As you browse the site, add accommodation, tours, events and attractions to your personalised trip by clicking the heart icon. When you’re done, click the heart icon in the menu at the top of the website to view your wishlist.
Review your list, remove any items you no longer need, then select “View your itinerary” to see your trip on a map, or send it to a friend.
Join us at TMAG this summer to celebrate contemporary Tasmanian art and culture! Our summer program includes four new exhibitions, artist talks, school holiday programs and more.
Rex Greeno: Memories through Sea Stories is filled with the life works of Tasmanian Aboriginal Elder Rex Greeno – artist, fisherman, and maker of tuylini, ninga and pyerre (Tasmanian Aboriginal bark and reed canoes). Through his art, Greeno shares a deeply personal story of connection to culture, family, and the sea. The exhibition continues to 27 April 2025.
Come and experience the sculptural works in Written in Wood, inspired by the acclaimed Tasmanian writer Richard Flanagan. Kevin Perkins is a Tasmanian artist, master furniture maker and wood craftsman. The exhibition continues to 30 March 2025.
On Island explores connections between artists and the archipelago of 334 islands that make up Lutruwita/Tasmania. All artworks are from the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery collection. The exhibition continues to 21 September 2025.
From 3 – 12 January 2025, the exhibition On the Edge, will commemorate 50 years since the Tasman Bridge disaster. Two cars that were teetering on the edge of the bridge will be on display for the first time since 1975, providing a powerful reminder of the event that split Hobart in two.
Join us this summer and experience captivating exhibitions that define Tasmanian art, culture, and history.
We acknowledge the Tasmanian Aboriginal people and their enduring custodianship of lutruwita / Tasmania. We honour 40,000 years of uninterrupted care, protection and belonging to these islands, before the invasion and colonisation of European settlement. As a destination that welcomes visitors to these lands, we acknowledge our responsibility to represent to our visitors, Tasmania’s deep and complex history, fully, respectfully and truthfully.
We acknowledge the Aboriginal people who continue to care for this country today. We pay our respects to their elders, past and present. We honour their stories, songs, art, and culture, and their aspirations for the future of their people and these lands. We respectfully ask that tourism be a part of that future.
Tasmanian Travel and Information Centre
16-20 Davey St, Hobart TAS 7000
(03) 6238 4222
bookings@hobarttravelcentre.com.au
hobarttravelcentre.com.au