“Place” and “People” are the cornerstones of Envelope’s brand strategy which informs the cataloguing of over 30 years of artistic practice into a conversation between gallery, artists and visitors.
Indigenous storytelling is intrinsically linked to Country. Iconic landscapes, idiosyncratic to each artist, powerfully illustrate where their stories are created.
Every artist has a unique story to tell about their practice in their own words. Informal, editorial-style portraits provide a very human starting point.
My art is about regenerating cultural practices, making people aware of, you know, our culture, and that we are a really strong culture, and that we haven’t lost anything; I think they’ve just been, some of these practices have been laying dormant for a while.”
I paint in my own personal space where I feel most comfortable including my back veranda, in the dry river beds… the camp sites that my families have lived and spent time for thousands of years. I will take time to look at the miniature things, the tiny little things that nature hides.”
My art practice reveals the continued presence and patterns of First Nations knowledge, history and culture in the contemporary Australian landscape despite ongoing interventions.”
Envelope’s toolkit of practical solutions, is designed to harmonise gallery operations for efficient in-house production of ongoing communications. The result? Vivien and her team enjoy more time engaging with curious visitors — explaining and expanding understanding — doing what they do best, storytelling.
The gallery’s existing logo is built on solid typographic foundations which Envelope evolves into a highly flexible architecture. This new visual language provides for a hierarchy of information to be displayed uniformly across all communications.
The gallery enjoys a significant street presence on St Kilda Road. Located at an intersection with four lanes of traffic constantly stopping, it is especially busy during the evening drive-time peak. Envelope capitalises on this opportunity by unifying two previously separate building façades into a single advertising billboard. An initial launch campaign across industry journals, socials and this new canvas deliberately questions potential visitors with a simple call to action — “Curious?”
Physical communications provide the perfect respite from an increasingly noisy digital realm. The gallery is equipped with a new toolkit — exhibition catalogues, gallery price lists, artist postcards and CVs — designed for efficient production by the in-house team.
After making so many decisions about the business by myself for three decades, the recent decision to expand the gallery footprint and regenerate the website, required fresh ideas. I decided to contact Ty. He is a creative, imaginative, and strategic thinker who embraces learning all of the complexities of your business. The first concept reveal was like a reawakening, we were so excited. The finale has us all invested in a bolder, centred, and confident future for the gallery and the artists we exhibit and represent.”
The website operates as the gallery’s communications hub — previewing upcoming exhibitions and building editorial narratives around those on show; allowing for artists’ own context; and providing a generous framework for thousands of works exhibited over the gallery’s long and esteemed history.
It’s an exciting visitor experience with space for longer, editorial-style artist profiles, exhibition essays and news items. Together with the physical galleries, this digital hub forms an important part of the ongoing conversation between the artists, gallery team and other contributors.
Detailed artwork information and availability indicators help to encourage online enquiries. A centralised database of artworks ensures the gallery’s team can quickly update the status of available artworks.
hello@envelopegroup.com.au
T +61 (0)412 249 745
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