Artists of Ampilatwatja

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Artists of Ampilatwatja

Twenty five years ago, heralding a new and fresh direction in Aboriginal painting, 20 artists from Ampilatwatja held their first sell-out exhibition.  Ampilatwatja (pronounced um-blood a-watch) sits on Alyawarr land, stretching north east of Mparntwe (Alice Springs), it is here that the artists map out the lands to reveal the contents of their country.

By 2003 the art centre was incorporated and the community were producing artwork reflecting life experience and bringing culture alive.  The beauty of the Artists of Ampilatwatja artwork emerges from a close association with the land, passed down through generations. The Artists of Ampilatwatja have painted together for 25 years. ‘Our painting has no borders, just one country. Ampilatwatja is our place, Ampilatwatja is our country’.  Elizabeth Ngwarraye Bonne

La Prima Luce – The First Light

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La Prima Luce – The First Light

  • Artist
    Evan Shipard
  • Dates
    19 Feb—22 Mar 2026

Archibald finalist Evan Shipard will make his exhibition debut with Michael Reid with a new body of Southern Highlands landscapes, centred on Berrima and its surrounds. These paintings grow out of repeated walks and return visits: river bends that hold the light, poplars standing like sentinels, low hills that lift and fall in slow rhythms. Shipard works between the studio and the open air, chasing the fugitive moments that remake a place — the pearl-grey hush of dawn, the heat-drained tones of late afternoon, the mirrored stillness of water at dusk. Classically trained and deeply attentive to atmosphere, he brings a rare tenderness to these scenes.

Quieter Ground

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Quieter Ground

  • Artist
    Emily Gordon
  • Dates
    30 Jan—22 Feb 2026

Gunning, NSW is a place of enduring personal significance for Emily Gordon. She has travelled here with her family for many years, returning again and again to this gorgeous landscape.  Across this small suite of works, Gordon charts the paddocks, tree lines, winding roads and bodies of water around Gunning with the same acuity she brings to urban facades. Eucalypts rise pale and rhythmic against broad skies; roads curve gently through dry grasslands; reflections double the world in still pools.

 

What links Quieter Ground to Gordon’s cityscapes is her enduring commitment to Australian light as a structuring force.  In Paddington and The Rocks, light falls across architectural planes—staircases, rooftops, terraces stepping downhill. Here, light behaves differently. It is ecological and spatial: moving laterally through sky, repeating across tree trunks. Ochres, golds and muted greens replace the gelato tones of the city, yet Gordon’s palette remains alert and finely calibrated.

 

A sustained intimacy with the landscape is felt throughout Quieter Ground. Scale plays an important role. Working on an intimate register allows Gordon to distil each composition to its essentials. If Paddington Stories emerged from sustained urban wandering, Quieter Ground feels anchored in stillness and return: a body of work attentive to the slower disclosures of a place known over time.  Quieter Ground ultimately affirms Emily Gordon as a painter of place in the fullest sense—equally attuned to the city’s charged complexity and to the restrained, durational poetry of the regional landscape.

Everything Might Happen

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Everything Might Happen

  • Artist
    Julia Flanagan
  • Dates
    16 Jan—1 Feb 2026

Julia Flanagan’s debut exhibition with Michael Reid unfolds in vivid, jubilant cadences of colour, pattern and form, and reveals an artist working at full stretch within a language she has made her own. The paintings seem animated by the same rhythm: lines curve, return and cross themselves, slipping between foreground and background as though intent on binding the works together. Many begin as drawings – quick, provisional notations made at a domestic table or studio bench – before widening into fields of paint. From there, fragments are enlarged, spliced, rephrased; a sliver from an earlier canvas becomes the seed of the next. Quilting squares, remembered from her mother’s sewing, offer geometric ballast, though that order is soon unsettled by curves and arcs that dip and weave like the thread pulled through cloth. The result is a choreography of parts – disciplined, but never still.

Flanagan’s paintings build towards an inward, hard-earned set of motifs: stripes, arches, prisms, crescents and ovals that return like familiar characters, altered slightly each time they appear. Patterned grounds, first imagined as repeat textile designs, become flickering stages over which bands and planes pass, collide, separate and briefly align.

There is pleasure here, unapologetic yet precise. Colours flare and then quieten; compressed passages open suddenly into air; the eye ranges across the surface and doubles back, catching on small adjustments that register the artist’s decision-making. If the paintings brush lightly against art-historical echoes – Bauhaus textiles, postmodern facades, the optical play of dazzle camouflage – they do so obliquely, without quotation. What remains, above all, is their immediacy: work grounded in lived experience and the daily habits of the studio.

