Artist Profile – Cameilia Grace Edwards

Posted by

In the lead-up to the announcement of Michael Reid Southern Highlands’ representation of Cameilia Grace Edwards, the gallery team visited the artist at her studio in Inverell, New South Wales — a converted shopfront where Edwards paints beneath high ceilings and large street-facing windows, remaining closely connected to the community that passes by each day.

It is here that Edwards develops the luminous botanical paintings for which she has become celebrated, translating fleeting, intimate encounters with light and the natural world into works of remarkable delicacy and presence.

“I want to show the viewer a different point of view. To show how beautiful things can be when you really take a closer look at them,” says the artist and two-time National Emerging Art Prize finalist in our conversation. “There is a lovely element of stillness and quiet when you get this close up to nature.”

Read our interview with Cameilia Grace Edwards below. To sign up for early previews, exclusive news and priority access to forthcoming releases by the artist, please email willkollmorgen@michaelreid.com.au.

What were some of your early creative influences?

Growing up I always knew my dad was creative and could paint really well. He had some of his paintings hanging up in the back shed and the level of detail was amazing. He has always been able to draw things from his mind, so whenever we needed something sketched up, he was the one we went to.

What led you to pursue painting as a career?

I didn’t do art in high school. I was always daunted by the theory side of it, so I was more interested in maths and physics. However, I have always been drawn to creative outlets from as far back as when I was at university and the early years of my working life.

As much as I dabbled over the years, I didn’t decide to properly pursue painting until 2020 when a friend and I discovered our mutual love of it and decided to get together once a fortnight to have some cocktails and see what we could create. For the first time since having my children (Harvey and Emerson) I challenged myself to paint something detailed.

I had never painted realistically, but I somehow always had this feeling that I could do it if I tried. So I set out to paint a portrait of a boy and a horse and I entered it in a local art show (Inverell Art Prize). I was awarded the Inverell Shire Council Acquisition Prize and the piece gained traction online through local ABC news articles and went viral (first and only time that this has happened with one of my paintings!).

How did you develop your approach to painting?

Starting out as a commission artist and having the mindset of saying ‘yes’. While challenging, this pushed me into different styles and helped me to work out the areas I was naturally good at and what I enjoyed the most. I think it also helped me to really ‘see’ things – to stop making assumptions about what I thought certain colours or shapes should be, but instead see what they actually were when I took a deeper look.

Can you identify a moment of creative breakthrough?

I had this ongoing feeling that I wanted to paint with a blurred background, to take advantage of my love for blending paint, and to have only a small amount of the image in focus in the foreground. It was on a very routine trip to the dog park one day that I saw a dandelion in a single ray of sunshine. My brother happened to be home at the time and had his fancy new camera on him. After some convincing to let me use the camera, I snapped a photo of the dandelion which became the reference photo for my piece One Thing at a Time and the beginning of the style I am still embracing today. 

Could you tell us about your relationship to the landscapes that appear in your work?

I am mostly drawn to areas that are ‘just off’ to the normal path of life. The wildflowers that are on the edge of the highway, the weeds that are just off to the side of the bush track, or the reeds and grasses on the edge of the river. My eye is constantly drawn to these areas that are often overlooked and unnoticed, scanning to see if I can uncover something beautiful and shine a light on it. Viewing these landscapes at sunset is when the magic really happens. 

Could you take us through your creative process?

Capturing my reference photos is the most unpredictable part of my process. If the weather is right (very rare), I set out at sunset and I have a few local areas that I frequent the most. Then it comes down to a bit of luck. I need the sun to be striking the subject in just the right way. It’s not guaranteed that I will be successful with taking a usable reference photo when I set out on these little expeditions, but I instantly know when I have captured something magical.

Once I have a reference photo that I am in love with, I need to work out what scale and composition to use. I usually sit with the image for a few weeks or sometimes months before I am ready to dive into the painting.

Once in the studio, I start with a layer of acrylic in a golden yellow. I have found that this base helps to enhance the ‘golden hour’ feel of my paintings. I then add a basic grid on the canvas so I know that the proportions will be correct and it saves a lot of changes along the way. Layers of oil paint are then built up to form the soft focus background. This stage is the most challenging and time consuming and tests my patience. Once the background is complete, the fun begins with the details being added to the foreground and bringing the whole painting together. 

“I just love finding beauty in native flora that would often be described as a weed and something easily bypassed. When the sun is setting and it lands on these little natural beauties, they come to life and it is as if they transform into something completely different.

