In After the Flood, Eora/Sydney-based artist, Drew Truslove turns his attention again to the Minnamurra River and its surrounding bushland, tracing the tangled beauty and abundance of this river country.
Working with a single colour—a luminous, mineral blue – Truslove’s landscape are drawn in near-continuous fields of marks, looping, searching and restless. His line doubles back, thickens and disperses, at times so fine it seems to hover just above the canvas, then gathering weight along the spine of a trunk, or in the articulation of roots gripping the bank. Ink proves uniquely suited to this task. It follows the slip of a hand without resistance, registering each pause and surge of confidence.
The effect is of a landscape in the process of assembling itself: the river country as a shifting tangle of elements and relations, continually being rewritten.
In After the Flood, Truslove observes the Minnamurra River after a period of inundation. Flooded banks have been reshaped, trees displaced and channels re-routed. There is an underlying awareness of force, of what the river is capable of when it exceeds its usual bounds. “I was curious about how the pieces would turn out.” says the artist. “Would they be paintings of destruction and mess or would they show something else. In the end the scenes I focused on show both damage and growth in harmony together.”
Earlier attentions to lightly marked fox paths—seen in Truslove’s first collection with Michael Reid Southern Highlands (Fox Paths – Minnamurra River, December 2024 to Feb 2025) —finds an echo in these reworked grounds. Here, however, traces of movement are more forcefully inscribed. The introduction of diptychs extends this thinking outward: the seam between panels becomes another line within the work, a hinge across which the landscape unfolds.
“The diptychs have allowed me to explore larger, more dramatic representations of this landscape.” says the artist. “I’ve been slowly escalating the size of these pieces in recent years to try and replicate the intensity, scale and immersive nature of the scenes. It’s allowed me to play around with composition in a different way, looking at scenes that ‘work’ individually and combined.”
What Drew Truslove ultimately proposes is a different way of seeing landscape. In choosing ink as the final medium, he makes a decisive claim: that a line and a single colour – drawn with clarity, patience, and an acute responsiveness to the world – can hold the vastness, force, and subtlety of a landscape.
Named Runner-Up in the 2024 National Emerging Art Prize, and recipient of the Award of Excellence in the Morgans Financial Prize for an Emerging Painter for ‘Flat Rock, River Crossing, 7th Angle’, Truslove is an artist of growing stature. After the Flood is his third solo collection with Michael Reid – with his prior two collections selling out in their entirety.
To speak with a Michael Reid representative about Drew Truslove’s work, press the Register Interest tile.