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.

The Holiday Hamper

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The Holiday Hamper

  • Artist
    Alix Hunter, Alice Laura Palmer, Amy Cuneo, Anh Nguyen, Ash Leslie, David King, Isabelle Chouinard, James Lai, Julianne Ross Allcorn, Lizzie Horne, Peta West, Stacey Mrmacovski, Suzie Riley

The Holiday Hamper is our festive-season showcase — a glittering ensemble of works that celebrate the pleasure of looking. Conceived as an invitation to gift art, live with art, and discover artists you may not yet know, the Hamper gathers pieces that feel intimate in scale yet expansive in spirit. From Brenton Drechsler’s cinematic Bath to Jessie Breakwell’s affectionate portrait Jean Paul, the collection moves through houses, gardens and remembered moments with tenderness and curiosity.

Moving outward into the landscape, the Hamper opens onto rivers, valleys and bushland through James Lai’s Scattered gum trees and pastures in spring, Julianne Ross Allcorn’s sweeping Glimpses of the Valley, Lizzie Horne’s sharply observed Wild Rivers I, and Peta West’s richly textured XI Study – Mallee Gum. Suzie Riley’s Pink Lake and Ash Leslie’s Clear Water hold light in soft, contemplative forms, while Nicci Bedson’s House Number 123 collapses the distance between the domestic and the geographic, reminding us that landscape is often the street just outside our door.

Alongside these works sit finely attuned explorations of still life and interior space: Alix Hunter’s Winter Sun with Glass and Plum, Alice Laura Palmer’s Leucadendron, Isabelle Chouinard’s poised Plums and Absinthe, and Stacey Mrmacovski’s reflective Those Days We Share. Amy Cuneo, Anh Nguyen, Gina Andree and Jennifer Ross each contribute their own interpretations of everyday scenes — tables half-cleared, walls washed with late light, familiar corners made newly luminous. Seen together, the artists of the Holiday Hamper create a considered cabinet of delights: works to gift, to keep, and to fold into daily life.

Morning Songs

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Morning Songs

  • Artist
    Julianne Ross Allcorn
  • Dates
    20 Nov—7 Dec 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now
In Morning Songs, Julianne Ross Allcorn turns again to the Australian bush, not as backdrop but as a living, polyphonic subject. Banksias, gymea lily and stands of eucalyptus are threaded with birds, insects and small foraging creatures; everything seems to arrive at once, as it does on a clear morning.
Working in watercolour and pencil on birch wood, Ross Allcorn builds her scenes from the close looking she does outdoors — the notations, field drawings and colour tests that fill her journals. Thin, translucent passages of paint sit over the grain, while areas of birchwood are left visible, like clearings in the foliage.
Perspective in these paintings is gently unsettled: branches advance and recede on the same plane, birds perch and hover within one field of view. “There’s perspective in my drawing, but there’s no perspective at the same time,” Ross Allcorn notes. “I want the viewer to go on a journey with me — to look at everything at once, then close their eyes and listen for what they saw.” The invitation is to experience the work as you would a place: through accumulation.
What follows is a series of images keyed to morning — to first light on gymea lily, to the quick, bright presence of bees, to the alert posture of a lyrebird. Each painting is composed with extraordinary particularity, yet none of them feels static. They read, instead, like scored moments in a landscape that is continually in motion.
Ross Allcorn has been a finalist in the Archibald Prize (2021) and the Wynne Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales (2020, 2021, 2022), receiving the Trustees’ Watercolour Prize in 2020. Her works have featured in numerous national prizes, including the Gallipoli Art Prize, Georges River Art Prize, Gosford Art Prize, Pro Hart Outback Art Prize, and the Federation Art Prize. In 2024 she was awarded the PLC Signature Art Prize and exhibited internationally in Milan as part of the AWI Fabriano Paper Watercolour Exhibition.

Heartleap

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Heartleap

  • Artist
    Linda Greedy
  • Dates
    13 Nov—7 Dec 2025

With Heartleap, Port Stephens–based painter Linda Greedy turns her gaze to the stillness and solitude of Tasmania’s central plains. Painted after time spent walking through this landscape in autumn, these new oil on linen works chart the fragile moments of early morning.

