Rhymes with Orange

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Rhymes with Orange

  • Artist
    Anh Nguyen
  • Dates
    18 Sep—19 Oct 2025

Michael Reid Southern Highlands is thrilled to welcome back to the upper level gallery Thirroul/Dharawal artist Anh Nguyen.  Of this new collection of still life and interiors paintings titled Rhymes with Orange, Nguyen says,  “I am thinking of rhymes that are not in sounds or words, and paintings that feel like something such as ‘orange’, a word famously considered to have no perfect rhyme in English. What does orange feel like? Synergies that are unexpected, pairings that are unusual, a mood that is warm, urgent, a state of change.”

 

‘Anh Nguyen will paint anything that she can visually engage with. She recalls a quote from another painter, whose name she has long forgotten but whose words have stayed with her: ‘Still life is the thing that is close by, figures and portraits a little farther away, and landscape is in the distance or if you get up and walk a bit, she says. ‘It is all part of the observed world and ready for a curious magpie to eyeball?While Anh will joke that still life is more forgiving than portraiture and more comfortable than plein-air landscape painting, what actually draws her to the genre is that it allows a number of different approaches. ‘It also feels very straightforward, a neutral canvas without pressure to introduce symbolism or narrative, she says.’

extract from Still. Life by Amber Creswell Bell published by Thames & Hudson

Radiance

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Radiance

  • Artist
    Kate Vella
  • Dates
    2—14 Sep 2025

Flowers from Kate Vella’s Southern Highlands garden spill across tables scattered with vintage jugs, teacups, fruit and glassware. Each arrangement balances exuberance with intimacy, animated by thick, textured brushstrokes.

Since her 2019 solo debut, Vella has become one of the brightest stars among our regular exhibitors. A recipient of multiple awards – including the 2023 BOCCA Hannah Forbes Memorial Prize – she now returns to Michael Reid Southern Highlands with Radiance.

September Highlights

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September Highlights

  • Artist
    Betty King, Libby Wakefield, David King, Anh Nguyen, Nicola Woodcock
  • Dates
    1—30 Sep 2025

Betty King is an esteemed painter and cultural leader from the Indulkana community, and one of ten women featured in our upcoming exhibition, Ngura pilunpa – Peaceful Country. King works from Iwantja Arts, the Indigenous-owned and -governed art centre on the Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands of South Australia.

King’s paintings capture the beauty in the landscape of Watjapilla, a diverse soakage not far from the Indulkana community, teaming with fish, bird life, and many plants.

 

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Libby Wakefield’s paintings arise from the rivers and wetlands of the Southern Highlands, observed on foot and from her kayak and later translated into oil on board pieces in the studio. In her hands, water is alive: a reflective surface, a mirror of sky, a shifting register of time and season—evoking the luminous intensity of J.M.W. Turner.

 

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Living in Thirroul on the New South Wales coast, Anh Nguyen draws inspiration from her surroundings and everyday experiences. She embraces what British artist Sara Lee Roberts calls ‘percolation and interleaving’: “I find thinking time in the interruptions and distractions of daily life. Then when I do get studio time, everything flows out naturally.”

Nguyen paints quickly and confidently, trusting her instincts. “I try not to overthink or second-guess,” she says. “There’s something about the immediacy of working that feels honest.” Curator Amber Creswell Bell observes, “Her work has an ethereal, soft quality but is very assured. It captures the small moments that, stitched together, form the texture of a life.”

 

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David King’s paintings hum with atmosphere — coastal skies at the edge of stormlight, mountains lost in mist, and the quiet glow of a landscape between dusk and dark. A former principal baritone with Opera Australia, King has traded one stage for another, swapping arias for oils in a creative journey that feels both bold and inevitable.

Born in Dublin and now based in Bulli, King brings a striking new voice to the Light Colour Landscape showcase. His work is deeply rooted in the northern Illawarra — a region he captures in thick, expressive brushwork and moody, layered light. Mentored by acclaimed painter Paul Ryan, King embraces a “punk impasto” style that gives his scenes a raw, visceral edge.

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Nicola Woodcock is a British-born, Sydney-based artist whose practice is defined by her meticulous use of oil pastel to explore the Australian landscape and its native flora. Her fascination with the country’s plant life began nearly 25 years ago during her first visit, inspired by a Margaret Preston print she encountered on the wall of her accommodation. Through oil pastel, a medium that demands rapid execution and precision, Woodcock captures the essence of each specimen, creating works that convey emotion and presence rather than scientific exactitude.

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Don’t Wish These Days Away

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Don’t Wish These Days Away

  • Artist
    Nicola Woodcock
  • Dates
    4 Sep—5 Oct 2025

Don’t Wish These Days Away by British-born, Sydney-based artist Nicola Woodcock is now open and on-view in the GROUND FLOOR gallery.

In this series, Woodcock focuses on the striking landscapes that edge the Hawkesbury River, drawing on photographs and memories from family weekend trips. Sweeping vistas and intimate still-life studies of native flora speak to crisp winter days, where wattle and banksia punctuate overcast skies with bursts of colour.

Woodcock’s burgeoning affinity for native Australian plant life dates back to her first trip here as a backpacker almost 25 years ago. “A pivotal moment occurred when I encountered a Margaret Preston print gracing the kitchen wall of one of my accommodations,” she says. “The experience left an indelible impression.”

“My pursuit of understanding and venerating Australian natives deepens through meticulously rendering their forms in oil pastel. This medium, demanding rapid execution and minimalistic precision, allows me to encapsulate the essence of the botanical specimens. The objective is to provide an authentic representation – not a pursuit of scientific precision but an endeavour to evoke sentiments of awe, gratitude and comfort.”

