Exhibitions here are staged inside a former cell block of Darlinghurst Gaol, the sandstone prison that now houses Sydney's oldest art school, its perimeter walls and guard towers still standing around the campus lawns and studios. The gallery converted from A-Wing runs an exhibition program independent of the teaching program upstairs, giving Australian and international artists a serious, non-commercial context inside a building whose past use is never quite disguised — the cell proportions and gaol stonework remain part of how the art is experienced. It turns twenty in 2026, a program that has included touring exhibitions sent to venues around the country and end-of-year graduate shows that double as a talent pipeline into the Australian art world. Recent and upcoming programming spans a survey of painter Mitch Cairns to a show of Margaret Olley's intimate interiors, alongside scholarly publications that give the exhibitions critical weight beyond the wall text. Admission is free, the campus opens Monday to Saturday, and the walk from the sandstone gatehouse to the gallery door is itself part of the experience of visiting.