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RE: Imagined: An exhibition of works by Konstantina

Current exhibition
29 October - 6 December 2025
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  • Overview
  • Selected Works
  • Installation Views
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Images
Overview
Konstantina, Mari Budbili II, 2025
Konstantina, Mari Budbili II, 2025

"These works are... a blueprint for the next evolution of my work with the British Museum, where my own artistic interpretation of the past becomes the future."

 

- Konstantina

LONDON, 29 October, 2025 − JGM Gallery presents RE: Imagined, an exhibition of works by proud Gadigal woman of the Eora Nation (Sydney basin), Konstantina, inspired by her three-year research project with the British Museum. 

 

Konstantina’s practice spans archival research, writing, social practice and small-scale sculpture, installation, film, and painting. Her engagement with each of these disciplines, however, began with a more singular directive in mind: the reassertion and recognition of her Gadigal heritage in opposition to its historic erasure. Konstantina reclaims and shares her story and family history, presenting connections to her Aboriginality which have been whitewashed since her great-grandmother’s generation. Her work documents a personal journey of rediscovery, exploring her identity and reintegrating Gadigal culture and language back into her own family’s customs. 

 

During her ongoing research project with the British Museum (2023 − present) Konstantina examines First Nations Australian objects which are currently part of the Museum’s collection. These objects number over 6,000 items and many have never been displayed since they were taken from Indigenous communities in various collecting contexts − often without consent and sometimes in circumstances of extreme violence − during the project of colonisation in Australia. Konstantina’s research explores the materials from which these objects were made, as well as the techniques used to make them. From her home and studio on Bundjalung Country (Byron Bay), Konstantina enters the second phase of her project, remaking these objects using traditional materials, such as river reeds, possum skin, bark and shells, and Gadigal skill sets, including bag weaving, making and adorning possum skin cloaks, and necklace design. After this phase, Konstantina re-imagines these objects through non-traditional mediums and making processes, including beading and embroidery, creating a new ‘roadmap’ for contemporary manifestations of Gadigal material culture. 

 

RE: Imagined showcases the results of the most recent phase of Konstantina’s project: paintings inspired by the raw materials which the Gadigal used to fashion the objects housed in the British Museum, and the original environments from which these materials were sourced. Her paintings are titled with the Gadigal word for either the material, or the item of clothing or accessory which it is used to make. Narang Barraba, for example, is the Gadigal word for a small reed or bulrush from which the Gadigal make necklaces, waistlets and chaplets. Konstantina interprets the young plant as if through its distorted reflection in the water it is commonly found growing beside, or as a dark silhouette set against glaring sunlight. In the upper right of the painting, radials of white dots emanate from a central point, which suggest a ripple or the sun’s halo. These radials are broken by less dense lines of gold dots creating darker recesses, which resemble the elongated forms of reeds. Through this treatment, Konstantina depicts the material in its early stages of growth, within its natural environment, before the mature plant is harvested and dried. 

 

Konstantina frames the reed and ripple or sun motifs with an irregular white border which sections them from an earthen backdrop, as if they are specimens of study suspended in a lantern slide. This composition references the practice of collecting and examining botanical specimens from ‘exotic’ outposts like Australia, during the “great colonial voyages” of Nicolas Baudin and Matthew Flinders, and the interpretation of these specimens through drawing and watercolour, as in the work of Joseph Banks, James Cook and Sydney Parkinson. By alluding to her subject’s life within this manner of composition, Konstantina’s work suggests that materials and so-called ‘artefacts’ from First Nations communities held by museums and institutions are not inert, but objects with living histories which have contemporary social, spiritual and practical uses in the communities where they are from. 

 

Konstantina’s wider work is marked by observations and analysis of this nature; almost everything she encounters in her investigation of culture, colonialism, language and lore, she documents through a visual medium, accompanied by text in the form of fragments, reflections or aphorisms. Often, she will work with a particular theme in mind. Her series, Raining on Eora (2021−22), for example, took locations in the Sydney area as starting points from which to tell stories about their significance in First Nations culture through painting and writing. RE: Imagined follows this course of both revivifying Gadigal cultural memory and imagining a future for traditional practices. 

