I carry you with me

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I carry you with me

  • Artist
    Clare Dubina
  • Dates
    24 Apr—25 May 2025

In her latest series I carry you with me, Melbourne-based artist Clare Dubina continues her quiet, confident exploration of the female form—its gestures, silhouettes, and the emotional weight carried in its negative spaces. Known for her warm, earthy palette and a practice that spans painting and ceramics, Clare’s work evokes a sense of organic simplicity, where every curve and texture feels both intentional and intuitive. 

Born in 1977 to a British mother and Sri Lankan father, Clare graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from The University of the Arts in 2001. However, it wasn’t until 2020 that she returned to her sketchbooks—originally filled during her university years, when her senior thesis focused on the female form—and began to shape the foundations of her current art practice. In the years between, Clare carved a varied creative path, working across fashion photography and retail design around the world. These formative experiences are still present in her work today, seen in the compositional awareness, the attention to surface, and the way her pieces seem to belong in both the home and the gallery space.

Clare’s paintings are loosely planned—sketched in advance with a strong sense of colour palette and form. “If I overthink as I’m drawing, I lose the organic markings and shapes my hands naturally want to create,” she explains. The result is a conversation between control and intuition, between stillness and movement.

Despite her quiet humility, Clare’s work has captured wide attention. Her previous series have sold out before reaching gallery walls, and her collaborations with Australian design names such as Viktoria & Woods and En Gold have only broadened her audience. Still, she remains grounded in the quiet rituals of making. Her studio—a small, light-filled space in a Brunswick warehouse—is both practical and personal. “It’s most likely going to stay in the practical state of white walls and bare concrete floors,” she says.

Clare’s inspirations range from the photographic simplicity of Edward Weston and Bill Brandt to the layered abstraction of Serge Poliakoff, and she’s equally drawn to the unexpected: a shadow across a wall, the way skin folds echo petals, or the tactile pleasure of running her fingers over a plant leaf. A trained printmaker, she brings a deep respect for surface and material to every medium she touches.

In every brushstroke, curve, and line, Clare Dubina offers a space for that kind of quiet discovery—a body of work that, much like the artist herself, invites you to look again, and feel something more.

Light Colour Landscape

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Light Colour Landscape

  • Artist
    Leah Bullen, Angela Hayes, Lizze Horne, David Griffith, David King, Lauren Kennedy, Anh Nguyen, Margaret McIntosh, Sally Joubert, Jennifer Prudence, Drew Truslove
  • Dates
    24 Apr—18 May 2025

We are proud to announce ‘Light Colour Landscape’, our next banner exhibition at Michael Reid Southern Highlands. This significant presentation brings together eleven of Australia’s foremost contemporary artists, each deeply engaged with the Australian landscape. Their work explores its vastness, its changing light, and its rich textures, offering a diverse array of perspectives on this ever-evolving environment.

At the heart of the exhibition is a Mun-dirra (fish fence) by Jennifer Prudence, a Burarra fibre artist from Maningrida in Arnhem Land. Prudence’s work, created using pandanus she harvests and dyes with natural pigments drawn from her ancestral Country, is a powerful expression of connection to both land and culture. Her intricate weavings not only reflect the land’s rhythms and spiritual significance but also embody the knowledge and traditions passed down through generations. Prudence’s piece anchors the exhibition, grounding it in the profound, living relationship between people and place.

‘Light Colour Landscape’ unites both familiar and first-time voices to our audience, each contributing a unique and essential perspective. Through a range of mediums — from painting to fibre, ink to etching, and clay to mixed media — these artists engage in a collective dialogue with the land, its light, its memory, and the shifting ways in which we experience it.

India Mark: Ngununggula

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India Mark: Ngununggula

  • Artist
    India Mark
  • Dates
    12 Apr—15 Jun 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now

We are delighted to announce that Dharawal/Wollongong-based contemporary painter INDIA MARK is exhibiting alongside six other esteemed Australian female artists in the Ngununggula Southern Highlands Regional Gallery show ‘Tender’. This significant showing comes following her feature in the April issue of Belle magazine – an accolade that attests to the growing acclaim of the artist.

“Writing a second chapter in Ngununggula’s series celebrating Australian women artists, ‘Tender’ explores the soft power of the title’s emotional register, its notions of care and significance beyond a gendered lens,” reflects Belle’s news piece on the show, which opened at the Ngununggula in Bowral on 12 April.

