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On the street where I live: Viva Gibb’s portrait of North and West Melbourne

Curated by Savannah Smith

Promotional image for the exhibition On the Street Where I Live: Viva Gibb – A Portrait of North & West Melbourne. The text is overlaid on a sepia-toned photograph of older Melbourne streetscape buildings.

Thursday 5 March – Friday 7 August 2026

Between the mid-1970s and early 1990s, Viva Gibb documented the suburbs of North and West Melbourne, where she lived. For nearly two decades, this was the primary focus of her work. Jewel-like portraits predominate, with her subjects set in a distinctive inner-suburban landscape. Grounded in her strong social and political convictions, Gibb created a sympathetic portrait of the community during a transformative period in Melbourne’s history.

The exhibition draws on a generous donation of more than 200 of Gibb’s photographs to Melbourne Art Trust in 2025. It was made by the artist’s children, Sybil Gibb and Rupert Duffy. Curated by Savannah Smith, 'On the street where I live: Viva Gibb's portrait of North and West Melbourne' examines this significant body of work and re-introduces the sophisticated practice of an artist whose photographs have largely lain dormant for 30 years.

Curator biography

Savannah Smith works with the City of Melbourne’s Art and Heritage Collection. She has been employed across the museums and galleries sector internationally, including at the National Galleries of Scotland, in Edinburgh, and the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, in Venice. Most recently, she was the gallery manager of Australian Galleries, in Melbourne. Savannah holds a master’s degree in art curatorship from the University of Melbourne and an honours degree in art history from the University of St Andrews in Scotland.

our acknowledgement

  • Torres Strait Islander Flag
  • Aboriginal People Flag

The City of Melbourne respectfully acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land we govern, the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung and Bunurong / Boon Wurrung peoples of the Kulin and pays respect to their Elders past and present. 

 

We acknowledge and honour the unbroken spiritual, cultural and political connection they have maintained to this unique place for more than 2000 generations.

We accept the invitation in the Uluru Statement from the Heart and are committed to walking together to build a better future.