Scintilla

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Scintilla

  • Artist
    Vicki Potter
  • Dates
    29 Jul—24 Aug 2025

“When you start worrying about the position of a mark, you cease to paint.” — Tony Tuckson

Vicki Potter is a Sydney-based artist, currently undertaking her Master of Fine Art at the National Art School. The artist’s work begins in the landscape but resists straightforward representation. Impressions of movement, light and distance are filtered through an intuitive process. There are no fixed subjects here; the interest lies in how the image is constructed and what it might hold.

“Walking is central to my practice,” Potter says. “It is how I gather sensory impressions and bear witness to the ephemeral: the shifting path of a flock of birds, the imprint of a well-travelled footpath, or the brief impression of waves on sand.” These details are not rendered directly, but absorbed into the surface. “Sometimes it’s a more enduring trace,” she continues, “like a fossil embedded in rock. It’s these sorts of images that find their slippery way into my paintings.” 

In Traces, vertical skeins of ochre stretch upwards, anchoring the canvas in a field of soft, atmospheric greys. Loose calligraphic strokes sweep across the picture plane, not to describe a form, but to animate the surface. Like Tuckson, Potter is interested in the physical immediacy of painting, how a mark made quickly, even roughly, can carry authority.

Remains plays in a higher key, purples, aquas, and lavenders form a textured field, animated by painterly incidents: daubs, drips, and punctuating dots of colour. By contrast, Swoop pulls dramatically back. A pale, chalky ground dominates, with faint marks and subtle variations in texture. There is a sense of openness, even fragility in the work.

 

Harbour Held

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Harbour Held

Following the luminous success of Due North, Bellingen-based contemporary painter Melanie Waugh returns with Harbour Held, a radiant new body of work that anchors her expressive brushwork and coastal sensibility to Sydney’s iconic harbour landscapes.

In this latest series, Waugh turns her attention to the cherished inlets and headlands of Eora/Sydney, from Cremorne Point to Shelley Beach and Cottage Point, capturing the region’s shifting shoreline light and lush, sculptural vegetation in her signature gestural style. These are scenes rendered not with photographic precision but with emotional clarity, inviting viewers to inhabit the artist’s experience of place, immersive, responsive, alive to nuance.

Across the exhibition, sailboats skim across aquamarine water, sandstone pathways wind through coastal scrub, and brilliant green fronds burst forward from the foreground. A red lighthouse, perched on a cliff edge, gazes over the glittering surface of the harbour. A white beacon is glimpsed through strappy leaves and dappled light. These are views familiar to many, yet rendered afresh through Waugh’s loose, intuitive application of paint. Each brushstroke carries the weight of both memory and immediacy.

Waugh’s practice is process-driven. Working from plein air sketches, photographs and her own recollections, she paints not to replicate a scene but to distil it, to capture something of its mood, tempo and quiet exhilaration. “The intention was to combine composition, tone and the application of paint so that I become completely immersed in the puzzle that is painting,” she says.

Her paintings embrace nature’s slower, salubrious rhythms. They hum with warmth and movement, yet they are grounded in a kind of contemplative stillness, the hush of a moment held, the feeling of standing before a view and being quietly, wordlessly stilled by it. “It is thrilling to stumble upon a view such as a gum tree at the right time of day where glimmering light falls perfectly on a branch,” Waugh explains, “and then if I am able to use the action of just one brushstroke to capture this moment, it brings me an enormous amount of satisfaction as an artist.”

This new body of work deepens Waugh’s relationship with the east coast landscapes that have long inspired her. While previous series such as Due North travelled northward to Byron Bay, Harbour Held returns south, drawing focus to Sydney’s inner waterways and the enduring allure of its harbour. The result is a painterly ode to water, light and place, to the leafy enclaves and sea-worn tracks that line the edges of the city, and the personal histories we attach to them.

These are paintings full of affection, movement and memory. In their shifting play of colour and form, they remind us of the great beauty in simply looking, pausing and holding a view, however briefly, before it slips away.

