My long-awaited first solo exhibition in Australia 'DISAGREE WHERE WE MUST'
Opening : Wednesday  6 August, 6–8pm
Exhibition Dates: 6 August – 28 August 2025
Goldstone gallery: 41 Derby St, Collingwood, VIC 3066, Australia
 
Disagree Where We Must marks the long-overdue first major solo exhibition of Badiucao in Australia, the country he has called home since 2009. While his work has been celebrated in prestigious national  museums across Europe and beyond, he has faced extraordinary resistance  in mounting exhibitions on Australian soil. This delay is not due to  lack of merit, but the chilling effects of Beijing’s far-reaching  campaign of censorship, intimidation, and transnational repression, a  campaign that has cast its shadow even over Australian cultural  institutions.
 
Badiucao is one of the world’s most fearless and prolific Chinese  dissident artists. His work confronts authoritarianism with unwavering  clarity and unflinching conviction. Through bold, satirical, and  visually arresting imagery, he dismantles the architecture of  dictatorship and lays bare the mechanics of propaganda, censorship, and  historical erasure. In Badiucao’s view, when democracy dies and free  speech is silenced, truth itself is rewritten, and often forgotten. His  art stands as a visual counter-narrative to the state-sanctioned myths  of power.
 
Using his brush and pen as weapons of resistance, Badiucao documents the  crimes the Chinese Communist Party would prefer the world forget. His  paintings, prints, and video works in this exhibition expose the full  breadth of Beijing’s human rights abuses: the genocide of Uyghurs in  Xinjiang; the violent suppression of Hong Kong’s democracy movement; the  systematic eradication of Tibetan cultural identity; and the expansion  of transnational repression tactics used to silence dissent far beyond  China’s borders — including here in Australia.
 
The timing of this exhibition is crucial. As Prime Minister Anthony  Albanese completes his second visit to Beijing, his government's  official China policy echoes the mantra: “We will cooperate where we  can, disagree where we must, and engage in our national interest.” But  this rhetoric — however diplomatic — collapses under the weight of the  Chinese regime’s global ambitions. The CCP does not permit disagreement;  it weaponises economic cooperation to erase it. To engage without  resistance is to capitulate. To trade without conscience is to sell out  democracy.
 
Disagree Where We Must  is not simply a critique, it is a call to  vigilance. It urges Australia to wake up to the cost of silence. To  recognise that short-term economic benefit must not come at the expense  of national sovereignty, democratic values, or the safety of those who  dare to speak truth to power.
 
This exhibition also highlights China's growing alignment with other  authoritarian regimes, such as Russia and Iran, a sinister axis of power  threatening global stability. Badiucao’s work draws direct lines  between Beijing’s backing of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, its  escalating threats toward Taiwan, and its infiltration of Australian  politics, academia, and media.
 
Accompanying the exhibition is the launch of Badiucao’s first graphic  novel, You Must Take Part in Revolution, co-authored with renowned  journalist Melissa Chan. 
 
This exhibition is a mirror held up to Australia, demanding we ask  ourselves: Where do we stand? And where must we draw the line?
It is not only Badiucao’s art that challenges the system. It is the very act of exhibiting it.
  
                                                
                                                        
                                
                                    
                                
                                
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