Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA)

Julius von Bismarck: This is not the storm Artist Talks and Walkthrough

Join us for an artist talk and walkthrough of the exhibition Julius von Bismarck: This is not the storm 2026 led by curator Dr Shelley McSpedden. This program is co-presented…

Artist Talks

Event Details

Category

Artist Talks

Event Starts

Apr 18, 2026 15:00

Event Ends

Apr 18, 2026 16:00

Venue

ACCA, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art

Location

111 Sturt Street, Southbank VIC, Australia

Join us for an artist talk and walkthrough of the exhibition Julius von Bismarck: This is not the storm 2026 led by curator Dr Shelley McSpedden. This program is co-presented with the Goethe-Institut.

ACCA is delighted to present This is not the storm, the first Australian solo exhibition by Julius von Bismarck. 

Encompassing a major new kinetic sculpture, photography, and immersive video installations, this exhibition brings together more than two decades of work, much of it never before seen in Australia. With wry humour, von Bismarck challenges our habitual understanding of the natural world, teasing apart the idea of ‘nature’ as a social construct – a romanticised arcadia, an economic resource, a benevolent or vengeful force.

This is not the storm showcases the breadth of von Bismarck’s practice, characterised by a sense of continual experimentation, scientific curiosity and technical virtuosity. His works emerge from direct, physical encounters and collaborations with elemental forces that defy human control.

Accentuating the awe, wonder and terror that natural phenomena can provoke, von Bismarck constructs poetic, unsettling, and oftentimes absurd encounters that problematise our understanding of reality and our relationship with the environment. In doing so, he signals the disastrous consequences of humanity’s domination of the natural world in the age of the Anthropocene—prompting us to reconsider the logic and systems that have brought us here.

Curated by: Dr Shelley McSpedden

ACCA warmly thanks the Goethe-Institut, Australia for their support of this exhibition.

For more information click here