 Griffith University's art collection amounts to over four and a half thousand objects. It's the second largest public art collection in the state. Just recently we've renamed ourselves as Griffith University Art Museum and we feel that this most encompasses all of our activities and gives us a new perspective and simplifies our message. Our collection is an amazing resource and we often have researchers as well as students and student groups led by teachers coming in and looking and viewing works in our collection. But we also have an on-campus exhibition program so we hang works from the collection all around the different campuses of Griffith University. We've been able to partner on publication projects assisting Dale Harding and Gordon Hookie with publications to accompany their showings in documentary this year. It's also fed into our exhibition program. These are some of the most significant Australian artists working today. We've got a really important internship program which has been going for several years now and it highlights the importance of real skills and in the development of a visual arts career. And I think that a space like this offers an amazing venue for that kind of activity where they can learn skills in terms of collection management, curatorship, exhibition logistics or marketing and communications.