Fed Square acknowledges the Traditional Owners, the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people of the Kulin Nation, on whose land we gather and work. We pay our respects to Elders past and present and extend our respect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people from all nations of this land. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this website may contain images, voices or names of deceased persons in photographs, film, audio recordings or text.
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What's on
An outline of a child on an adults shoulders as they are looking up into the night sky at lots of small lights

RISING:

As part of RISING: this year, you can enjoy three incredible, interactive (and free!) events at Fed Square.

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A collage image of portraits of Laverne Cox, Marilyn Monroe and Anna Tsuchiya

Goddess: Power, Glamour, Rebellion at ACMI

Trailblazers. Nonconformists. Rebels. Agitators and Instigators. On and off screen.

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Melbourne Now at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia

History-making exhibition returns with 200+ Victorian-based artists

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Koorie Heritage Trust

Discover Aboriginal Victoria.

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The Edge at Fed Square

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Discover Fed Square

Art galleries and exhibitions, a diverse range of food and drink options, and events that capture the heart of Melbourne year after year.

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Virtual Square
Regional Victoria
As part of RISING this year, you can enjoy incredible, interactive events at Fed Square. Over four nights, the Square will be illuminated by thousands of biodegradable lights overhead, with Studio Roosegaarde’s SPARK by Daan Roosegaarde. And a special In Conversation will be held in the Atrium with Daan. Look up in The Atrium to see the stunning deep-sea creatures by Australian creative technologists Tin&Ed: Multitudes. Want to participate in the 10,000 Kazoos event, by Ciaran Frame? It will be a sight (and sound) to behold!
Arts + Culture
Free
Book Tickets Now
Come join us at Fed Square on Mabo Day for a celebration of Torres Strait Islander peoples and culture. Mabo Day commemorates Mer Island man Eddie Koiki Mabo and his successful efforts to overturn the legal fiction of terra nullius, or ‘land belonging to no-one’. Curated by Torres Strait Islander creative Lisa Maza, this free community concert will be headlined by soul, R&B and pop artist Kee’ahn. There will also be dance performances from Gerib Sik and Jaran, music by Luke Captain and a special presentation from lawyer Brian Bero about how we can continue the legacy of the Mabo decision. For more information visit: https://whatson.melbourne.vic.gov.au/things-to-do/mabo-day-concert Follow City of Melbourne on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cityofmelbourne Follow Aboriginal Melbourne on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AboriginalMelbourne/ Follow City of Melbourne on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cityofmelbourne/ Follow City of Melbourne on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cityofmelbourne
First Peoples
Free
Music
Book Tickets Now
Melted cheese foodie experience! It’s a French winter tradition to melt Raclette cheese and drop it on potatoes, ham and pickles. Gather your friends and family in your private igloo, feast on Raclette cheese, drink mulled wine and enjoy roasting marshmallows around your own fire pit. Raclette is more than just a meal – it’s a social event. This traditional French dish, is a celebration of melted cheese and conviviality. Friends and family gather around the raclette grill, sharing stories and laughter as they savour the delicious flavours. This convivial atmosphere is what makes raclette such a beloved tradition in French culture. This winter, embrace the French tradition of raclette, savour the taste of melted cheese and the joy of shared moments with loved ones. Book an igloo for 6 or 8 people today. For more information visit: https://racletteiglooexperience.com.au/
Food + Beverage
The reimagined deep-sea creatures have taken up residence in Fed Square. See the new lair in The Atrium. Dangling above Melbourne’s latest art and design triumphs lurk otherworldly creatures by Tin & Ed—the Australian artists and creative technologists responsible for the many-limbed giants that roamed The Wilds at Sidney Myer Music Bowl last year. Tin & Ed create playful installations and experiences that illuminate the borderless dimension between art and science, the physical and digital, the human and the more than human. Their work is driven by a deep curiosity for the natural world and the intricate ways we’re connected to it. Look up! For more information visit: https://rising.melbourne/ Artist: Tin & Ed
Arts + Culture
Free
Thousands of luminous, biodegradable lights catch the wind and dance above heads in the night sky. Inspired by fireflies, birds and the galaxy of stars, Dutch artist Daan Roosegaarde designed a flock of sparks made from biodegradable materials. Once released, the sparks form organic, ever-shifting clouds of light that behave like atmospheric bioluminescence, caught in a cool night breeze. For four evenings during RISING, the environmentally friendly light show will be released above Fed Square, free to be enjoyed by anyone who takes the time to look up. For more information visit: https://rising.melbourne/ Artist: Studio Roosegaarde, Daan Roosegaarde