 

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Selected Works
  • Konstantina Ngara I, 2025 Acrylic on linen 75cm x 75cm
    Konstantina
    Ngara I, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    75cm x 75cm
  • Konstantina Ngara II, 2025 Acrylic on linen 151cm x 100.5cm
    Konstantina
    Ngara II, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    151cm x 100.5cm
  • Konstantina Ngara III, 2025 Ochre on linen 91cm x 90cm
    Konstantina
    Ngara III, 2025
    Ochre on linen
    91cm x 90cm
  • Konstantina Bamal I, 2025 Acrylic on linen 90.5cm x 75cm
    Konstantina
    Bamal I, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    90.5cm x 75cm
  • Konstantina Bamal II, 2025 Acrylic on linen 121cm x 90cm
    Konstantina
    Bamal II, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    121cm x 90cm
  • Konstantina Narang Barraba, 2025 Acrylic on linen 79.5cm x 40cm
    Konstantina
    Narang Barraba, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    79.5cm x 40cm
  • Konstantina Barraba, 2025 Acrylic on linen 121cm x 121cm
    Konstantina
    Barraba, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    121cm x 121cm
  • Konstantina Wali, 2025 Acrylic on linen 75.5cm x 75.5cm
    Konstantina
    Wali, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    75.5cm x 75.5cm
  • Konstantina Budbili, 2025 Acrylic on linen 155cm x 100.5cm
    Konstantina
    Budbili, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    155cm x 100.5cm
  • Konstantina Mari Budbili I, 2025 Ochre on linen 140cm x 139cm
    Konstantina
    Mari Budbili I, 2025
    Ochre on linen
    140cm x 139cm
  • Konstantina Mari Budbili II, 2025 Acrylic on canvas 199cm x 139cm
    Konstantina
    Mari Budbili II, 2025
    Acrylic on canvas
    199cm x 139cm
  • Konstantina Murrira I, 2025 Acrylic on linen 151cm x 100.5cm
    Konstantina
    Murrira I, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    151cm x 100.5cm
  • Konstantina Murrira II, 2025 Acrylic on linen 121cm x 90cm
    Konstantina
    Murrira II, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    121cm x 90cm
  • Konstantina Guwirang I, 2025 Acrylic on linen 139.5cm x 139cm
    Konstantina
    Guwirang I, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    139.5cm x 139cm
  • Konstantina Guwirang II, 2025 Ochre on linen 50cm x 50cm
    Konstantina
    Guwirang II, 2025
    Ochre on linen
    50cm x 50cm
  • Konstantina Guwirang III, 2025 Ochre on linen 50cm x 50cm
    Konstantina
    Guwirang III, 2025
    Ochre on linen
    50cm x 50cm
  • Konstantina Guwirang IV, 2025 Ochre on linen 79.5cm x 40cm
    Konstantina
    Guwirang IV, 2025
    Ochre on linen
    79.5cm x 40cm
  • Konstantina Baragu, 2025 Acrylic on linen 60cm x 60cm
    Konstantina
    Baragu, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    60cm x 60cm
  • Konstantina Banga I, 2025 Acrylic on linen 75cm x 75.5cm
    Konstantina
    Banga I, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    75cm x 75.5cm
  • Konstantina Banga II, 2025 Acrylic on linen 79cm x 100cm
    Konstantina
    Banga II, 2025
    Acrylic on linen
    79cm x 100cm
Installation Views
  • Dsc08194 Julius Edit
  • Dsc08218 Julius Edit
  • Dsc08144 Julius Edit
  • Dsc08232 Julius Edit
  • Dsc08135 Julius Edit
  • Dsc08146 Julius Edit
Press
  • IMPULSE

    Editors' Selects: November 2025
    Sehrish Alikhan, November 17, 2025
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