"Queer-oglyphs" and a "genderf*ck" colour palette feature in an installation designed by Adam Nathaniel Furman and Australian practice Sibling Architecture as part of the National Gallery of Victoria's NGV Triennial.
Called Boudoir Babylon, the project celebrates queer aesthetics through a series of painted plywood volumes in NGV's Gallery Kitchen, which create different spaces for gathering and socialising.
Although the design incorporates stereotypically gendered colours such as baby blue and pink, these are recontextualised and subverted to challenge traditional notions of what is male or female. This is known in the LGBTQ+ community as a "genderf*ck".
Boudoir Babylon is made from painted plywood volumes