Fun events for everyone!

In conjunction with our Mangroves from the Water exhibition, opening tomorrow 11 August – 22 August, we have these exciting events for the public to participate in…..


Meet Richard Collopy, who will narrate fantastical tales of nature and beings through indigenous storytelling.


Dance away with Jacqui Dreessens from Wild Moves International, translating a full body experience in connection with nature.


Get inky, creative and expressive by learning monoprinting techniques with Nicola Cerini, making unique prints inspired by the mangroves.

NEW DATE!!! Opening 14th August

We are ready!!

We have a post-quarantine treat for you!!

Our show will open Saturday 14th August, 1 pm.

We are in the process of updating the official invitation and the schedule of events. You will be able to book for the workshops very soon!

Thank you for your patience. Stay home, stay safe and see you all soon!

The beautiful paintings of Helen Martin

The beautiful paintings of Helen Martin conveys a touching fondness for her husband by translating his deep-rooted connection to the mangroves, Her skill as a painter is evident in the atmospheric depictions of mangrove trees as seen in the images below, manifesting the vibrancy and liveliness through brush strokes and play of light.

Helen’s artist statement:

For the Mangroves from the Water Exhibition, Helen is collaborating with her husband Peter Martin, who has a deep affinity with mangroves having grown up playing and exploring them on the shore in front of his family home at Peek’s Point, East Gosford in New South Wales – on Darkinjung Country. 

Her works for the exhibition draw on recent images of a small stand of white mangroves planted in the early 1960s by the five Martin boys at shoreline of Broken Bay. These young boys were motivated to plant mangrove seedlings they had found nearby in response to the degradation and destruction of the local mangroves, their playground, caused by unabashed urban development. The mangroves were seeded in the rocky foreshore among the clusters of native oysters, and over the past 50 years thrived, creating a new habitat.

Helen Martin’s paintings: ‘Mangroves at Peek’s Point, Darkinjung Country: a Martin Legacy I-V’, 2021.

Exhibition opening POSTPONED

Due to the latest Covid regulations, as from 5 August 2021, our exhibition had to be postponed until further notice.

The lockdown is due for 7 days, and we will share the new dates and revised event schedules as soon as we possibly can!

We wish everyone a sane and safe lockdown.

If we work together with compassion for all, we can make it through this (again) !

“The girl who fell in love with the mangroves” : sneak preview!

We are so proud of the variety of multi-media on offer at the next Mangroves from the Water exhibition.

Here is a preview to entice you to visit the Gordon Gallery.

Geraldine Chansard collaborated with director Pauline Dupin to create this heartwarming tale in a short video.

You can follow the news thread on Geraldine’s crowdfunding page to see the development of this project, as well as contribute to realize her dream:

https://fr.ulule.com/la_jeune_fille_tombee_amoureuse_des_mangroves/news/

State of the world mangroves report 2021, by the Global Mangrove Alliance

As world leaders face converging crises of biodiversity loss and climate change, a compilation of the most current information available on what is known about mangrove forests is released, with a look at what’s being done to reverse the downward trends impacting the forests and the local communities who depend on them.

The report is compiled by THE GLOBAL MANGROVE ALLIANCE:
In 2018, Conservation International (CI), the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), The Nature Conservancy (TNC), Wetlands International, and World Wildlife Fund (WWF) formed the Global Mangrove Alliance (GMA). Today, over 25 member organizations share the twin goals of restoring and recovering 50% of recent mangrove loss and doubling the area of mangroves under effective and equitable protection and management.

The report is of great importance to everyone – not only with regards to the mangroves but out of concern for the greater environmental issues facing us all globally.

Introducing the Dance and Film collaboration between Jacqui Dreessens and Enrico Santucci

Jacqueline Dreessens and Enrico Santucci
Échelons, 2021

A collaboration between Jacqueline Dreessens, choreographer and performer, and Enrico Santucci, Videographer and photographer.

A dance film about the interconnection of mangroves and creatures in Lake Connewarre, Wadawurrung Country, Barwon Heads, Victoria, Australia.

Visit Mangroves from the Water exhibition from 7-18 August at Gordon Gallery, Geelong to view this spectacular film!

Enrico’s passion for the mangroves

Here is a tale by Enrico explaining his passion for the mangroves and how his green fingers connects him to the natural world:

On a warm day in February 2019 I was kayaking in Koornoo wetlands territory of the Waddawurrung Balug clan of the Wadawurrung people, with a few fellow artists to be inspired by such a Mystical Ecosystem.  I wanted to showcase how important are Mangroves in wetlands for all the living creatures that are living nearby. 

I saw an endless number of Mangrove seeds floating in the calm waters.  As a spontaneous gardener that I am, I received such a floral message.  They asked me to be part of my story telling, to embody the essence of connecting to such an Eco Cosmos.  I took 8 seeds home, planted them in a long shallow vase.  I built another large, long shallow vase and filled it up with fresh water.  As mangroves are salt water tolerant, salt isn’t essential for their growth.  I then immersed the vase with mangroves seeds in it. 

I didn’t do any research on how to grow those precious seeds, as plants from seeds are easy to grow; you just need to be able to observe, listen and learn from them, like our Ancestors did a thousand years ago.  Seeing those little, fragile seeds growing, becoming little plants, has been a wonderful journey for me. 

A reconnection with nature, to my role in this Planet as a humble helper servant of Nature, Rejecting the Culture of Dominator and Abuser of the Unique Planet we humans call Home.  Like Paul Kelly, one of the most influential singer songwriters of our time, says in one of the most Uplifting songs ever written “From little things big things grow”.  Thanks for coming to testify about this unique Ecosystem, to start the reconciliation process with our Ancestors, with our Environment and with our Common Mother Earth.