West Space is proud to present a major new project by Greek-Australian artist Tina Stefanou as part of our 2025 West Space Commission series.
The second chapter in a two-part exhibition across two major public art galleries in Naarm/Melbourne – Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA) and West Space – this Commission encompasses immersive installation, live performance and music. Stefanou presents a groundbreaking interdisciplinary project, redefining how artists, contemporary art institutions and audiences perceive and participate with socially engaged art, visual culture, performance and access.
With a focus on relationality, knowledge sharing and impactful collaboration and innovation around questions of access, the artist is working with an array of collaborators with different art and non-art backgrounds and access needs, from rural and urban Australia.
Stefanou's recent time spent living in rural Western Australia amidst shifting political and environmental terrains has shaped the ways she chooses to engage and communicate within the arts. Her practice contemplates how neoliberal-humanism and social class dynamics infiltrate our day-to-day lives, sense of self, bodies, practices, and relations, affecting how we connect, communicate, and create liberation for one another and the planet. It holds the potential for other forms of sharing, making, and contributing to the cultural commons beyond the rat race.
Tina Stefanou: You Can’t See Speed is showing at ACCA, 4 April → 9 June 2025.
"Tina Stefanou is an iconoclast—an artist who is tender yet uncompromising in her explorations of sound, community, collaboration, 'the rural' and settler-coloniality.
In a strong field, the Artist Committee was impressed by Tina's proposal, her most rigorous yet convivial body of work so far." — West Space Board Member Eugenia Lim
This project is a West Space Commission, assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body, presented in partnership with the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art.