Goldstone Gallery
Collingwood, Melbourne, VIC
Goldstone Gallery is a contemporary art space in Collingwood, VIC 3066 that takes on social issues through the work it shows and the stands it takes. You'll find glass installations, detailed paper pieces, ceramics and ritual objects by artists interested in memory, spirituality, light and transformation. The gallery's program puts energy into giving a platform to voices that get left out and speaking up against antisemitism.
- Address
- 41 Derby St, Collingwood, VIC, 3066
- Mediums
- Glass, Works on Paper, Ceramics, Mixed Media
- Price range
- Emerging (under $1k) · Mid ($1k–$10k)
Location
About Goldstone Gallery
Contemporary Art Space on Derby Street
Goldstone Gallery is tucked on Derby Street in Collingwood, a suburb buzzing with creative energy. The gallery shows contemporary work from artists tackling real problems. What sets it apart is that it doesn't just hang pictures on walls. The team actively pushes for change through advocacy and education, working to amplify voices from communities that get overlooked. The idea's straightforward: art can start conversations and actually shift how people think.
Collingwood's a good fit for what the gallery does. The whole neighbourhood's got a strong arts scene, design spaces, and locals who care about their community. The space runs rotating shows and events throughout the year, with hours that shift depending on what's on. You can wander in whenever suits you, no need to book ahead. That's intentional. The gallery wants everyone to feel welcome.
Contemporary Art Across Glass, Ceramics, Installation and Drawing
Goldstone Gallery shows work by a carefully selected group of contemporary artists working in glass, ceramics, installation and drawing. The artists here range from abstract to figurative to minimalist, and they all push what their chosen materials can do. You'll find glass installations that play with light and colour to reshape a space, intricate black paper works, ceramic vessels, and conceptual pieces that tackle political and social themes head on. Recent artists have included Ilan El, whose glass works shift how you experience light and space; Deborah Wargon, whose paper installations work with line, shadow and ancestral memory; and Chaya Joffe and Ryan Abramowitz, whose ceramics draw on Jewish ritual and lived experience.
The gallery's program actively supports artists exploring Jewish identity, social justice and spiritual or political ideas. You've probably seen their past exhibitions: work by Badiucao and Nina Sanadze, shows like 'October 7' and 'This is Navalny', pieces by Ilana Razbash. The gallery takes art seriously and thinks carefully about what it chooses to show. Beyond exhibition space, there's also a curated online store where you can buy artworks and limited edition pieces. So Goldstone Gallery works as a viewing space, a shop and a cultural space all at once, which means it helps support artists both financially and critically.
Melbourne Design Week and Four-Artist Concurrent Exhibition
Goldstone Gallery is running four solo shows during Melbourne Design Week, featuring artists Ilan El, Deborah Wargon, Chaya Joffe and Ryan Abramowitz from 14 May to 14 June 2026. Each artist gets their own space to develop their work properly, and you can trace real connections between the four practices. The shows sit around material, perception, ritual and memory, with pieces in glass, paper, light and ceramics. Nina Sanadze, the gallery's artistic director, has put together a framework that lets you see how light and shadow, transformation and hand-crafted form speak to each other across these different artistic mediums.
Entry is free and the gallery's open at extended hours on weekends plus various times during the week to make it easy for people to get in. If you want a private viewing, you can arrange one. The opening week (14-17 May) runs with longer hours, and there are special events happening over the following weekends too. It all points to how Goldstone Gallery operates overall: good contemporary art should be easy for people to see, what a curator does actually matters, and art can bring communities together and get people thinking.
Beyond the Gallery: Advocacy, Community and Artistic Direction
What makes Goldstone Gallery stand out in Melbourne's art scene is how it refuses to keep aesthetics separate from ethics. The gallery's artistic director, Nina Sanadze, is a sculptor herself, and her work pushes well beyond the gallery walls into community projects that actually matter. She led the effort to preserve three tonnes of flowers left in tribute after the Bondi tragedy, working with curators and over 160 volunteers. The Guardian covered it, and now the flowers are part of the Sydney Jewish Museum's major memorial artwork. The gallery also runs the Hostage Pin Collection initiative alongside the Sydney Jewish Museum and UIA, collecting and preserving yellow hostage pins as a record and memorial.
These projects reveal that Goldstone Gallery is something other than a commercial space or institutional venue. It's where collective meaning gets made, where art and activism actually meet. The gallery puts out a Substack newsletter with pieces and writing about art, identity and politics, reaching beyond the physical space.
Visit Goldstone Gallery: Location, Hours and Getting in Touch
Goldstone Gallery sits at 41 Derby Street, Collingwood, VIC 3066, Australia, right in the heart of Fitzroy-Collingwood's arts area. You can just walk in during opening hours without booking ahead. Hours and exhibition dates change with each show, so it's worth checking the website first. Give them a ring on +61 403 917 918 or shoot an email if you want to know more. They'll also sort out private viewings if you'd prefer a quieter look around.
{"text":"The gallery runs a mailing list if you want to hear about upcoming shows and events. It's a welcoming space that respects the traditional owners of the land and their ongoing connection to country. Serious collectors and curious visitors alike will find challenging, genuinely interesting art on the walls."}.
Source: goldstonegallery.com · Last verified 01/06/2026