“India Mark’s exquisitely composed, richly detailed and intimately scaled still-life paintings balance elegant restraint with a quiet intensity expressed via fiery underpainting.”

The term ‘tender’ conjures notions of care and femininity. We associate tenderness with the body, our gestures, and emotional expression. We also assign the term to places, objects and surfaces – to describe how they arouse our senses or yield under touch, softening or giving way.

Yet with its layered meanings, ‘Tender’ seeks to examine the concept of tenderness not through a gendered lens, but as an intrinsically human quality – woven into the body and lived experience– through the distinctive practices of these seven leading female voices in the Australian contemporary art scene.

Celebrating the alchemy of things artfully arranged, serendipitously set together, Mark curates a visually charged set of immortalised objects. Mark recently exhibited at our Berrima gallery in the group exhibition ‘A Celebration of the Still’ – a vibrant and richly varied paean to the genre’s enduring vitality and its power to instil objects with life, storytelling and small moments of grace.

All works from Mark’s painterly contribution to ‘Tender’ are available to acquire by request in our Southern Highlands gallery or online.

A Walk In The Park

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A Walk In The Park

  • Artist
    Susan Morris
  • Dates
    4—22 Apr 2025

It is our enormous pleasure to welcome Melbourne-based still life painter Susan Morris to our Project Space at Michael Reid Southern Highlands this month, with her collection of new work titled A Walk in the Park.

On walks with her dog Milou in her home-town of Melbourne, also known as ‘the city of gardens’, Susan’s painter’s eye observes and picks out plants in her local environment to be captured in oils back in her studio.  The ever ubiquitous dried gum leaves depicted in the painting Fall, is a celebration of one of nature’s gifts at the end of its life cycle.  A small branch that would usually be trodden on or swept aside, it’s beauty now brought back to life through gentle and fine brush strokes.  The inky dark background highlighting its fragility and uniqueness as it dances and falls in the light.

“Still life is often autobiographical in nature, as are my paintings. They reflect where I’ve been and where I live. The containers also have a story to tell, whether it is in the immediacy of a glass jar,  an heirloom vase from a country far away or a clay vessel from a local potter. Holding our precious and unique indigenous flora, that relationship speaks of home, history and country.” says Susan.

Susan has been a finalist in numerous awards including the Waterhouse Natural Science and Art Prize, the Mosman Art prize, the Lethbridge 20000, the Waverley Art Prize, Omnia Art Prize, the Linden Postcard Prize and the York Botanic Prize as well as a solo exhibition at the Victorian Artists Society in 2021.

Unfolded Linen on Linen II

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Unfolded Linen on Linen II

For Sydney-based painter Mary Stack, the domestic realm becomes a space for formal experimentation and quiet reflection. In Unfolded Linen on Linen II, she continues her investigation into the visual potential of the everyday—handkerchiefs, tea towels, the folds and creases of cloth. “Everyday items like handkerchiefs and tea towels felt like a familiar starting point,” she says. “By isolating these objects from their usual surroundings, my aim is to keep the interpretation open.” Though the subject matter may appear humble, Stack’s intellectual foundations are deeply rooted in art history.

A joint recipient of the 2023 Brandon Trakman Prize for Art History and Theory, she sees her practice as part of a broader, ongoing conversation. “While artists strive for original work, we cannot ignore that everything we make is part of a larger conversation.” Her influences are broad, ranging from the rigorous abstraction of Albers and Agnes Martin to the hushed, luminous order of Vermeer and de Hooch. “There’s something about the way they used light and shadow—it’s not just about realism. It’s about presence, and creating space for reflection.”

For Stack, it’s never just about the object depicted. “I am not painting these things because I have a particular interest in hankies, tea towels, or table runners,” she explains. “What appeals to me is the fact that when you unfold a folded piece of fabric, it reveals a grid pattern. Visually, I love a grid, but even more than that, I like an imperfect grid.” That imperfect grid—creased, crumpled, disrupted—becomes a quiet metaphor for human presence.

These marks suggest use, touch, interaction, but Stack resists any symbolic reading. “While philosophers have written extensively about folding as a way to understand the world, and psychologists view folding as a metaphor for concealment and unfolding as a metaphor for revelation… that is not what motivates me to paint this subject.” What drives her, instead, is the act of painting itself: how light behaves on cloth, how a flat plane of pigment can create the illusion of depth, and how the viewer negotiates between seeing an image and seeing a surface. “You might see the image of a tea towel,” she says, “but what you are actually seeing is just a layer of oil paint on a fabric surface.”

