Ragnar exhibition NGV
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Ragnar Kjartansson: Mercy at the NGV – a world-premiere exhibition you won’t want to miss

An Icelandic artist described as one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary art is coming to Melbourne for the very first time.

If your idea of a great afternoon involves art that makes you feel something — a little melancholy, a little amused, possibly both at once — Ragnar Kjartansson: Mercy at NGV International is worth clearing your diary for. This world-premiere exhibition brings eight video works by the acclaimed Icelandic artist to Australian audiences for the first time, and it runs from 26 June to 4 October 2026. For those visiting with grandchildren, there’s also a free accompanying exhibition in the Children’s Gallery that runs concurrently.

Ragnar exhibition NGV
Ragnar exhibition NGV Melbourne – images supplied

Who is Ragnar Kjartansson?

Kjartansson is an Icelandic artist born in Reykjavík in 1976, and he’s had major solo exhibitions at the Barbican in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the Palais de Tokyo in Paris. He represented Iceland at the Venice Biennale and was named Reykjavík City Artist in 2016.

His work draws on music, theatre, cinema, and literature — and sits in that interesting territory between comedy and sadness, sincerity and irony. His parents were both theatre people (his father a director, his mother an actor), and that background infuses everything he makes.

Ragnar exhibition NGV
Ragnar exhibition NGV Melbourne – images supplied

What’s in Ragnar’s exhibition?

The centrepiece is The Visitors (2012), a nine-screen video installation that The Guardian named the best artwork of the twenty-first century. It was filmed in real time at a crumbling mansion in upstate New York, where Kjartansson and a group of musicians from the Reykjavík music scene each occupy a different room, playing together while apart. A drummer in the kitchen, a banjo player in the library, Kjartansson himself on guitar in the bath. The lyrics were written by artist Ásdís Sif Gunnarsdóttir, and the effect is genuinely moving — the kind of work that stays with you.

Also on show is the world premiere of Sunday Without Love (2025), his most recent work. Inspired by a postcard on his fridge, Kjartansson and nine performers dress in European folk costumes in a bucolic setting and repeatedly sing the phrase “You must learn to live without love.” It sounds bleak on paper, but the execution is more pastoral painting than protest — the kind of thing that makes you laugh and feel oddly sad at the same time.

Then there’s Me and My Mother, an ongoing work in which, every five years, Kjartansson asks his mother — acclaimed Icelandic actor Guðrún Ásmundsdóttir — to spit on him. The camera captures every grimace, sideways glance, and stifled laugh. It’s a portrait of a mother-son relationship playing out its strange theatre across decades, and it’s unexpectedly touching.

Ragnar exhibition NGV
Ragnar exhibition NGV Melbourne – images supplied

Practical information

Ragnar Kjartansson: Mercy

Dates: 26 June – 4 October 2026

Location: NGV International, 180 St Kilda Road, Melbourne (Ground Level)

Tickets:

  • Adult: $25
  • Concession: $22
  • Child (5–15 years): $11
  • Family (2 adults + 3 children): $60
  • NGV Members receive discounted entry

A $4.50 online transaction fee applies. Tickets are available at ngv.vic.gov.au.

Joint ticket offer: If you’re also planning to see the CARTIER exhibition, there’s a special joint ticket deal — you can add Mercy for just $10 when purchasing a CARTIER ticket. Worth considering if you want a full day at the NGV.

Ragnar exhibition NGV
Ragnar exhibition NGV Melbourne – images supplied

Getting there

NGV International is right on St Kilda Road, making it one of Melbourne’s most accessible major venues.

Tram: Several trams stop directly outside or nearby — tram routes 3, 5, 6, 16, 64, 67 and 72 all travel along St Kilda Road, stopping at the Arts Precinct stop (stop 18 or 19 depending on your direction). It’s a flat walk from the tram to the entrance.

Train: Flinders Street Station is about a 10-minute walk along St Kilda Road, or a very short tram ride. City Loop stations are also close by.

Parking: There’s paid parking nearby on St Kilda Road and surrounding streets, though weekend availability can be limited. The NGV doesn’t have its own car park, so public transport is genuinely the easier option.

The gallery itself is fully accessible, with lifts, ramps, and seating throughout. The video works in this exhibition involve sitting or standing to watch screens, so it’s a comfortable, low-exertion visit.

Ragnar exhibition NGV
Ragnar exhibition NGV Melbourne – images supplied

For grandparents bringing the grandchildren

Alongside the main exhibition, the NGV is also presenting Children’s Play: Ragnar Kjartansson in the Children’s Gallery on the ground level. Entry is free.

Kjartansson created this companion exhibition inspired by the theatrical tradition of a grand feast — think banquet halls and backstage theatre, reimagined for young visitors. Kids can step onto a stage and perform their own stories, draw from lavish still-life displays of food arranged like old paintings, and stack colourful upholstered cushions into wobbly cake sculptures.

It’s an unusually imaginative space — not a typical children’s activity room — and ties in genuinely with the themes of the main exhibition. If you’re planning a visit with grandchildren, the combination of the ticketed show upstairs and the free children’s gallery makes for a very good day out.

Ragnar exhibition NGV
Ragnar exhibition NGV Melbourne – images supplied

A few things worth knowing

The video works are immersive and some run for quite a while — The Visitors is 64 minutes in full, for example. You don’t need to watch any piece end to end to appreciate it, and most people move through at their own pace. There are seating options within the exhibition spaces.

The NGV has dining options on site, including a café, which makes it easy to build the visit around a relaxed lunch. The gallery tends to be busiest on weekends and school holidays; weekday mornings are generally quieter.

Events accompanying the exhibition include a curator’s talk and a member preview on 25 June, and Kjartansson himself is appearing in conversation on 27 June — that event is ticketed separately.


This is genuinely one of the stronger exhibitions coming to Melbourne in 2026 — not conceptually difficult, but emotionally rich, with real craft behind it. If you’ve been meaning to get back to the NGV, this is a good reason to go.

Ragnar Kjartansson: Mercy — NGV International, 180 St Kilda Road. 26 June – 4 October 2026.Book tickets at ngv.vic.gov.au

Ragnar exhibition NGV
Ragnar exhibition NGV Melbourne – images supplied

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