Given that your painting process begins with photography, how do you see the relationship between these two mediums within your practice?

I love the play of light that lens flare adds to a reference photo. I don’t capture it in every photo, but when I do, I love the extra layer it brings to the painted composition. I also cheekily enjoy the initial moment when someone views my work and questions if they are photos or paintings. I love being able to take my own reference photos. While it is frustrating at times, I think over time it’s made me more aware of just how fleeting these moments of pure magic are, and I am much more grateful for each winning shot.

Could you tell us about your experience entering and being selected for the National Emerging Art Prize?

It was a massive turning point for me. For years, I felt like I had been waiting for my chance. For a gallery to see my work and say ‘I see something here, let’s give her a shot’. When I attended the opening night of NEAP 2024 and was able to see other people’s reactions to my painting, it became clear that this style was something special, and it gave me the drive to keep developing it.

The National Emerging Art Prize was the start of that for me because it then led to my first show with Michael Reid Southern Highlands in 2025. 

What was the starting point for your debut series Echoes of Light and how did this body of work develop?

The Echoes of Light collection evolved from the piece One Thing at a Time. I was excited to develop a whole collection in this style. I set out with the intent of wanting each piece to be unique and tell its own story, but for the whole collection to work in unison. And as with all of my paintings, it is very important for the sunlight element to feature in each piece to create that ever-striking glow that pulls you in.

Could you tell us about your most recent series, Chasing the Light?

Chasing the Light was my biggest collection to date. It was a chance to experiment within the style, both in terms of canvas size, and also subject matter. The title for the collection came from me literally ‘chasing the light’ all over the place at sunset in search of inspiration and magical reference photos. It was a turning point for me to really dive into the whole process, from start to finish, reference photo through to painting and then through to the exhibition. I learnt a lot about which areas I have my strengths and which areas still need more time and development. I learnt that I absolutely love the process of creating work for an exhibition and love seeing the collection come to life.

What other projects are you looking forward to working on now?

I feel so grateful to have found ‘my style’ after many years of worrying that I never would. It feels very exciting and hopeful to know that I have a nearly endless amount of inspiration out in the world and I just need to keep exploring with my camera and waiting to stumble onto some more magic. 

I am looking forward to pushing myself to create larger works, which is not such an easy task when you see the size of my paint brushes!

For now, I am just so grateful that I am able to spend my days creating paintings that are really resonating with people. In a crazy world, I do not take lightly the fact that I am able to inject some calm and peace into people’s lives.

Held in Place

Posted by

Held in Place

  • Artist
    Brittany Jones
  • Dates
    9 Jul—9 Aug 2026

In July, Melbourne/Naarm-based painter Brittany Jones will present her first exhibition with Michael Reid Southern Highlands, Held in Place.

Jones’ modest subjects—measuring tapes, glassware, ceramic vessels and domestic implements—are drawn from the familiar world of the home and studio. Through meticulous observation, she reveals their often overlooked beauty and formal complexity.

While grounded in the traditions of still life painting, the works that comprise Held in Place also function as a form of surrogate portraiture. Jones, who was recognised as a finalist in the 2025 Archibald Prize, approaches her subjects with the same attentiveness she brings to the human figure. The objects she depicts bear the imprint of lives lived around them—the traces of touch, habit and ritual. They become stand-ins for their owners, suggesting lives beyond the frame.

At the heart of the exhibition is Jones’ remarkable sensitivity to the material world. Glass catches and disperses light with convincing luminosity; ceramics reveal subtle irregularities that speak to their handmade origins; a poppy stem is rendered with such precision that even the fine hairs lining its surface remain visible. Particularly compelling are her leadlight windows, where rippled panes fracture and distort the view beyond. Such passages speak to the precision of her painterly language.

Jones’ work has been recognised in a number of significant Australian art prizes, including the Portia Geach Memorial Award and STILL: National Still Life Award, where she received a Judges’ Commendation in 2025. She has also been shortlisted for the Ravenswood Australian Women’s Art Prize, ACB Selects (National Emerging Art Prize), the Lethbridge 20,000 Small Scale Art Award, the Small Works Art Prize and the Kilgour Art Prize, and was a semi-finalist in the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize.