Echoes of Light

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Echoes of Light

  • Artist
    Cameilia Edwards
  • Dates
    31 Jul—24 Aug 2025

Cameilia Grace Edwards is an emerging Australian artist working in oil on canvas. Based in a small NSW regional town, she paints from a shared studio space in town with a large street-facing window, offering the community a glimpse into her process and a quiet connection to her evolving work. Over the past four and a half years, she has been transitioning from commission-based work to developing her own personal style, rooted in light, memory, and stillness. Cameilia has been selected as a finalist in the 2024 National Emerging Art Prize and the 2023 Lethbridge Small Scale Art Prize, and has twice received acquisition prizes in the Inverell Art Prize (2020 and 2023).

“This collection explores the quiet intimacy between light and landscape — the fleeting, golden moments that often go unnoticed, yet carry a deep emotional charge. Working in oils, I aim to translate memory, atmosphere, and stillness into layered compositions that feel both personal and universal.  While rooted in realism, some of my paintings drift into a softened, almost dreamlike realm — a visual echo of how we remember beauty, not how we first saw it.  I work from a shared creative space in our small town, where my easel sits by the front window. As I paint, passersby often stop to watch, wave, or step inside for a conversation. This visibility has become an unexpected and treasured part of my practice — transforming what can be a solitary process into something quietly communal. That connection with people, place, and pace grounds my work in a lived, local rhythm.  At the core of my work is a desire to hold space for calm. In a fast-moving world, painting offers me — and hopefully the viewer — a pause, a breath, and a sense of still wonder.” ~ Cameilia Grace Edwards 2025

Interwoven

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Interwoven

Following her celebrated Through an Artist’s Journal collection last year, Archibald and Wynne Prize finalist Julianne Ross Allcorn returns with Interwoven, a body of work that delves deeper into her lyrical connection with the Australian bush. Much like an orchestra, the bush comes alive in her paintings. Each work captures part of its score, an interplay of colour, texture, and light.

Ross Allcorn’s creative process is rooted in the countless hours she spends sketching and writing in the field, carrying her notebook to record the rhythms of nature. She draws inspiration from the flora and fauna of the Burralong Valley and Lower Hunter, as well as her Garden Studio in Roseville, where the bushland surroundings continue to inform her work.

Artist quotes with asterix and all studio imagery courtesy of Southern Wild Co and Jessica Bellef

“There’s perspective in my drawing, but there’s no perspective at the same time,” she explains. “I would like the viewer to go on a journey with me. If someone asks me about the work, I often say stay in front of it for a few minutes and look at everything at once, the colours, the way the foliage is moving, the birds. And then close your eyes, and listen for what you saw. You know you are in the landscape because you’ve looked and focused. You will find yourself trying to recreate what you would hear if you were walking through it.”*

Allcorn’s paintings are alive with energy and motion, where banksias, grevilleas, wattles, and gumnuts swirl in rhythmic harmon. Birds, insects, and mammals flicker into view among the layers of paint, their motion suspended as though captured mid-flight. While she is well known for her distinctive use of raw plywood, where exposed areas of timber act as quiet clearings within the rich thickets of line and colour, this exhibition also introduces an extraordinary work rendered on vintage pianola paper. The concertina of flora and fauna unfolds like a visual scroll, underscoring the musicality inherent in her compositions. Here, the perforations on the pianola paper suggest birdsong.

The Intertwined was shaped by a formative journey abroad. “This is one of the artworks created from my trip to Kenya,” she shares, “where I had the opportunity not only to go on a safari but to be invited to teach and work with young artists in the Mizizi Primary School and with young adult artists at the Uweze Art Gallery in Kibera for four days. That experience will never come again.” In these pieces, the flora and fauna of Australia and Kenya meet in layered compositions that honour endangered species from both regions.

Fragments traces a path or a journey. At a simple level, it describes a walk through the bush. More profoundly, it maps the intersection of two civilizations. “I have used iconic artefacts from both Indigenous and colonial cultures, ceramics and Indigenous vessels such as the koolamon,” she says. “The koolamon was made by an Awakabul elder for the opening and smoking ceremony of an exhibition in the Wollombi Fire Shed this year.”