Free
Book Tickets Now
Inspired by the ephemeral and organic light of fireflies, and a desire to update the celebratory ritual of fireworks, SPARK is an artwork created by Daan Roosegaarde of Dutch social design lab, Studio Roosegaarde. SPARK by Daan Roosegaarde has been exhibited in Bilbao, Aix-en-Provence, Madrid, Auckland and London – and is coming to Fed Square as part of RISING this year. SPARK by Daan Roosegaarde will gently illuminate the night sky, as visitors are encouraged to pass through the space in quiet contemplation of the wondrous organic and luminescent forms that hover above, moving with the wind. In this special In Conversation event, artist Daan Roosegaarde will be joined by Melbourne Arts Precinct CEO Katrina Sedgwick OAM and RISING Co-Artistic Director and Co-CEO Hannah Fox. Learn more about the artist, his inspiration and the process of creating the award-winning artwork, SPARK – register your attendance for this free event now. Artist: Daan Roosegaarde, Studio Roosegaarde Image: Rebekka Mell
Forums + Talks
Free
It’s 10,000 people, playing 10,000 kazoos and everyone’s invited. Simple. Powerful. Kazoo-tiful. One kazoo? That’s silly and fun. But 10,000 kazoos? That’s a city-sized pied piper of absurdity. An all-encompassing frenzy of kazoo-thiasm. A leap into an unknown kazoo-niverse.10,000 Kazoos is a mass participation event for RISING 2023. It’s going to be a big, unifying, howling moment in the heart of Melbourne, in Fed Square, and anyone can take part. The kazoo is arguably the world’s easiest instrument, which is kind of the point. There’s no practice, special skill, particularly tuneful ear or musical ability required. Just grab a biodegradable kazoo (we’ll provide them). Stick one in your mouth and send some do-do-dos down the tube alongside 9,999 kazooists, all at once, in ramshackle unison. Will we transcend? Will we break a world record? Will we communicate with the ducks on some kind of infrasonic level? There’s only one way to find out. Join the kazoo-nity. Register your interest. For more information visit: https://rising.melbourne/ Artist: Ciaran Frame
Free
Book Tickets Now
Trailblazers. Nonconformists. Rebels. Agitators and Instigators. On and off screen. Through iconic stories, characters and moments from over 120 years of moving image history, Goddess celebrates the women who shaped their own roles, took creative control and fought a system that tried to exploit them. From the swagger of Mae West and glamour of Anna May Wong to the powerful punch of Pam Grier, ACMI’s next home-grown exhibition salutes the groundbreaking achievements and impact of the screen’s revolutionary leading ladies. Though behind the scenes since the beginning of cinema, women were too often reduced to bombshells, starlets and screen sirens. But goddesses are far more than sexist stereotypes. Featuring never-before-seen costumes, original sketches, interactive experiences and cinematic treasures, including iconic outfits worn by Marilyn Monroe and Marlene Dietrich, as well as stories from across the globe, Goddess honours the women who wielded glamour, sensuality and smarts to challenge narratives, defy expectations and fashion personas that transcend tropes. Whether it’s Tilda Swinton, Geena Davis or Michelle Yeoh, today’s goddesses unapologetically occupy spaces and roles that shatter glass ceilings, project solidarity and reframe society through essential stories, brave voices and complex characters. They’ve overcome convention and an industry built to confine them with collective power and fearless creativity to imagine their own heroes and take their own roads. Extended Hours Open til 8pm on Saturdays from Sat 15 April. Open on select Thursdays til 1am – see ACMI’s Goddess Nights program. For more information visit: https://www.acmi.net.au/whats-on/goddess/ Goddess: Power, Glamour, Rebellion is curated by Bethan Johnson, ACMI and is part of Melbourne Winter Masterpieces® 2023
Arts + Culture
Exhibitions
The second edition of the ground-breaking exhibition Melbourne Now will be presented at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia from March 2023. Bold in scope and scale, the exhibition highlights the extraordinary work of more than 200 Victorian-based artists, designers, studios and firms whose practices are shaping the cultural landscape of Melbourne and Victoria. With more than 200 ambitious and thought-provoking projects on display, including more than 60 never-before-seen and world-premiere works commissioned especially by the NGV for this major presentation, the exhibition highlights the vibrant creativity of local emerging, mid-career and senior practitioners and collectives –including many who are presenting at the NGV for the very first time. The large-scale exhibition traverses all levels of The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, including contemporary interventions across the Australian Art and First Nations permanent collection displays, and highlights a diverse range of contemporary disciplines across fashion, jewellery, painting, sculpture, architecture, ceramics, video, virtual reality, performance, photography, printmaking, product design and publishing. Exhibiting artists including Christian Thompson, Esther Stewart, Atong Atem, Mia Boe, Kait James, Pitcha Makin Fellas, Layla Vardo, Nicholas Mangan, Fiona Abicare, Meagan Streader, Mia Salsjö, Sean Hogan, Amos Gebhardt, and Lisa Reid. For more information visit: https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/exhibition/melbourne-now-2023/ Image credits Left image in banner: Portrait of Mia Salsjö, Photo: Mia Mala McDonald Centre image in banner: N’arweet Dr Carolyn Briggs AM and Sarah Lynn Rees, Gathering Space: Ngargee Djeembana 2021, installation view, Who’s Afraid of Public Space? 