Bathurst Regional Art Gallery (BRAG) presents The Fragility of Goodness: The Prison on the Landscape and Other Stories by Elizabeth Day, curated by Ann Finegan.
Elizabeth Day's survey exhibition at BRAG examines the legacy of Empire and the colonisation of Australia and its First Nations peoples. The exhibition focuses on the lasting impact of colonial prison systems and how these institutions reshaped both landscape and society.
The Fragility of Goodness: The Prison on the Landscape and Other Stories considers how the histories of colonial prisons continue to shape contemporary Australia. Day draws connections between historical penal sites including Parramatta and Tasmania, engaging with ideas of layered colonial, geographical and social histories. Her practice is informed by both historical research and personal experience within institutional systems.
A key work in the exhibition, The Law Is Not Always Just, forms part of a new series of grass-grown texts mapping prisons across the Central West. This floor installation sits among several significant works including There's a Reason Beyond a Reason, Notes on the Castle, the sculptural recreation of Bathurst Gaol's Lion Gate, Invisible Words Invisible Worlds, and the collaborative community project MYCO LOGIC.
Together, this exhibition invites reflection on systems of justice, power and repair.