Historically, archaeologists have valued artefacts like ceramic fragments for the way they illuminate civilizations. In Allcorn’s work, the broken shards represent early colonial settlers. She created her own fragments, decoupaged images with bush scenes, to form a landscape filled with dense detail. Here are close observations of the Australian bush, images of symbolic and metaphorical significance, maps, foreign ships, and the familiar flora and fauna of the Burralong Valley.

“The image attempts to describe a connection of all peoples to the land,” she reflects. “It explores an intrinsic relationship between humans and the natural world, and how powerfully the environment influences mental and physiological being. Fundamentally, I am interested in how humans understand and change the environment.”

“In a contemporary manner, Allcorn’s paintings to my eye, channel an earlier world of a more detailed observation and the Australian bush. Her paintings make use of raw plywood to create a unique negative space on which to work. The artist sketch paints in layers, sometimes panoramic in scope- but always hyper observant. From top to bottom, left to right Allcorn’s paintings read as if you are standing within a grove of native trees. In the gum trees, you see through the brush and into canopy, to witness a densely packed and active world.”

-Michael Reid OAM, 2023

Uncertain Truths

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Uncertain Truths

Following its celebrated debut at our flagship Eora/Sydney gallery, Uncertain Truths by Scott Perkins is now showing at Michael Reid Southern Highlands in a special presentation timed to coincide with the announcement of his representation by Michael Reid Galleries.

Ushering in a striking development in the artist’s visual vocabulary, two new works – densely layered forest scenes rendered in stark, atmospheric monochrome – have been created exclusively for the Berrima iteration of Uncertain Truths, extending the contemplative seascapes of the original series into a deeper, terrestrial register: more intricate, more elusive, and equally arresting.

Perkins’s landscapes defy easy geography. Tasmania, the Kimberley, coastal Italy and New Zealand are invoked but never concretely mapped. Instead, they are pared back to their essences — distilled through fine lines, tonal washes and silvery gradients. What at first seems minimal — austere, even — gradually reveals itself as a web of quiet intricacies. Cloud banks shimmer with granular light; horizons dissolve into ambiguity; mirrored waters and shadowed terrains teeter on the edge of the surreal.

The series includes works displayed within bespoke, portal-like light boxes — illuminated structures that dissolve the boundaries between photograph, sculpture and architecture. Meticulously crafted from movement-resistant timber, these frames become containers of extraordinary stillness, drawing the viewer into an immersive, almost meditative encounter with the image.

To discuss works from the series, please email southernhighlands@michaelreid.com.au

Impasto

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Impasto

  • Artist
    Bernard Greaves, Zaide Harker
  • Dates
    26 Jun—27 Jul 2025

Thick with texture and charged with feeling, Impasto brings together the works of Zaide Harker and Bernie Greaves, two contemporary painters who wield oil paint with a bold, sculptural intensity. In this dual presentation, gesture becomes language and surface becomes story, as each artist pushes the medium to its expressive limits.

For both Harker and Greaves, impasto is more than a technique. It is a way of seeing, processing and communicating. Paint is not smoothed or restrained; it is piled, sculpted and pushed to the very edges of the canvas, commanding attention and offering a distinctly physical experience of looking.

Zaide Harker, a 2024 National Emerging Art Prize finalist, delivers works that pulse with urgency and lived experience. Their heavily worked canvases speak to themes of identity, imperfection and transformation, shaped in part by the artist’s own diagnosis of Huntington’s Disease and a long history within the disability support community. Here, oil paint becomes something more than pigment and binder. It is movement, resistance, memory. Harker’s impassioned mark-making transforms limitation into power, and fragility into force.

Bernie Greaves, currently based in London, approaches the canvas with a designer’s eye and a painter’s instinct. Drawing from Sydney’s urban and coastal fringe, Greaves’ compositions capture the often-overlooked lyricism of suburbia: terrace houses, telegraph poles, the unmistakable silhouette of a palm tree. His background in architecture is present not in rigid precision but in the bones of the compositions. The joy lies in how he builds upon these forms with lush, layered applications of colour. Each painting is a portal into a world where detail and delight coexist.

