Contemporary Art Galleries in Melbourne

A curated perspective on the gallery ecosystem shaping contemporary art in Melbourne.

The commercial wing of Melbourne's gallery scene gathers along Flinders Lane and the adjacent CBD blocks, where dealers such as Tolarno Galleries and Sutton Gallery run programs that balance established Australian names against younger practices in painting, installation, and time-based media. What sets contemporary art in Melbourne apart is how much weight sits outside this commercial core. Artist-run initiatives function less as a marginal presence than as working infrastructure, and spaces such as West Space, concentrated around Collingwood and the northern suburbs, serve as the proving ground where emerging artists test material and conceptual risk before any move toward representation. Between these poles operates a middle tier committed to experimental, curatorially driven exhibitions rather than fair-ready inventory, keeping the gallery scene closely tied to art institutions in Melbourne without simply mirroring their formats. The result is a gallery culture tilted toward process and production, in which the distance between a studio, an artist-run show, and a commercial floor stays unusually short, and movement across that distance becomes the scene's defining mechanism.

Explore Melbourne

A local guide to Melbourne, with links to its galleries, institutions, and wider Australia art context.

Gallery Districts in Melbourne

Key areas where contemporary art galleries are concentrated across the city.

Gallery activity in Melbourne thins and changes character the further it sits from the central grid. Within the CBD, and along Flinders Lane in particular, the established commercial dealers cluster in tight proximity, frequently stacked into the upper floors of older buildings; this is the city's market-facing zone, where representation, art-fair logistics, and a relatively settled roster of artists set the terms.

North of the river the texture loosens. Fitzroy and Collingwood, built over former industrial stock, hold a mixed population of mid-sized commercial galleries and artist-run spaces, with consolidated sites such as Collingwood Yards drawing several organizations into a single address and lowering the threshold for collaboration. Further out, Preston and the surrounding outer-north suburbs read as production rather than display territory, where cheaper floor space supports studios and programs willing to absorb risk. The result is less a single art quarter than a directional pull, with commerce concentrated in the centre and experimentation gaining room as the map extends northward.

Galleries in Melbourne

A selection of contemporary art galleries operating across different areas of Melbourne.

Alcaston Gallery

Alcaston Gallery

Gallery Melbourne CBD DecolonialGlobalEstablished

Contemporary art gallery in Melbourne specialising in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists, with a national and Asia-Pacific focus and regular fair-facing presentation of First Nations practices.

Its program gives First Nations contemporary art a sustained commercial and international platform from Melbourne.

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Anna Schwartz Gallery

Anna Schwartz Gallery

Gallery Melbourne CBD GlobalEstablishedCommercial

Founded by Anna Schwartz in 1986, this contemporary art gallery in Melbourne has shaped Australian conceptual and installation practice through a long-running program of multigenerational artists.

A historically important gallery whose influence exceeds its scale within the Australian contemporary art market.

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ARC ONE Gallery

ARC ONE Gallery

Gallery Melbourne CBD InstallationCommercialLocal scene

Commercial gallery in Melbourne’s Flinders Lane precinct representing respected Australian contemporary artists across painting, sculpture, photography, video, and installation-based practices.

ARC ONE anchors the CBD gallery circuit with a program balancing material diversity and institutional credibility.

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Neon Parc

Neon Parc

Gallery Brunswick, Melbourne EstablishedCommercialGlobal

Established in 2006, Neon Parc operates across Brunswick and South Yarra with a selective program of emerging and established Australian and international contemporary artists.

Its dual-site model connects Melbourne’s younger gallery culture with a broader international circuit.

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Sarah Scout Presents

Sarah Scout Presents

Gallery Collingwood, Melbourne IndependentConceptualCommercial

Collingwood-based contemporary art gallery representing critically engaged conceptual practices; directors Kate Barber and Vikki McInnes also co-founded the boutique art fair SPRING1883.

The gallery occupies a precise position between conceptual rigor, artist development, and fair-oriented visibility.

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STATION

STATION

Gallery South Yarra, Melbourne CommercialConceptualGlobal

Contemporary art gallery in Melbourne established in 2011, with a Sydney space added in 2019, presenting a conceptually driven program of Australian and international artists.

STATION links Melbourne’s commercial scene to a wider national and international contemporary art dialogue.

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Sutton Gallery

Sutton Gallery

Gallery Fitzroy, Melbourne Local sceneConceptualCommercial

Fitzroy gallery established in 1992, Sutton presents contemporary artists from Australia and New Zealand through a steady program of solo and group exhibitions.

Its longevity makes it a key reference point for contemporary practice in Fitzroy’s gallery ecology.

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Tolarno Galleries

Tolarno Galleries

Gallery Melbourne CBD EstablishedCommercialGlobal

Long-standing contemporary art gallery in Melbourne founded in 1967, Tolarno has shown major Australian and international artists, including several artists who represented Australia at the Venice Biennale.

Tolarno’s historical depth gives Melbourne’s commercial gallery scene rare continuity and international memory.

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This is a curated selection. Explore the full network of contemporary art venues on the map.

This Melbourne guide is part of the 1 Cubic Meter global contemporary art mapping project, which documents galleries, institutions, foundations, and independent art spaces through curated city-specific research.

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About 1 Cubic Meter 1 Cubic Meter

1 Cubic Meter is an editorial map of contemporary art venues and exhibitions, built city by city to document where contemporary art is produced, presented, supported, and encountered.

The project is built on a principle of horizontality, both geographic and qualitative. It gives attention to scenes outside the established circuit alongside the major capitals, and approaches a small artist-run space with the same editorial care as a long-standing institution. Each entry is the outcome of editorial selection, a curatorial reading of contemporary art across painting, sculpture, installation, performance, moving image, and other current practices.

We maintain the map continuously, with its focus kept entirely on contemporary art.