Capture

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Capture

  • Artist
    Libby Wakefield
  • Dates
    20 Aug—2 Sep 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now

Libby Wakefield is a prize-winning landscape painter and teacher living and working on Gundungurra Country in New South Wales. Working both in her studio and en plein air, she seeks to translate her intimate connection to the local rivers and wetlands into paintings that balance observation with reverie.

Her practice is steeped in Romanticism, exploring beauty and the sublime in the waterways she knows best. “I want to expand on this concept and apply that framework with a new curiosity,” she explains, “looking specifically at the wetlands within my local environment— places that are part of my daily practice, but in many ways unknown and at times unseen.”

In works such as ‘Natti Creek’, where two dark poplars rise through mist against a diffused, peach-grey sky, Wakefield captures the tension between clarity and obscurity, the seen and unseen. Her gentle brushwork and translucent glazes allow each surface of water, each shifting bank, to emerge as if through memory. The landscapes appear at once real and imagined—steadfast in her world yet edged with change.

The round composition of ‘Kangaloon I’, with its billowing clouds and low-slung wetlands, distils her fascination with light and atmosphere, while ‘River and Rain’ submerges trees and shoreline in a soft blur.

Wakefield’s work has been recognised in several key Australian prizes, including the Salon des Refusés, the Paddington Art Prize, the Heysen Prize for Landscape, the Waverley Art Prize, the Fisher’s Ghost Art Award, the Wingecarribee Landscape Prize and the David Turnbull Bequest Prize. She has been highly commended in the Norvill Art Prize and the Belle Property Prize, and was a semi-finalist in both the NSW Parliament Plein Air Painting Prize and the Meroogal Women’s Art Prize, where her work was acquired by the Historic Houses Trust. In 2020, she was awarded the Blue Square Art Prize.

Ngura pilunpa- Peaceful Country

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Ngura pilunpa- Peaceful Country

  • Artist
    Vicki Yatjiki Cullinan, Emily Cullinan, Raylene Walatinna, Betty King, Priscilla Singer, Maringka Burton, Trisha Singer, Sallyanne Robert, Rosalind Tjanyari, Daisy Barney
  • Dates
    4—28 Sep 2025

This September, Michael Reid Southern Highlands presents a commanding showcase of leading female painters from the Iwantja Arts Community – the Indigenous-owned and -governed art centre in the rocky desert country of Indulkana, on the Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands of South Australia.

“Painting … is a teaching tool,” says Vicki Yatjiki Cullinan, director and cultural liaison officer of Iwantja Arts, and a featured artist in ‘Ngura pilunpa – Peaceful Country’. “We use our paintings as a way of sharing stories, Country and Tjukurpa (ancestral creation stories), as well as what it was like here in the old days — like the mission times when people were living and working at the stations.”

Established nearly fifty years ago as a modest communal printmaking facility, Iwantja Arts has, through the vision of its founding directors, evolved into one of the most dynamic and respected centres of contemporary art in Australia, with an influence reaching far beyond its desert home.

Following last year’s monumental Then/Now/Always exhibition, Ngura pilunpa- Peaceful Country brings together works by Vicki Yatjiki Cullinan, Emily Cullinan, Raylene Walatinna, Betty King, Priscilla Singer, Maringka Burton, Trisha Singer, Sallyanne Robert, Rosalind Tjanyari and Daisy Barney.

Each artist, with her distinct visual language, paints a single Tjukurpa – a cultural story rooted in her Country. Barney captures the lush vibrancy of the Kapata (bush plum) plant; Cullinan evokes the waterholes, boulders and riverbeds once traversed with her family on long journeys across Country. Burton, painting her ancestral lands of Anamara Piti – the site of the Caterpillar Tjukurpa, near Irrunytju (Wingellina) – uses sweeping brushwork to map roads and waterholes in bold, fluid lines.

Scintilla

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Scintilla

  • Artist
    Vicki Potter
  • Dates
    31 Jul—31 Aug 2025

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. These new paintings, completed during the cooler months, return to the cherished inlets and headlands of Eora/Sydney—from Cremorne Point to Shelley Beach and Cottage Point—where sandstone pathways wind through coastal scrub and brilliant green fronds burst from the foreground. “Sydney Harbour is a favourite subject of mine which is probably confusing to a lot of people because I don’t live there anymore,” Waugh says. “I return to it over and over again and yet the subjects seem endless.”

Inflected with memory, the works incorporate more recognisable manmade structures—“a lighthouse, a bridge, a cemetery”—yet remain tethered to the shifting shoreline light and lush vegetation of the New South Wales coastline. These are scenes rendered not with photographic precision but with emotional clarity. As Waugh puts it, “The real reason I paint the nooks of Sydney Harbour I believe is because of the nostalgia it holds for me, having left the city after 23 years.”

Waugh’s practice is instinctive, process-driven, and rooted in drawing. “I have always known how to draw and did a lot of watercolours as a child,” she recalls. “It was the natural progression to move from drawing to painting… I didn’t need anyone else to help me and could pack it in my backpack.” She works in oil alla prima, beginning most studio sessions by stretching her own canvases—“which prepares me to get in the zone to paint”—and completing each work in a single burst. “At heart I’m a plein air painter,” she explains. “It’s quite frantic… I don’t wait for layers to dry.” Working rapidly with large brushes, solvent, and palette knives, Waugh paints from memory, plein air sketches, and photographs, seeking not to replicate a scene but to distil it.

Echoes of Light

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Echoes of Light

  • Artist
    Cameilia Edwards
  • Dates
    31 Jul—31 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

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