Together, these artists celebrate the emotional and material weight of paint itself. Impasto is an exhibition of surface and depth, control and chaos. It is a testament to the enduring power of gesture in contemporary painting.

The Fabric of Faces

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The Fabric of Faces

  • Artist
    Jessie Breakwell
  • Dates
    5—22 Jun 2025

Over the course of two decades, Jessie Breakwell has refined a visual language rooted in her admiration for Brett Whiteley and Henri Matisse. But the distinctiveness of her work lies in its synthesis of personal history and far-flung influence—most notably her father’s years in Uruguay and her own travels across South America. The vibrancy of the region, its colours and cultural traditions, weaves through her compositions, infusing them with a grounded warmth that offsets their bold formalism.

The foundation for Breakwell’s artistic sensibility was laid early. Her childhood home was a world of intricate surfaces—her mother’s jewellery and fabric designs featured pelts, beaded textiles, and richly layered materials. These tactile beginnings shaped her understanding of texture and form, elements that remain central to her practice today.

In The Fabric of Faces, this legacy manifests in portraits that reward a slow and deliberate engagement, drawing viewers closer with their layered simplicity. Faces become vessels for presence, emotion, and ambiguity—less about likeness than a kind of psychic imprint. Breakwell’s stylised figures, often flattened and monumental, resist narrative and flirt with the ceremonial. Eyes are wide, often hollowed of light, inviting scrutiny while withholding clarity. Her compositions evoke both folk traditions and ancient forms, distilling something timeless and elemental. These are works that hum with quiet intensity, portraits that stare back—imbued with the quiet drama of being seen.

Shimmering Country

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Shimmering Country

  • Artist
    Joyrene Ngwarraye Holmes, Edie Kemarre Holmes, Kindy Kemarre Ross, and Jessie Ngwarraye Ross
  • Dates
    5—23 Jun 2025

The luminous canvases of Shimmering Country, the forthcoming major showcase from the Artists of Ampilatwatja, extend a vibrant legacy of storytelling and kinship. Building on the critical success of Edie and Her Daughters, this new body of work features Joyrene Ngwarraye Holmes, Edie Kemarre Holmes, Kindy Kemarre Ross, and Jessie Ngwarraye Ross. It delves again into the intricate ties between cultural heritage, personal memory, and the resplendent landscapes of Central Australia.

The Artists of Ampilatwatja are renowned for their vivid depictions of flowering plants, expansive blue skies, and verdant plains. Their canvases, alive with intricate dot patterns and radiant colour, offer an overhead perspective of their landscape, a distinctive feature of their work. This aerial view not only maps the physical characteristics of their environment but also charts the cultural and botanical knowledge embedded within it. Plants such as kwenkart (turkey bush), therrpeyt (native fuchsia), and ntang (edible seeds), used for Arreth (strong bush medicine), are woven into the fabric of these paintings, reflecting their millennia-old importance as healing resources.

The Pattern of Birds

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The Pattern of Birds

  • Artist
    Deborah Michell-Smith
  • Dates
    5—23 Jun 2025

Deborah Michell-Smith’s The Pattern of Birds is an evocative exploration of regional Australia, where birdlife anchors the vastness of the outback. Her works are both homage and observation, distilling the quiet grandeur of the bush into layered textures and nuanced tones.

A solitary Brolga stands poised within a quilt of pinks and ochres, its form embodying both fragility and resilience—qualities intrinsic to life in remote settings. In another scene, Kookaburras perch on weathered branches, their feathers blending seamlessly into the rhythmic geometry of the landscape. These images are as much about space and stillness as they are about life, offering a sense of harmony between Australia’s birdlife and its terrain.

“Birds, as symbols of freedom, move effortlessly through these environments, embodying the deep connection between land and life,” Michell-Smith reflects. Through her precise brushwork and a restrained yet expressive palette, she invites viewers to linger in the resilience and beauty of the bush. Each painting is a quiet meditation on nature’s persistence and its poetic, enduring rhythms.

