Milica Božić’s research-driven practice focuses on curation and exhibitions about architecture, shaped by her cross-cultural experience across Australia, Italy and Serbia. Named in Australian Design Review’s 30UNDER30 for 2025/2026, she brings a critical approach to heritage and its representation.
Milica Božić: I entered the 30UNDER30 program because I’m curious about the young people shaping Australia’s design scene right now. It feels like a space where connections can move beyond networking and become real collaborations, friendships and shared momentum. I’m genuinely excited to contribute to and learn from this community.

I’m hoping for long-term creative alliances and mentors who challenge my thinking. I’m interested in building a strong, evolving community of practice and friends.
The intensity of it. Being immersed, slightly out of context and fully present. I’m excited by the idea of stepping away from routine and entering a shared space for creative exchange.
I think the most urgent and interesting work happens at the intersections of these fields – architecture, interiors, product design and beyond. Different fields bring different sensitivities, and that friction often creates space for unexpected ideas.
A cross-cultural perspective shaped by Australia, Italy and Serbia, and a research-driven practice that moves between heritage, contemporary architecture and curation. I’d like to think I bring a sense of criticality, openness, and a genuine interest in dialogue and co-creation.
The tightening of intellectual, political and geographic freedoms globally shapes who has access to creative spaces and whose stories are heard. This is highly concerning to me. I think designers need to keep actively creating space for critical voices more than ever.
An incredible density of festivals and cross-disciplinary platforms connecting architecture, design and visual arts. That hybrid territory is most exciting to me, and where I feel most at home.

I was five years old, making a small pottery piece for my mum in kindergarten. That feeling of designing something with my hands for someone I love stayed with me, and I carry it into my work today.
My work is research-driven, experimental, intentionally open-ended and oriented towards creating meaningful encounters.
Producing an event for the MPavilion Season 11 was such a formative experience. It allowed me to connect my research with the public by creating a meaningful encounter. Also, working closely with my PhD supervisors, Suzie Attiwill, Annunziata Maria Oteri and Maria Cristina Giambruno, has been transformative in helping me find my voice.

I would love to collaborate with Boris Acket and Jonathan Bree, ideally together. I’m drawn to artists whose work is immersive and atmospheric across fields.
My favourite activities are yoga and aperitivi with friends.

Ideally, travel. Distance gives new energy, making space for new perspectives to emerge.
I’m interested in the experimental exploration of the multi-heritage environments we live in. It’s important to me that my work takes a critical position – socially, politically and culturally – and influences how we relate to heritage and to one another. I question what Laurajane Smith calls the “authorised heritage discourse” seeing heritage instead as collectively shaped and continuously reinterpreted. Beyond that, I hope my work invites empathy, compassion and coexistence.

Before Sunrise. It’s become an annual ritual. It always reminds me that meaningful connections happen serendipitously and unexpectedly.
Definitely ‘Ride’ by Lana Del Rey.
Australian Design Review’s 30UNDER30 is brought to you by major sponsor Neolith, alongside partners Designer Rugs, Laufen, Krost, Miele, Signature Appliances powered by Miele and Tongue & Groove.
Australian Design Review is also grateful to our 30UNDER30 practice partners AJC Architects, BVN, Cera Stribley, COX Architecture, Genton, GroupGSA, HDR, Richards Stanisich, RIZEN Atelier, Rob Mills Architects, Rothelowman, SJB and Design by WBL for helping us foster the future of Australian design.
Learn more about ADR’s 30UNDER30 here.
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