Art Gallery of New South Wales opens their exclusive Magritte exhibition this month. Don’t miss the 2-for-1 ticket offer every Wednesday from 5–10pm for an after-dark dose of mind-bending art.
René Magritte has landed at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in an exhibition that’s got everyone from art-dads to gallery newbies feeling delightfully unhinged.
AGNSW’s retrospective is a huge get. It’s Magritte’s greatest hits – over 100 works – many of which have never graced Aussie shores before. From his earliest experiments in the 1920s (when he was just getting weird) to his foundational contributions to surrealism, and all the way to the provocative works of his later years. Spoiler alert: things get really strange before his death in 1967.
Magritte’s art isn’t just about looking at skilful painting; it’s full of a weird tension that you never fully figure out.
His art practically begs to be meme-ified. Those mysterious, deadpan images – apples, pipes, bowler hats – have not only influenced modern art but also seeped into pop culture.
2-for-1 tickets
The exhibition is part of the Sydney International Art Series, which means it’s exclusive to Sydney (sorry, Melbourne). Every Wednesday night, the gallery stays open late with a 2-for-1 ticket deal from 5–10pm. So, bring a mate, a date, or that one person who’s always saying “I don’t get art.”
Fun Magritte Facts
- John Cale’s 2003 song “Magritte” and Paul Simon’s 1983 “René and Georgette Magritte with Their Dog after the War” are about Magritte and since the 1960s, many of his works have appeared as album covers.
- The city of Brussels, where Magritte spent much of his life, named a street Ceci n’est pas une rue meaning “This is not a street” after his most famous work, The Treachery of Images.
- In 2009, two armed men stole Magritte’s painting Olympia, a nude portrait of his wife, from the museum in Magritte’s former home. It was returned in perfect condition in 2012 because, duh, the painting was famous and that made it impossible to sell on the black market. It’s currently appraised at AUD$2.1 million.
Tickets to see Magritte
When: 26 October 2024 – 9 February 2025
Where: Art Gallery of New South Wales Naala Nura, south building, Lower level 2
Tickets:
$35 adult
$32 concession
$30 member
$88 family (2 adults + up to 3 children)
$18 youth (12–17 years)
Free for members, children under 12 and companion card holders
See Magritte + Cao Fei and save!
$60 adult
$55 concession
$50 member
$150 family (2 adults + up to 3 children)
$30 youth (12–17 years)
Free for children under 12 and companion card holders
Art Pass for Sydney International Art Series
Magritte + Cao Fei + Julie Mehretu at the MCA
$83 adult
$73 concession
$30 youth (12–17 years)
Free for children under 12 and companion card holders
Ticket FAQs for more information