The Sound of Phthalo

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The Sound of Phthalo

  • Artist
    Miranda Joy Summers
  • Dates
    22 May—22 Jun 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now

“Sky bright & colourless with promise of day, contests the cool air and dark shadows. Houses, partially hidden, stand tall—quietly watchful as boats, tension broken, wiggle with windows winking. Trees, their branches dipping, anticipate sun’s first tickle. And in waters green all this is seen, a moment, reflected, remembered, and held with in the Phthalo”.

Using a painting knife and oil, Miranda Joy Summers captures the essence of water and land, the interplay between soluble and solid matter. Her knife strokes are deliberate and expressive, shaping the scene through tone and form. She emphasises the dynamic interplay between negative and positive space, creating a unique dialogue between the foreground and the perceived distance, effectively reducing spatial separation. This technique challenges conventional perceptions of landscape painting, inviting viewers to engage with both the foreground and distance in a similarly subjective way.

What led you down the painterly path?

I’ve always painted, but there came a moment when I felt compelled to take it more seriously. When I met my now-husband, I told him, on our very first date, that I was an artist. What I didn’t mention was that I hadn’t painted anything of note at that point. But I said it with conviction, because I knew deep down that it was true, if a little futuristic.

That declaration became a turning point. I realised I wasn’t just speaking a hope, I was naming a path I wanted to walk. From there, painting through a stop start fashion at first, gradually found itself under a spot light in my life.

What compelled you to paint the Middle Harbour landscape?

Middle Harbour is my most immediate access to the water, where bushland meets the harbour in a way that feels both wild and intimate. There are walking tracks around it where, despite being in the middle of Sydney, you can feel a million miles away. That sense of quiet seclusion was my starting point.

But what began to captivate me wasn’t just the natural beauty, it was the way civilisation peeks through the bush. I became fascinated by the human impulse to live right on the edge of the land. Houses perched on rocks, built on poles, suspended or tucked deep into the landscape. Every kind of dwelling, each one a wish made real. A home among the gum trees. A window with a view.

As I painted, I began to see these dwellings not as intrusions, but as extensions of the terrain. They started to morph into the rocks, blending with the earth, sometimes even borrowing its materials. Built from stone, shaped by engineering, and often camouflaged by reflection, windows catching the trees, roofs echoing the contours.

And the water – the water sees everything. It reflects it all back, trees, sky, dwellings, the shifting light. It began to feel, to me, like a conscious presence. An all-seeing body that holds the entire scene on its surface and its depths. That became the emotional core of the work.

With your works, do you paint from life, from photos or from memories? Do you construct a scene/ vignette in your studio, or do you prefer incidental scenes that you come across?

For me, absorption of place is everything. However you approach it, the experience of the landscape has to permeate your whole being, it has to get into your soul. I absorb location through all my senses, especially on bush walks. I take endless photographs with my Canon & iPhone, capturing both the expected and the incidental.

Back in the studio, I study those images, manipulate them, play with light and shadow, draw directly onto the photos using my iPad. Then I return to the site, revisit the atmosphere, take more photographs, and refine the emerging idea. It’s a layered process of memory, observation, and re-immersion.

Once I’ve sketched out a few compositions based on those original images, manipulated to reflect the essential character of the landscape as I feel it, I begin painting. The final work is grounded in reality, but distilled through repeated looking, sensing, and imagining.

Can you describe the importance of the title for this show – the significance of the phthalo colour family to your work?

The Sound of Phthalo—those words evoke exactly the space I’ve tried to communicate in paint. The depth of the green, especially as it appears in the shadowy parts of the water, feels still, quiet, and profound. It suggests not just the absence of sound, but a presence of calm, of reflection, of something all-knowing.

In this work, the water has become a kind of witness, an all-seeing, all-holding force. And in its green-ness, in those phthalo depths, there’s a deep understanding of peace. That colour holds the mood of the whole series: contemplative, immersive, and quietly powerful.

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