Julia Flanagan has recently been announced the winner of the 2025 Hawkesbury Art Prize, highly commended in the George’s River sculpture prize and a finalist in the 2025 National Emerging Art Prize. She was commissioned to make a series of large-scale sculptures for an exhibition in the gardens of the Hazelhurst Gallery in Gymea, New South Wales, titled Many things to Many in 2022. In 2020, she collaborated with fashion label Gorman on a collection of clothing adorned with her artwork. The artist has exhibited extensively at galleries in Sydney, Wollongong, Melbourne and Newcastle, and has works in local and international private and institutional collections.

As time drifts, so do I

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As time drifts, so do I

  • Artist
    Phoebe Stone
  • Dates
    15 Jan—15 Feb 2026

Phoebe Stone is a Sydney/Cammeraygal-based artist working primarily in oil pastel on board, a medium whose softness and immediacy suit the urgency of her looking. Rather than being blended smooth, the pastel remains present as a living surface: linear dashes, curls and small accumulations of colour build an image that vibrates. Foliage is rendered as breathing texture; shadows murmur; the edge of a chair hums with life. The joy and energy of being among friends and familiar rooms finds its formal equivalent in the vigour of these marks.

This new collection moves between interiors and gardens, tables and thresholds. We encounter wicker chairs and striped runners, glasses and bottles catching faint light,
and the slow architecture of greenery enclosing figures in shade. In one work, a table waits beneath a canopy of leaves; in another, a figure is glimpsed through a window, as if by chance. Elsewhere, friends lean toward one another outdoors, half absorbed into the dappled pattern that surrounds them. The distinction between figure and ground softens; people are held within their environments rather than set apart from them.

Spread

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Spread

  • Artist
    Amy Cuneo
  • Dates
    15 Jan—15 Feb 2026
  • Catalogue
    Download now

It is our great pleasure to welcome Dharawal multi-disciplinary artist Amy Cuneo to our top floor gallery this coming January. Cuneo’s subjects link us to essential and reassuring elements in our lives including familiar objects, flowers and tender depictions of domestic scenes.

For her collection Spread  Cuneo says “These paintings have taken their form while considering how we spread our attention, affection and energy in everyday life. Domestic demands as a caregiver continue but within these parameters I have scope to play, imagine and enjoy. These works are an invitation to attend the lives we have in front of us- colour filled and complex.”  

Cuneo has shown widely in NSW and Tasmania and has been a finalist in several art prizes including FLOW (2019/2023) and the Fisher’s Ghost (2023). Her work is included in various private collections throughout Australia, New Zealand and Sweden and has been collected by Tiers & Co Collecting Group

Out of the Blue

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Out of the Blue

  • Artist
    Armelle Swan
  • Dates
    8—25 Jan 2026

Out of the Blue is a mini-suite of oil paintings emerging from a practice concerned, in essence, with the condition of being human. These works – forming Armelle Swan’s debut with the gallery – aim to characterise, in poetic and intuitive terms, some of the most charged human experiences — grief among them.

Across the suite, notions of presence and absence recur. In still life the figure is typically absent, yet it may reappear by proxy: a cup, jug or bottle operating as a kind of cipher for the human in the story.

Each work here centres on a vessel — cups, a vase, a jug, a bowl — a motif that since antiquity has carried metaphorical weight, touching on ideas of literal and figurative containment and the human impulse to keep or hold.

Two works, ‘Not in the Picture’ and ‘Revealed’, feature vessels decorated in blue and white motifs traditionally associated with funerals, death and mourning in Chinese culture. This symbolism sits in neat alignment with still life’s historical relationship to mortality, and with the larger theme of grief within the suite. These elements became newly compelling in Swan’s practice following two life-altering experiences: the recent arrival of a daughter-in-law of Chinese ancestry, and, some years earlier, the death of her own daughter — a loss that precipitated a long and brutal journey of grief. In these paintings, the cultural and the deeply personal converge.

‘Kitchen Sill (after Hopper)’ may appear, at first glance, to depict a simple domestic interior, yet its composition carries a more philosophical charge. The velvety darkness outside, the bright white sill, and the pendant lights reflected in the glass recall the haunting sensibility of Edward Hopper’s Automat. The window becomes a threshold: a meeting point of dark and light. The reflected lights appear to move from the interior into the night, piercing both the window pane and the picture plane as they recede like a row of distant streetlamps. As ever, the window is an ‘eye’ that sees, and the view it frames echoes the act of painting itself.