Dalin Alejandrino

Posted by

Dalin Alejandrino

  • Artist
    Dalin Alejandrino
  • Dates
    30 Jul—16 Aug 2026

Following her debut collection, Quiet Tide, at Michael Reid Northern Beaches, Sydney/Eora-based painter Dalin Alejandrino will make her first appearance at Michael Reid Southern Highlands this July with a new body of work presented in the mezzanine gallery. Presented concurrently with an exhibition at the Northern Beaches, the two bodies of work reveal distinct currents within the artist’s practice: one shaped by the luminosity and atmosphere of the coast, the other grounded in a more earth-toned and elemental palette. Together, they move between the diaphanous and the solid, demonstrating the breadth of a painter equally attuned to light, atmosphere and form.

Soliloquy

Posted by

Soliloquy

  • Artist
    Conor Knight
  • Dates
    18 Jun—5 Jul 2026

With Soliloquy, Brisbane-based oil painter Conor Knight makes his return to Michael Reid after nearly two years, presenting a suite of works across our Murrurundi and Southern Highlands spaces throughout June and July.

Knight depicts his floral subjects as boldly illuminated and set against spare grounds, such that the force of our attention rests on the elegance with which these still-life forms are depicted: the curve of a leaf, or the delicacy of a petal.

In this lighting, his subjects are endowed with an almost actorly grace, as though stage-lit and moments away from delivering a great monologue. “In theatre, a soliloquy is a window into the inner thoughts of a character,” says Knight. “These still life paintings use that concept to create works that touch on themes of intimacy, theatricality and solitude. Borrowing their titles from famous monologues and soliloquies, the collection explores feelings that sit between softness and unease.”

Always, there is attention to the gradations of tone changing across his forms as they turn towards and away from their light sources. The control of his brush, allowing it to deposit just enough paint to successfully record a form and then nothing more, gives each work a buoyancy and lightness.

On this level, he recalls one contemporary Australian master, Robert Malherbe. Further back, one can see that the artist is an eager student of history, with a deep respect for the traditions of Dutch and Flemish vanitas painting, albeit in a more gestural register and one less constrained by the pursuit of exact fidelity.

Also coursing through his work is a care for his medium which begins at its earliest stages, mulling his paints himself so that he has the most precise control possible over their viscosity and performance on the canvas. “I’ve really come to appreciate the unique quality of oil as the binding agent in paint,” Knight says. “Oil is able to hold light within. When light hits the surface of an oil painting, some of that light passes through the paint and reflects within the oil.”

In a stylistic flourish, Knight allows elements of the grisaille underpainting to poke through: a nod to the process itself, whereby a stable orange ground becomes the starting point and base colour upon which all others are applied. It is also very much an active element within the final composition, giving the work an almost weathered quality – as though uncovered after centuries.

If his botanical forms can be considered stars of the stage, characters of such devotion singing their arias, then concluding on the cuts of meat must be an undeniable and wry gesture: after the beauty, the meat of the scene, or its substance. Of course, by including the subject, Conor tells us that there is some underappreciated beauty in this subject too.

Mountain Made

Posted by

Mountain Made

Mountain Made is a new series of exuberant botanical paintings by Louise Frith, returning the Eora/Sydney-based artist to the Southern Highlands with some of the most immersive works of her career to date. Building on the creative breakthrough of her celebrated Murrurundi exhibitions Understory and Tendrils and Tapestries, along with her debut collection at Michael Reid Sydney last year, Frith’s latest paintings delve deep into the bushland surrounding Pierce’s Pass in Blue Mountains National Park. Sketching in the field before returning to the studio, the artist closely observes the dense floral interplay of the landscape, its tangled undergrowth and resilient plant life emerging through sandstone cracks and beneath the canopy.

Moving with painterly gusto between passages of intricate, tightly controlled detail and moments of untamed, impressionistic abundance, Frith’s dazzling profusions of native wildflowers teem and grow to the very edge of the canvas. “Most people are enthralled by the big views, looking down the valleys, marvelling at the escarpment,” says the artist, “but I’m charmed by the details at my feet.” 

The works in Mountain Made are deeply informed by the cycles of destruction and regeneration that shape the Australian landscape. Pierce’s Pass was severely affected by the 2020 bushfires, and Frith recalls how visitors spoke of an eerie silence after the burn, a landscape emptied of birdsong and the usual din of the ecosystem. Returning in recent summers, however, she found the terrain transformed once more: “If you visit now, the landscape is thriving and the thrum of cicadas is deafening. It is full of life again,” says the artist. In this respect, the exhibition becomes a meditation on regrowth and renewal, celebrating the resilience and restorative power of the Australian bush within one of the country’s most sublime landscapes.

Join our mailing list
Interests(Required)
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
REGISTER YOUR INTEREST: Mountain Made