
Most of the objects we live with pass unnoticed, handled without thought. A shoelace, a candle, a child’s drawing, a paint tray, even a lump of Blu-Tack.
In _Stone Soup, _Hany Armanious, one of Australia’s leading artists, brings these objects back into view. Through the casting process, he remakes them as near-perfect doubles so precise they unsettle what we think we know.
His sculptures remind us of the joy of seeing something as if for the very first time, while unravelling our uncertainty about how we come to know the world through its things.
Curator Laurence Sillars says: “Armanious’s practice is not merely an exploration of the object, but an invitation to dwell in the uncertainty of perception itself – a quiet but radical challenge to the assumption that the world is a stable place. Throughout, there is joy, a celebration of being, touching, of looking so intently that the familiar becomes strange. In an age of synthetic realities, this is a profoundly generative act. Like stepping into a place where the language is unfamiliar and every word must be relearned, his sculptures offer the thrill and vertigo of finding one’s bearings in a newly translated world – a place where, in order to truly see, we must first allow ourselves to be lost.”
_Stone Soup _is the artist’s largest exhibition to date, featuring more than 80 works spanning 15 years of practice, including a new commission and many works never before seen in Australia.
The exhibition is curated by Laurence Sillars, Head of the Henry Moore Institute, with Samantha Comte, Head Curator, and Charlotte Day, Director of Art Museums, at the University of Melbourne, and builds on a recent presentation at the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds, UK.







Hany Armanious is a sculptor based in Sydney, Australia. He is known for his uncanny, often humorous replicas of everyday objects, which subvert viewers’ understandings of material culture, morphology, and value under the veneer of familiarity.

Buxton Contemporary is a public art museum dedicated to contemporary art, located at the University of Melbourne’s Southbank Campus in the Melbourne Arts Precinct, Australia. Opened in 2018, the museum was purpose-built to house the Michael Buxton Collection, one of the most significant collections of recent Australian art. Designed by Australian architecture practice Fender Katsalidis, the building includes multiple gallery spaces, education facilities, and an expansive outdoor screen dedicated to moving-image art that activates the surrounding streetscape.

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