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MAGNT Darwin

 

Located on Larrakia Country, the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory's principal site, MAGNT Darwin, is home to internationally renowned artistic, cultural and scientific collections and research programs.

Each year MAGNT Dawrin presents a dynamic program of internally-developed exhibitions, carefully curated from the collection, and the best travelling exhibitions from around Australia.

MAGNT Darwin is also home to the annual Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA)— Australia's richest art awards.

Image: Colin Jack-Hinton Maritime Gallery. Photo: Shaana McNaught

MAGNT Darwin

19 Conacher Street

The Gardens, Darwin

Open daily: 10am – 4pm

FREE ENTRY*
 
+61 8 8999 8264
info@magnt.net.au

Closed New Year's Day, Good Friday, Christmas Day and Boxing Day

* excludes touring exhibitions and

  ticketed public programs

Getting Here

By public transport

Public buses in Darwin cost $3 for 3 hours or $7 for a day trip. Using Google Maps is the simplest way to find the next bus from where you are.

Number 4 Bus

The #4 runs from Darwin Interchange and from Casuarina Interchange.

It will drop you off on Gilruth Ave, a 10 minute walk from the museum.

Number 6 Bus

The #6 bus departs from the city regularly and will take you directly to the MAGNT entrance.

By taxi

Catch a taxi or use a ridesharing app such as Oscar or Uber.

Ask one of our friendly Visitor Experience Officers to help you to book your onward journey.

Blue Taxi

Radio Taxis

By bicycle or foot

MAGNT is about a four kilometre ride or walk from the Darwin city centre.

It is best to avoid walking during the heat of the day. Ensure you carry water, wear a hat and use sunscreen. 

MAGNT Getting Here
52 ACTIONS

Until 2 June 2024

52 ACTIONS

An exhibition highlighting the social and cultural importance of artistic practice and art as action.

2023 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards

Online

2023 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards

Showcasing the very best contemporary art from emerging and established Indigenous artists.

Cyclone Tracy

Ongoing

Cyclone Tracy

Learn about the day that changed the urban landscape and the lives of Darwin’s residents forever.

Tiny Territory

On now

Tiny Territory

Tiny Territory makes large and wondrous the small, colourful and alien-like invertebrates of the Northern Territory.

Unruly Days: Territory life 1911- 1921

Now open

Unruly Days: Territory life 1911- 1921

The Flinders Gallery was subject to damage in late 2021 and, as a result, the Unruly Days exhibition within the gallery partially closed in January 2022. Major building repairs are now being carried out and the Colin Jack-Hinton Maritime Gallery is also closed as a consequence.

We thank you for your understanding during this period of maintenance.

We look forward to welcoming you back when the gallery spaces reopen and the Unruly Days exhibition has been fully reinstated.

Gumurr’manydji Manapanmirr Djäma

On now

Gumurr’manydji Manapanmirr Djäma

A photographic exhibition from the Arnhem Land Progress Aboriginal Corporation (ALPA) celebrating 50 years of Yolŋu economic independence.

Transformations: the changing nature of the territory

Ongoing

Transformations: the changing nature of the territory

Tracing an evolutionary timeline from the beginnings of our solar system, this exhibition journeys through the periods of natural history that have shaped the unique ecology of the Northern Territory.

Exit Art - Contemporary Art From 2023 NT Year 12 Students

17 February - 2 June 2024

Exit Art - Contemporary Art From 2023 NT Year 12 Students

Exit Art reflects the diversity of the Territory’s artistic practice and practitioners, expressing universal themes of identity, place and the environment.

Colin Jack-Hinton Maritime Gallery

Now open

Colin Jack-Hinton Maritime Gallery

We're thrilled to announce that the Flinders Gallery is now open!

After undergoing repairs due to damage in late 2021, the Unruly Days exhibition and the Colin Jack-Hinto galleries are now back in full swing.

Thank you for your patience during our maintenance period. When you visit, please also say hi to Melville, our Pygmy Blue Whale, who has recently been reinstated in the Colin Jack-Hinton Maritime Gallery.
See you soon!

Gumurr’manydji Manapanmirr Djäma

Online

Gumurr’manydji Manapanmirr Djäma

In the immersive Gumurr’manydji Manapanmirr Djäma virtual gallery, viewers can see historical vignettes of Yolŋu life in Milingimbi, Galiwin’ku, Gapuwiyak, Ramingining and Minjilang – communities where ALPA operates today.

MAGNT History

MAGNT was founded in 1966, with the introduction of a Bill into the Legislative Council of the Northern Territory. Dr Colin Jack-Hinton was appointed the MAGNT's first director, taking up the position in 1970.

It was first housed in the renovated old Town Hall (originally known as the Palmerston Town Hall) in Darwin’s central business district

 

But on that fateful evening, Christmas Eve 1974, Cyclone Tracy hit Darwin, destroying the old Town Hall and damaging much of the MAGNT collection. 

 

For the next few years both the staff and collection were housed in multiple buildings around Darwin, coming together for lunchtime lectures in the ruins of the Old Town Hall.

After deliberation, approval was finally granted for the construction of a new purpose-built museum and art gallery at Bullocky Point, on the site of the old Vestey's Meatworks. It was opened on the 10 September 1981.

 

Over the last few decades, MAGNT has grown to include six sites across Darwin and Alice Springs. MAGNT became an independent statutory body on 1 July 2014.

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