Alice-Anne Psaltis is an arts researcher, and educator based on Wurundjeri land. She grew up in Meanjin/Brisbane and has been living in southeast London since 2018. Her research examines the relationship between images, memory, and place, often using walking and deep mapping methods.
Alice-Anne has worked across art museums and universities in Australia and the UK. From 2022-24, she coordinated the MA Curating Art and Public Programmes at Whitechapel Gallery, and taught photographic theory at London South Bank University, where she is a visiting researcher with the Centre for the Study of the Networked Image. She has previously worked as an administrator at the Royal College of Art and in curating public programmes at the Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art and the University of Queensland Art Museum.
Her recent practice-led work includes Storied Walks & Deep Mappings of South London (2025), I recall seeing you from across the room (2023), figments (2021), and Spectres of Smyrna (2020). She is also co-founder of tent, a publication and reading group about art and politics.
Alice-Anne holds a BA (Hons) in Art History from the University of Queensland and an MA Art and Politics from Goldsmiths, University of London. She is currently a PhD candidate in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne where she is researching postcards, lost places, and the politics of nostalgia.
contact: aliceanne.psaltis [@gmail.com]