2021–22, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne., Courtesy the artists, Photograph: Andrew Curtis Right image in banner: Atong Atem, Maria of mars 2022, © Atong Atem, Courtesy of Artist
Arts + Culture
Exhibitions
Free
First Peoples have used pelts in ceremonial and everyday life since time immemorial. KHT has one of Australia’s most significant collections of South East Australian art and cultural belongings. It is from this collection that Second Skin: Essence of Country brings together 22 artists and presents works and cultural belongings that relate to the use of animal pelts in cultural practices. For tens of thousands of years possum skin has been used in the production of cloaks to protect First Peoples from the wind, rain, snow and cold in South East Australia, but are also made for use in ceremony, making music, trade, to reflect cultural identity, map Country and pass cultural knowledge down through generations. The exhibition will present underlying themes relating to cultural and spiritual resilience; pride in identity and community; connection to culture, community and Country. Featured KHT Collection artists include William Barak (Wurundjeri); William Carter (Nharrang Clan of Wiradjuri Nation, and Pajong and Wallaballooa Clans of Ngunnawal Nation); Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta, Wamba Wamba, Mutti Mutti, Boonwurrung); Wally Cooper (Yorta Yorta); Vicki Couzens (Keeray Woorrong Gunditjmara); Lee Darroch (Yorta Yorta, Mutti Mutti, Boon Wurrung); Mick Harding (Taungwurrung); Val Heap (Yorta Yorta); Nola Kerr (Yorta Yorta, Jaara); Kelly Koumalatsos (Wergaia, Wamba Wamba); Cassie Leatham (Taungurung); Gayle Maddigan (Wamba Wamba, Wertikgia); Teena Moffatt (Yorta Yorta, Gunaikurnai, Gunditjmara); Isobel Morphy-Walsh (Taun Wurrung); Kent Morris (Barkindji); Jenny Murray-Jones (Yorta Yorta); Mandy Nicholson (Wurundjeri, Dja Dja wurrung, Ngurai illum wurrung); Daryl Rose (Gunditjmara); Iluka Sax-Williams (Taungurung, Tibrean); Titta (Diana) Secombe (Jardwadjali, Gunditjmara); Len Tregonning (Gunai/Kurnai); Werrimul Art & Krafts; and Kevin Williams (Wiradjuri). The rich knowledge embodied in these works ranging from cloaks, marngrook, arm bands, headdresses, necklaces, bags, vessels, baby carriers, and various forms of contemporary art and craft, continues to flourish throughout South East Australia. Organic forms of cultural material act as powerful reminders of the natural life cycle of living things – from birth, through life, to death and the inevitable return to Country. Procuring pelts was part of a larger waste-free process of harnessing the resources of Country. Long after the rest of the animal has been utilised, the pelt continues to provide physical warmth and an ongoing physical connection to Country, culture and community. Possum skin cloaks are also an important reminder and marker of time, both materially and in their method of production. Beginning with a small number of pelts at birth, the cloak grows as pelts are added throughout a person’s lifetime, and is decorated with cultural designs and symbols. The various designs and markings made on the cloak, in both pigments and engravings, tell the story of an individual’s life journey, forming a visual biography and link to cultural identity. The cloak often follows its owners’ journey through life, marking key events and milestones, to finally be laid to rest with them when they pass into the Dreaming. One of the key turning points in the revival of the cultural practice took place in 1999, when artists Lee Darroch, Vicki Couzens and Treahna Hamm had the opportunity to view for the first time two cloaks held in the collection of Museum Victoria, the Gunditjmara Lake Condah cloak (c.1872) and the Yorta Yorta cloak from Maiden’s Punt (c.1853). These two highly significant cloaks sparked a series of workshops and projects that led to a major revival of the cultural practice of possum skin cloak making. The process of revitalising cultural practice and the various skills required to make cultural belongings out of pelts, has seen First Peoples Communities throughout South East Australia grow their knowledge and connection to each other, to culture and to Country. This has resulted in the design and production of cultural belongings that embrace new ways of making, based on old ways of knowing. For more information visit: https://koorieheritagetrust.com.au/ Image credit: Iluka Sax-Williams (Taungurung, Tibrean), Kulin Connection, 2020, pokerwork on kangaroo skin, 181 x 89 x 1cm. Collection of Koorie Heritage Trust
Exhibitions
First Peoples
Explore Fed Square