Stack’s process is as meticulous as it is intuitive. She begins by photographing the linen, then developing those images through drawings and watercolour studies before committing to the final painting. Each work is built up slowly in translucent layers of oil paint, with areas rubbed back to reveal texture and allow the image to emerge gradually. “There’s something poetic about painting linen on linen,” she reflects. “It becomes a kind of double surface.”

This material mirroring nods to the tradition of trompe l’oeil, but Stack enjoys subverting that genre by shifting scale and context. “Unlike traditional trompe l’oeil, which typically replicates objects at their actual size, I enjoy changing the scale—making something small feel monumental.” The result is a kind of visual play that draws attention to the act of perception itself, as much as to the object being represented. “It’s slow work,” she admits, “but that slowness matters.”

Among the works in this new series, Stack is particularly drawn to Untitled (unfolded hanky, white stripes) for its restraint. “It’s very minimal. There’s something quiet and contemplative about white on white that I find deeply satisfying.” She also cites Untitled (unfolded hanky, blue stripes), a larger-scale piece that presented the challenge of balancing overall structure with the delicacy of detail. “It’s a kind of dance, really, between the macro and the micro.”

Tea towels reappear throughout the body of work, familiar forms that she neither sentimentalizes nor seeks to elevate. “I’m not after nostalgia exactly, but I know that people project meaning onto these objects. That’s part of what makes them so interesting.” Of Untitled (unfolded tea towel, yellow stripes), she simply says, “The colour feels joyful. And sometimes, that’s enough of a reason.” While there’s no overt narrative threading the series together, there is a consistent undercurrent—a quiet attention to transformation. “These fabrics have been touched, folded, used. And now they’re painted, suspended. There’s something in that transformation that I keep coming back to.”

Bonnie, Freda and Sylvia

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Bonnie, Freda and Sylvia

  • Artist
    Freda Ali, Sylvia Marrgawaidj, Bonnie Burarngarra
  • Dates
    12 Mar—8 Apr 2025

The Maningrida Arts Community in north-west Arnhem Land produces a rich variety of fibre objects, both utilitarian and artistic. These include mats, baskets, bags, wall hangings, ceremonial regalia, and sculptural fish traps.

The primary thread for these weavings is the pandanus leaf, which is dyed using natural materials like the bloodroot. The weaving process is laborious, but the women who practice it take pride in their craft and its transmission to younger generations.

Each weaver’s unique style is reflected in her work. The colours of the weavings—reds, yellows, browns, black, and green—echo the changing seasons and the availability of different dye-yielding plants.

Maningrida Arts and Culture, the coordinating art centre for the Mun-dirra project at the NGV Triennial, is a leading Indigenous arts centre representing renowned artists like John Mawurndjul. Notably, the Mun-dirra project resulted in the creation of Australia’s largest woven sculpture.

Images on Country: Richard Mockler for ‘Making Mun-dirra’ – with Anna Freeland, ABC Arts, February 12 2024

Information Sourced: Elizabeth Fortescue, ‘Vast fish fence takes centre stage at Melbourne’s NGV Triennial’, The Art Newspaper, December 4 2023

 

‘Lookaftering’

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‘Lookaftering’

  • Artist
    Miranda Hampson, Elena Larkin, Anthea Stead
  • Dates
    20 Mar—20 Apr 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now

In Lookaftering, a group exhibition featuring Anthea Stead, Elena Larkin, and Miranda Hampson, the act of care takes on layered meanings. Each artist draws on their intimate connections to place, memory, and culture to explore the creative and ecological imperatives of ‘looking after’. As Annie Dillard once wrote, “There is no shortage of good days. It is good lives that are hard to come by.” This exhibition presents three artists who, through their work, strive to create not only good art but lives imbued with meaning, care, and attention to the natural world.

Anthea Stead’s paintings offer a meditation on the Illawarra Escarpment and its surrounding coastal landscapes. Though rooted in the region’s storms, cliffs, and seas, her works are composites—imagined scenes built from memory, photographs, and imagination. This merging of the familiar and the invented mirrors the ecological balance she observes: the delicate interplay between preservation and vulnerability. Stead’s paintings, with their moments of calm before the storm, evoke the fragility of the world we inhabit, compelling us to care for it as she does.