Across her canvases, the distinctive Macrocarpa Pines — not native to Tasmania, but long planted to withstand its harsh conditions — stand as sentinels against the wide, exposed terrain. Their silhouettes anchor the compositions, offering contrast to the washed, milky sky.

For Greedy, walking is both subject and ritual: “an opportunity to take time to immerse and appreciate the sights, sounds, and unpredictable weather of the natural environment.”

A finalist in the Paddington Art Prize, Lethbridge 20000, and Muswellbrook Art Prize, Greedy brings a practiced precision to her observation of landscape. Yet Heartleap is less a document of place than a meditation on perception — a record of what it feels like to stand alone before a waking world, heart quickened by the first light of day.

From the North

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From the North

  • Artist
    Holly Dormor
  • Dates
    13 Nov—10 Dec 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now

Michael Reid Southern Highlands is delighted to welcome back Holly Dormor to the gallery, with her collection of new work,  From the North. Since her sold out exhibition at Michael Reid Northern Beaches in 2024, collectors have been eagerly awaiting her next suite of paintings.

From the North is a continued exploration of light and its transformative nature.  “The harsh sun light from my northern windows has an extraordinary effect on a subject – particularly botanicals. Leaves illuminate or disappear into shadow, forming curious, high-contrast images I never tire of.”

Dormor is a visual artist working in Sydney NSW. Her work can be recognised through her use of light to reveal and conceal her subjects, forging a reflective look at ordinary botanicals. Dormor was a finalist in the 2023 National Emerging Art Prize and the 2023 Hunter’s Hill Art Prize. As a multidisciplinary artist she was a finalist in the 2015 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize. Her work is held privately throughout Australia.

Vantage

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Vantage

  • Artist
    Miranda Hampson, Peta West
  • Dates
    13 Nov—14 Dec 2025

This November, Peta West and Miranda Hampson return to Michael Reid Southern Highlands with Vantage — the first time these two celebrated artists have exhibited together. The exhibition brings into focus the ways we see, remember, and interpret the land.

Lake Conjola–based printmaker Peta West unveils two of the most commanding works of her career — including the monumental Sweetwater. Across vast linocuts, carved line by line over hundreds of hours, West renders the landscape with masterful precision. “I’m constantly searching for ways to carve the landscape with depth,” she says, “so that when you look at the work, you feel as though you could step right into the reimagined vista before you.”

Her latest works were shaped after travelling through Central Australia, where studies of flora and topography became the foundation for these intricate, reimagined terrains — rolled by hand in Prussian blue ink onto fine Japanese paper. Once a photographer, West brings the same attuned sense of light and structure to her printmaking, carving for months to reveal flora and birdlife in astonishing detail. The result cements her as one of the foremost printmakers working in Australia today.

Miranda Hampson, an Anaiwan artist practising on Dharawal Country, follows her sold-out Lookaftering collection with new paintings that continue her exploration of Country and kin. Working in part with ochre sourced with permission from Elders, she creates pared-back compositions that hover between map and memory. Across their surfaces, fine lines recall the weave of baskets, while cracked and layered forms evoke salt plains and dry riverbeds — landscapes marked by endurance, history, and care.

Together, West and Hampson offer two vantage points on the Australian landscape — one carved, one painted — each a meditation on place, connection, and the patient act of seeing.

Clarity After the Storm

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Clarity After the Storm

  • Artist
    Ash Leslie
  • Dates
    18 Oct—10 Nov 2025

We are delighted to announce Clarity After the Storm, a new series of oil paintings by South Coast–based artist Ash Leslie. The works register the changing light that follows a storm, tracing a passage from turbulence to calm.

“This series of work was completed after a long period of stormy weather at the end of winter,” Leslie explains. “As the storm cleared I was taken with the way the sunlight illuminated the landscape in between the patches of passing fog and mist. With hints of spring on the horizon I felt a sense of clarity with the promise of the warm weather to come.”

Ash Leslie’s open-ended process embraces chance and discovery. Layers of oil paint coalesce into forms that hover on the edge of recognition, drifting through diaphanous washes of grey, moss, and blush.

Recognised across Australia, including finalist selections in the Paddington Art Prize, Flow Art Prize, and Signature Art Prize, Leslie has quickly established herself as a singular voice in contemporary abstraction. ‘Clarity After the Storm’ opens this weekend in the Mezzanine Gallery.

Images of the artist courtesy of Jessica Bellef

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