Explore major cultural attractions including NGV, ACMI and Koorie Heritage Trust. Discover retail shopping and dine at the best restaurants and bars in Melbourne including Chocolate Buddha, Taxi Kitchen and Beer Deluxe. Fed Square has it all.

Explore Fed Square
ACMI The Story of the Moving Image
ACMI
Navigate the universe of film, TV, videogames and art
The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia
Showcasing Aboriginal and Modern Australian Art
Koorie Heritage Trust
Discover the history of Aboriginal Victoria and South-East Australia
The People's Place
Your digital memory board where you can share your special experiences of Fed Square
Fed Cam
Discover the most popular live cam in Melbourne
Fed Square Barometer
The Barometer is all about measuring the important things going on in Melbourne
The Edge at Fed Square
Venue Hire
Activate your brand at Melbourne’s best venue hire space
Eat + Drink

The best restaurants and bars in Melbourne are at Fed Square.

If you’re looking for the best places to eat in Melbourne, Fed Square’s bars, cafes and restaurants are second to none. Time to get your nosh on.

Transit Rooftop Bar
Your late-night haunt for smooth jazz and classy cocktails
Two people sitting at the bar at Hero ACMI with their backs to the camera
Hero ACMI
Contemporary day-to-night food and wine bar experience
Two people sitting in IceBar smiling at the camera
IceBar Melbourne
Australia’s only ice bar, keeping things fun and frosty in Melbourne all year round!
Good Beer Week and Beer DeLuxe, Fed Square
Beer DeLuxe
Bringing the world’s great beers together with exciting locals from Australian craft breweries.
Transport Public Bar
Melbourne's boutique bar that has it all
Hero ACMI
Contemporary day-to-night food and wine bar experience