Elena Larkin’s layered impressions of the Australian bush bring an immersive and dynamic perspective to the theme of care. Working in gouache, she captures the ephemeral rhythms of light and shadow in the forest, painting the sensory experiences of being surrounded by nature. Her dappled, pointillistic markings reflect the vitality of the natural world, shaped by her childhood on Bundjalung Land. Larkin’s works suggest that to look after the land is to embrace its beauty in all its chaos and impermanence, a reminder of our deep, reciprocal relationship with the environments we inhabit.

For Miranda Hampson, an Anaiwan artist, looking after is an act of cultural and personal reclamation. Her work, such as Kati Thanda, honours Indigenous connections to Country, drawing on her heritage and her background in cultural heritage management. Hampson’s paintings are rooted in the shared experiences of kin, Country, and place. Her art extends the idea of care beyond the ecological, suggesting it as a means to heal and strengthen the bonds between people, land, and culture.

Lookaftering offers a poignant reflection on the many ways we care—through art, through attention, and through action. As Dillard suggests, good lives are hard to come by, but in the work of Stead, Larkin, and Hampson, we see a dedication to creating lives of care and connection.

So Long, Summer

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So Long, Summer

In the six oil pastel works that make up ‘So Long, Summer’, Sydney/Cammeraygal artist Phoebe Stone bids farewell to this enchanting season by depicting a late lunch at the dining table. Envision warm golden light, shareable dishes, clusters of flowers in vintage earthenware, and linen tablecloths draping over weathered wooden tops.

Using her distinctive linear dashes and curlicue lines, Stone leverages the immediacy and vigour of the oil stick. The joy and energy of being among friends finds its equivalent in this medium. 

But if the works in ‘So Long, Summer’ have the air of being completed in a single, unbridled burst of creative energy – it is only because the artist has so skilfully disguised the careful analysis and control behind them. She describes “the beauty and delight to be found in a well balanced coming together of composition, colour, pattern and texture” something which takes time and calibrated focus. 

Watching Dawn Break and Dusk Fall

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Watching Dawn Break and Dusk Fall

  • Artist
    Linda Greedy
  • Dates
    13 Feb—9 Mar 2025

Unveiled in our top floor gallery, six oil on linen landscapes comprise ‘Watching Dawn Break and Dusk Fall’ – a collection of exquisitely painted landscapes from Port Stephens-based Linda Greedy

Areas of spareness in these views of Three Capes Track and Low Head, Tasmania give way to surging cacophonies of lines – denoting dense scrub – and revealing Linda’s formidable talent as a draughts-person. Here, the artist precisely evokes the emotional charge and monumentality of standing and walking within these landscapes. One senses the wind buffeting one’s face, hears the sigh of branches and smells the surge of the sea below. Linda has the rare talent of carrying the spectator directly into the picture.

‘Rocky Outcrop’ depicts a central tree curving sideways by the whipping coastal winds – and now only half supported by the ground on which it stands. The finesse and small workings of her brush gives this most ancient of subject matters a certain glory and presence. The exhilarating Tasmanian landscape is presented in lyrical detail.

For the artist, bushwalking “gifts (her) the opportunity to take time to immerse and appreciate the sights, sounds, and unpredictable weather of the natural environment.”.

Midnight Garden

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Midnight Garden

  • Artist
    Madison Baird
  • Dates
    13 Feb—9 Mar 2025

In 2021, Madison Baird entered the National Emerging Art Prize with her painting ‘When the bees are busy’. The judging panel were wowed by Baird’s accomplished depiction of nasturtiums curling out of a large glass vase, acknowledging her with a finalist placement. Prize co-founder, Amber Creswell Bell has been watching her practice develop since. For her debut showing at Michael Reid Southern Highlands, Baird has created a series of new works titled ‘Midnight Garden’.

 

The collection of flora – geraniums, nasturtiums and angel’s trumpets – painted in their garden settings after dark, captures the soothing solitude found in these inky nighttime environments. The calming rhythms and unhurried pace of nature invite a gentle stillness.Working on Gadigal land, Sydney, Baird “explores land as a space of emotional reprieve, of refuge, and of a soft return to a greater whole. Although without external gaze, the bush holds a mirror up to our internal states. It is a poignant reminder that, like nature, we are always in a state of becoming, akin to the flowers that bud and wither.”

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