Discover how a team of cross-discipline students dove into a world of coding, storytelling, and sound design, to create a game inspired by our exhibition.
Read MoreThe murnong (yam daisy) was a staple food source for Wurundjeri people for tens of thousands of years!
Read MoreJournalism students from The University of Melbourne used the NOT NATURAL theme as a prompt for short podcasts.
Read MoreThrough creative writing workshops delivered at CERN and locally, DARK MATTERS artist Suzanne Treister sought to unlock the hidden imaginations of expert scientific theorists and encourage dreams of future worlds.
Read MoreFind out about the collaboration behind BREAK THE BINARIES exhibit, Self Portrait, in this interview between J. Rosenbaum and Melanie Huang.
Read MoreWe sat down with eighteen-year-old Lauri Pavlovich (they/them), the youngest exhibiting artist at Science Gallery Melbourne, to chat bugs and breaking the binaries as a neurodivergent and non-binary young person.
Read MoreThey say ‘the key to a person’s heart is through their stomach’. Could it also be the key to their mood and mental health?
Read MoreImagine being observed through viewfinders, locked up inside a tiny, secluded room on the worst day of your life.
Read MoreExplore this youth-made digital zine created in response to our MENTAL exhibition.
Read MoreWellness is about much more than not being sick— it’s a trillion-dollar industry.
Read MoreIn 2020, Journalism students from the University of Melbourne created short audio pieces in response to our exhibition MENTAL: Head Inside.
Read MoreMENTAL exhibition artist Nwando Ebizie allows her need for expression to guide her form. Among other things, she is a dancer, DJ, writer, curator, musician, composer and Afrofuturist. ‘I feel limited in the world and art is a place to let go of those kinds of boundaries’.
Read MoreChemist and theatre practitioner Jue Theng Soo is an avid proponent of ScienceArt; the concept of assimilating science into the performing arts.
Read More“Both my parents are scientists, and I pursued art, which has often sparked conversation about where one field stops and the other begins, and how valuable art and science are in collaboration.”
Read MoreMENTAL exhibition artist Wednesday Kim is largely inspired by the effects of nightmares, intrusive thoughts and childhood trauma on the human psyche. Oh, and shrimps!
Read MoreMitch became a friend of Science Gallery Melbourne more than two years ago when he built a ten-metre eel trap out of river reeds to explore Indigenous aquaculture technology.
Read MoreEmu Sky is a collaborative exhibition created by Barkandji researcher Zena Cumpston
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