Click here: RMIT photography students capture MPavilion 2018

Photo by Rebekah Arcuri.

We love seeing MPavilion through fresh—and keen—eyes. For our opening event on Monday 8 October, we invited talented students from RMIT’s Bachelor of Arts (Photography) program to capture MPavilion 2018, designed by Barcelona-based architect Carme Pinós of Estudio Carme Pinós.

As dusk settled and this year’s sculptural MPavilion was officially welcomed into the world by Carme and Naomi Milgrom AO, chair of the Naomi Milgrom Foundation, which commissions each year’s MPavilion, the group of students discovered new ways of seeing Carme’s creation. See a selection of the photographs below, with thanks to RMIT and the participating students.

Robert Miniter: 

Photo by Robert Miniter.

Indya Williams:

Photo by Indya Williams.

Rebekah Arcuri:

Photo by Rebekah Arcuri.

Inez Brookes:

Photo by Inez Brookes.

Aimee Bush:

Photo by Aimee Bush.

Stephanie Bakas:

MPavilion 2018 is open in the Queen Victoria Gardens, Southbank Arts Precinct, until Sunday 3 February 2019. View our season of free events, talks, workshops, performances, installations, kid-friendly experiences and more on our program page.

Wominjeka (Welcome). We acknowledge the Yaluk-ut Weelam as the traditional custodians of the land on which we meet. Yaluk-ut Weelam means ‘people of the river camp’ and is connected with the coastal land at the head of Port Phillip Bay, extending from the Werribee River to Mordialloc. The Yaluk-ut Weelam are part of the Boon Wurrung, one of the five major language groups of the greater Kulin Nation. We pay our respects to the land, their ancestors and their elders—past, present and to the future.