‘Glow’ offers an interior heightened by a keen register of attention — a meditation on observation and presence.

Armelle Swan has exhibited in group and solo shows, completed numerous portrait commissions, and been a finalist in several awards, including the Waverley 9 x 5” (twice), the Kings School Art Prize, the Harden Landscape Prize, and various portraiture and still life prizes. Highlights include curated exhibitions such as ACB Selects (2023), The Making Effect for the Arts Health Association NSW (2020), and Dot, dot, dot… (2017) at Sydney College of the Arts Galleries.

In 2019 she undertook a study tour of Italy with Dr Julie Fragar, and in 2023 completed a major arts–health commission for SPHERE Knowledge Translation, creating works based on her interpretation of academic health-study findings. Her works are represented in private collections in Australia, South Africa, the UK, Dubai and Singapore, and in public collections including the Young Endeavour Youth Scheme, the Archdiocese of Hobart and the Black Dog Institute.

Botanica Vita II

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Botanica Vita II

  • Artist
    Alice Laura Palmer, Allie Webb, Angie de Latour, Baden Croft, India Mark, Louise Anders, Miranda Joy Summers, Nadja Kabriel, Susan Morris
  • Dates
    18 Dec 2025—8 Feb 2026

Opening this December, Botanica Vita II assembles nine artists who return, again and again, to the natural world — to the flowers, branches and unruly greens that anchor their sense of place. For each, the botanical is less a subject than a lens: a way of noticing, of keeping time, of understanding how the living world impresses itself on the mind.

Several familiar voices reappear here — India Mark, Louise Anders, Angie de Latour, Susan Morris, Miranda Summers, Nadja Kabriel and Baden Croft — their works forming a kind of ongoing conversation across years and exhibitions. They are joined, for the first time, by Allie Webb and Alice Laura Palmer, whose paintings bring a fresh tempo to the still-life tradition, alert to subtle shifts in colour, light and structure.

Across the collection, the works share an understanding that the botanical is never static. Light shifts, colour gathers and recedes, compositions tighten and loosen. A single stem can hold a surprising amount of intent; a vase can become an anchor point for an entire scene.

Botanica Vita II asks viewers to consider why these forms endure — why flowers, branches and arranged objects continue to offer artists a way into deeper observation.

 

 

 

Lines on the Landscape

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Lines on the Landscape

  • Artist
    David King
  • Dates
    11 Dec 2025—11 Jan 2026

Working in a bold, expressive impasto, David King charts roads, ridgelines and shifting weather with an almost operatic instinct for drama: sky pressing low over the hills, light pooling in unexpected places, fences and telegraph lines drawing the eye forward. The scenes he paints travel widely — the Illawarra escarpment, the Central Tablelands, the edges of Goulburn, Orford’s pale fields, the misted greens of Ireland — but his subject is not geography. “I see the same things everywhere,” he says. “Ireland, Tasmania, the Tablelands — fences, gates, telegraph poles. They join all these places.”

Enchorial

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Enchorial

  • Artist
    Leanne Harrison Davies
  • Dates
    11 Dec 2025—11 Jan 2026
  • Catalogue
    Download now

In Enchorial, Leanne Harrison Davies turns her meticulous gaze once more to the natural forms that have long anchored her practice. Living and working on the South Coast of New South Wales, the painter draws closely and attentively from the landscape that surrounds her — eucalyptus, banksia, wattle and grevillea. The title of the series, meaning “belonging to a place,” signals a deepening of this engagement.

Harrison Davies’ classical training — a Visual Arts degree from COFA and several years studying historical oil technique at the Charlie Sheard Studio School — is evident in the compositional discipline that shapes each canvas. Against darkened grounds or softly diffused fields of colour, a single stem or cluster sits with near-architectural clarity. The vessels are unadorned, the lighting carefully controlled, and the drama is held firmly within the forms of the flora themselves. It is in this interplay between natural abundance and the order of the frame — between the unruly asymmetries of the bush and the painter’s rigorous restraint — that the works gather their force. Her banksia blooms, flannel flowers and gum blossoms appear sumptuous yet composed, exuberant yet stilled within the cool discipline of her pictorial world.

If Botanica (Michael Reid Northern Beaches, 2024) announced Harrison Davies as a painter of rare sensitivity and technical command, Enchorial extends that promise with new confidence. Harrison Davies has been a finalist in many of Australia’s significant art prizes, including the Mosman Art Prize, the Basil Sellers Art Prize, the Calleen Art Award and the Gosford Art Prize.

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