

Now you can 'collect' artworks from the Art Gallery of New South Wales and arrange them in your own exhibitions.

If you create an effective exhibition, with interesting text panels, it could even appear on this website, for others to see.

 
What do you want to do now?

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(Some especially interesting ones are featured below)

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Software requirements
What do I need to use myVirtualGallery?

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Detailed instructions and answers to frequently asked questions

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Got something to say, or ask, about myVirtualGallery? Send a message to the Website Manager

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Notes for teachers
Using myVirtualGallery in the classroom: rationale, ideas, hints

 
   

Featured Exhibitions

The purpose of this exhibition is to look at some representations of machinery in art as a reflection of the ways we relate to technology. In all these artworks, the functional machine is rendered tec
By Phoebe Boyle - Wed Aug 19, 2009
 
This exhibition explores the way artworks create a unique space to become more than an object, but an experience. This is usually achieved by unconventional artistic forms, for example installation ar
By Phoebe Boyle - Mon Jul 13, 2009
 
Art is a symbolic a language of its own. So, an interesting relationship can be created between images and text. In most cases, the text does not clarify the meaning of the work, but rather, makes it
By Phoebe Boyle - Mon Jun 22, 2009
 
"The most fundamental reason one paints is in order to see".
- Brett Whiteley

Perhaps best known for his Archibald Prize-winning painting 'Self Portrait in the Studio' (1976), Whiteley's belief that ...
By Christine Flatley - Tue Jun 2, 2009
 
"My Window"
Gazing out of my window, what can I see?
Tall buildings staring back at me.
I close my eyes tight.
Determined to see beyond what my window wants me to see.
Gazing out of...
By Sally Walton - Thu Nov 27, 2008
 
Motion, movement, running, jumping, falling, leaping, climbing, never ending motion. Most elusive of elements. Hard to capture, hard to keep, impossible to illustrate? Or is it?

These are some works ...
By Shi Ming Luo - Mon Sep 22, 2008
 
When the term "Pop art" is mentioned, most people find certain artists spring to mind: Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, or images of comic frames, Campbell's canned tomato soup or Marilyn Monroe. Pop ar
By Thomas Ferson - Mon May 19, 2008
 
The exhibition 'Her Beauty and Her Terror' is a collection of photographs taken from the late 19th century up until the mid-20th century that illustrate the harshness of the Australian landscape. It e
By Ruby Heery - Tue May 13, 2008
 
The exhibition 'The Lost Thing' blends styles of architectural photography and documentary photography to examine the idea of presence and absence in the Australian landscape. It takes its name and th
By ashleigh garwood - Tue May 6, 2008
 
Sometimes I feel like art.


By Joy Suliman - Sat Jan 19, 2008
 
Grace Cossington Smith (1892-1984) spent the majority of her life in Turramurra, Sydney NSW. She was instrumental in bringing Modernism to Australia. She used colour with a vibrancy that surpassed th
By Jenna Fielding - Wed Sep 5, 2007
 
Born in Adelaide in 1921, Jeffrey Smart has lived in Italy since 1965. This expatriate Australian painter is renowned for his bleak urban landscapes and still-lifes. He is the modern Australian painte
By Heather Clements - Sun Sep 2, 2007
 
In Australia, convict transportation and escapism are historical realities. However, they can also refer to art's capacity to transport us to vivid imaginary worlds, where life is more intense and exc
By Mark Allerton - Mon Jul 9, 2007
 
Artists have often used irony, appropriation, absurdity and caricature in their work to make overt or veiled comments about society and the state of the human condition. The artists in this exhibition
By Charlotte North - Sat May 26, 2007
 
The objective of this exibition is to draw attention to the often neglected influence of Australian women artists upon their contemporaries and subsequent generations. While the notion of a patrilinea
By Jaimee Edwards - Mon May 21, 2007
 
From sheep to sharks, animals have been the subject of many artworks for thousands of years. Within Australia the Rainbow Serpent, an Aboriginal religious icon, has long been appearing on rock art. Wh
By Annette Michalski - Mon May 21, 2007
 
Carl Plate was one of Sydney's most outstanding abstract painters of the post-war period. Born in Perth in 1909 to an artist father and raised in Sydney, his travels and studies as a young man in Euro
By Anne Ryan - Thu Dec 14, 2006
 
From the politicised voice of the collective mass ('we') to the rediscovery and expression of the self ('me') in the post-cultural revolution era, printmaking in 20th-century China has taken a highly
By Liu Yang - Fri Nov 17, 2006
 
What makes an artwork different from 'the real world'?
Imagine if you tossed a box full of junk onto the gallery floor, and walked away. Would it still be there tomorrow? How would the cleaners dec...
By Jonathan Cooper - Fri May 26, 2006
 

 
 

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