Queensland Art Gallery: Brisbane’s architectural landmark

Queensland Art Gallery and the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Fountain, June 1982 / Collection: QAGOMA Research Library / Photograph: Richard Stringer / View full image
Australia’s most outstanding concrete public architectural works have recently been chosen from a judging panel comprising some of Australia’s best-known architects and building experts with Robin Gibson’s Queensland Art Gallery among Australia’s top 10 most outstanding and distinctive architectural landmarks in Australia. The structures selected from a list of 45 nominations based on architectural merit, innovation in the use of concrete and exemplar of time.
Gibson’s vision of Brisbane celebrating its river changed the face of the city’s South Bank waterfront, with the Gallery winning the Sir Zelman Cowan Award for the most outstanding public building in Australia when it opened in 1982.

QAG under construction, with architect Robin Gibson AO
(left) and then Gallery director Raoul Mellish, c.1981 / Photograph:
Richard Stringer / View full image

Queensland Art Gallery, 1982 / View full image

Queensland Art Gallery from the Victoria Bridge, Brisbane, 1982 / Collection: QAGOMA Research Library / Photograph: Richard Stringer / View full image
The other nine structures, many modernist in style are Jørn Utzon’s Sydney Opera House; Australia Square Tower by Harry Seidler and Associates; Roy Grounds Australian Academy of Sciences’ Shine Dome in Canberra; the High Court building in Canberra; Sydney’s Punchbowl Mosque; the Melbourne University Carpark; the Gladesville Bridge in Sydney (which was the longest single-span concrete bridge in the world when it was built in 1964); the Victorian State Offices, and James Cook University Library in Townsville.

Huang Yong Ping, China/France 1954-2019 / Ressort 2012 / Aluminium, stainless steel / Commissioned 2012 with funds from Tim Fairfax AM through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Estate of Huang Yong Ping / Photograph: Mark Sherwood © QAGOMA / View full image

Ai Weiwei, China b.1957 / Boomerang 2006 / Glass lustres, plated steel, electric cables, LED lamps / 700 x 860 x 290cm / Gift of the artist through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation 2007 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Ai Weiwei / Photograph: Natasha Harth © QAGOMA / View full image

qag Watermall, featuring Yayoi Kusama’s Narcissus garden 1966/2002 / Photograph: Natasha Harth / View full image
The selection was based on three criteria: Architectural Merit (the form, function and structure of the building); Innovation in the use of concrete as a material, as a structure, and aesthetically; and finally, Exemplar of the time, which determined whether the project redefined and expanded concrete’s potential.
The publication of the Top 10 List marks the 90th anniversary of the establishment of the organisation that represents the heavy construction materials industry, Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA), August 26, 2019
Elliott Murray is Senior Digital Marketing Officer, QAGOMA
Featured image: Queensland Art Gallery / Photograph: Richard Stringer