Art Gallery of South Australia Director Rhana Devenport ONZM has announced she will leave the Gallery in July after six years. She will be returning to Sydney and looks forward to embarking on a series of new international and national projects.
“It has been an honour and privilege to have led AGSA for the past six years through many successes and some significant challenges, managing a much-loved and deeply respected cultural and tourism destination,” said Ms Devenport.
Four million people have visited the Gallery since Devenport was appointed Director in 2018, with AGSA programming reaching an audience of 1.8 million just in 2023 alone. During the pandemic, AGSA became one of the most visited galleries in the world, making the Top 100.
“AGSA is a fearless and innovative leader in South Australia, nationally and internationally. I’m incredibly proud of the ambitious growth of our world-renowned collection and our acclaimed exhibitions program.”
“Exhibitions have included highly successful temporary exhibitions, three impressive Adelaide Biennials, the immensely influential Tarnanthi Festival of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art, and the wonderful Ramsay Art Prize.”
“In 2023 alone, we presented the work of 3148 living artists which defines AGSA as the foremost national art museum in its support of Australian art,” said Devenport.
Highlights of Devenport’s legacy include:
- Strategic expansion of AGSA’s collection with important new works of art across all media wholly acquired through philanthropic support, fundraising and a series of major bequests such as the James and Diana Ramsay Fund. Major acquisitions include works by Chris Ofili, Daniel Boyd, Nalini Malani, Olafur Eliasson, Sonia Delaunay, Jeffrey Smart and Giorgio de Chirico.
- Frida & Diego: Love & Revolution in 2023 – the Gallery’s most successful ticketed exhibition in decades with $1.5million taken at the box office, cementing the Gallery’s reputation as an international cultural destination.
- Staging of Clarice Beckett: The Present Moment – one of Australia’s most acclaimed exhibitions of recent years.
- Significantly growing audiences to 1.8 million in 2023 for the Tarnanthi Festival of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art and reaching $8.1 million in art sales through the art fair, making Tarnanthi Australia’s leading First Nations art festival and fostering opportunities for First Nations artists across the country at all stages of their careers. Tarnanthi is also now supported by AGSA’s First Nations Advisory Council.
- An increased international exhibition touring program which included Living Rocks: A fragment of the universe, an official Venice Biennale Arte and touring the First Nations exhibition Kulata Tjuta to France and Germany. An increased national exhibition touring program that has included Quilty, Kungka Kunpu: Strong Women, Brent Harris: Surrender and Catch, and Vincent Namatjira: Australia in Colour currently showing at the National Gallery of Australia.
- Devenport has also personally curated three international projects: Lee Mingwei: Sonic Blossom, Nalini Malani: Gamepieces and Robert Wilson: Moving Portraits to critical and visitor acclaim.
- Landmark publication in 2024 of AGSA 500 – celebrating 500 works of art selected from AGSA’s collection, just one percent of the entire collection.
“I will leave AGSA with a clear roadmap for the future of the 143-year-old Gallery through the new Strategic Plan and am deeply honoured to be part of its legacy and helping to shape its future,” said Devenport.
“I wish the new leadership, and our dedicated, inspiring and passionate staff and volunteers, every success moving forwards. It has been an absolute privilege to work so closely with our inspiring donors and supporters of the Gallery.”
“Personally, I am very much looking forward to the future and to an exciting next phase of my career, which will clearly benefit from my time at AGSA. I have loved living in Adelaide with all it offers and working closely with so many impressive creatives in a highly collaborative environment here in South Australia” said Devenport.
Minister for the Arts Andrea Michael MP said, “I sincerely thank Rhana for her exceptional leadership. She leaves the Gallery with an enviable reputation and a strong plan for the future,” said Minister Michael.
“She has championed artists, led an immensely talented curatorial team and grown South Australia’s incredible collection. She has been crucial to building an inviting space for audiences across all generations to enjoy challenging ideas.”
“I would like to congratulate her on AGSA’s most recent and resounding success, the Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art on display now which continues to play a key role nationally in connecting Australian audiences with the contemporary artists of our time,” said The Minister.
Art Gallery Board Chair Sandy Verschoor thanked Devenport for her extensive contribution to the Gallery, successfully steering the Gallery through the challenges of the pandemic, strategically growing the collection and delivering memorable exhibitions and programs.
“Rhana’s passion for the Gallery, its collection, and audiences has driven a profound enhancement of AGSA’s world-renowned collection and launched a series of highly successful exhibitions both in Adelaide, across Australia, and abroad. We wish her every success for the future,” said Ms Verschoor.
A national and international recruitment search will shortly commence to identify a new Gallery Director.
For more information about the Art Gallery of South Australia, visit: www.agsa.sa.gov.au for details.
Image: Art Gallery of South Australia Director, Rhana Devenport ONZM, with Motorbike Paddy’s work Amaroo Station – photo by Saul Steed