Aldona Kmiec
Photographic Artist
Aldona Kmiec (b. Poland) is a Melbourne-based photographic artist working across digital and analogue photography, installation, and archival practices. Her work explores themes of belonging, memory, and displacement, combining conceptual and documentary approaches to examine identity, migration, and social connection. She holds an Advanced Diploma in Photography from London Metropolitan University.

After migrating to Australia in 2009, Aldona established her professional practice and studio, developing a sustained body of work engaging with broader social and cultural themes.

Aldona works from her art studio at Montsalvat, Eltham where regularly facilitates cyanotype art workshops for adults and children, helping participants reconnect with nature through hands-on creative processes. Inspired by her childhood on a dairy farm, her practice reflects a longstanding focus on the environment and fostering connection with the natural world.

Her work has received a number of awards and is represented in public and private collections, including State Library of Victoria, St John of God Hospitals, Ballarat Arts Foundation, and has been featured in Channel 7’s Better Homes and Gardens and The Design Files.

The artist acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the lands on which she lives and works and pays her respects to Elders past, present, and emerging.

Instagram: @aldonakmiec
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Aldona Kmiec
Experimental, Installation, Painting, Paper, Photography, Printmaking, Public Art
Live Art
Workshops/demonstrations/master-classes/presentations, Social media services, Residency – community, in school, Public art projects, Professional development training, Project management, Exhibitions, Commercial commissions, Curating, Art instructions/lessons, Arts for social change/creative activism
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Adults, Businesses, Families, General public, Men, People from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, People living with disabilities, School children, Seniors, Women, Young people
NAVA