• The Interior II brings together artists whose practices engage with the idea of the interior through painting, sculpture, and material exploration. Across the exhibition, domestic spaces, remembered environments, and lived experience intersect, creating unexpected dialogues between artworks and artists.

    As visitors move through the gallery, moments of intimacy, stillness, and gesture shift from one artwork to the next, leading into Sally Scales’ new exhibition, where a bold shift in colour expands the conversation in a distinct new direction.

    As a continuation of the first iteration, The Interior II builds on the connections between artists while allowing each practice to retain its own voice and sensibility.

     

    – N.

  • Sally Anderson
    Sally Anderson

    Sally Anderson’s work draws heavily on personal domestic, maternal, and relational experiences, as well as second-hand encounters with landscapes, to explore how meaning and memory are held, stored, and carried. She is particularly interested in the concept of ‘the souvenir’ and the ways we authenticate experiences and navigate notions of reality and truth.

     

    Anderson recontextualizes and arranges personal and intimate experiences with art historical references to address how motherhood, domesticity, and creative practice are, for her, reciprocal and ultimately entangled. Her paintings deliberately oscillate between abstraction and representation, using still-life and landscape motifs as symbols of containment and care. Stella Rosa McDonald writes that Sally’s paintings are 'like wombs or libraries—where gestation and digestion are tacitly implied.'

     

    Join Sally's preview list / Find out more.

  • Sally Anderson, Apple and eggs with Tweed view, 2025

    Sally Anderson

    Apple and eggs with Tweed view, 2025
    acrylic on linen
    50 x 60 cm
  • Holly Anderson
    Holly Anderson

    From across a room, Holly Anderson’s paintings appear to swim in the brightness of a clear sky. Bursts of sunlight populate familiar subject matter – interiors, figures, skies, and water are monochromic planes pierced with white light...

     

    Anderson’s painting practice explores sensory encounters between light and landscape. Moving between figuration and abstraction, her brushstrokes form geometric, often monochromatic compositions whose flatness intensifies their subtle realism. Sunlight is central to her work – flashes of white disrupt gridded surfaces of stripes and squares, bending and scattering form. Familiar subjects emerge through the glare, developing a visual language attuned to the brilliance of the Australian sun.

     

    Recent exhibitions include the Museum of Brisbane and Firstdraft. She has been a finalist in the JADA Prize and Brisbane Portrait Prize, among others, and her work is held in public and private collections. Anderson completed a BFA (Hons) at the Queensland College of Art, where she now teaches sessionally.

     

    Join Holly's preview list / Find out more.

  • Holly Anderson, I found a tunnel, 2025

    Holly Anderson

    I found a tunnel, 2025
    oil on panel
    150 x 31 cm
  • Tom Blake
    Tom Blake

    Tom Blake’s practice draws on fragmented moments, looped imagery and recurring motifs as potential sites for contemplating the psychological, architectural and technological frameworks that surround us.

    'Most of the work I do starts with drawing,' says the artist about his wide-ranging practice. The drawings are then fragmented and redrawn, and the new compositions incorporated into cyanotypes, hand-etched de-silvered mirrors, mobiles and installations. 'There's a balance between concept and formalism, and where those two meet,' explains Tom.

     

    Tom has exhibited in Australia, Japan and Italy, and has undertaken residencies with Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts (PICA), Museo de Arte Moderno Chiloé (MAM), Fremantle Arts Centre (FAC), North Metro TAFE, Sapporo Tenjinyama Art Studio, and Parramatta Artists’ Studios. He was a 2013 recipient of a Clitheroe Foundation Mentorship.

     

     Join Tom's preview list / Find out more.
  • Tom Blake, index of a stream (pause), 2025

    Tom Blake

    index of a stream (pause), 2025
    cyanotype, artist-made brass frame
    41 x 31 cm
  • Joshua Charadia
    Joshua Charadia

    Joshua Charadia is a Sydney-based artist who explores the nature of consciousness and perception. He translates his photographs of the built environment and its inhabitants into paintings and drawings to reveal their latent visual complexity, capturing moments of the sublime in the everyday. His characteristic use of motion blur serves as an extended metaphor for our contemporary experience of the world, offering fleeting fragments of observation which oscillate between realism and abstraction.

     

    Charadia won the Adelaide Perry Prize for Drawing in 2023, and has been a finalist in numerous art prizes, including the Jacaranda Drawing Award (2022), Sulman Prize (2020) and Dobell Drawing Prize (2021, 2019). In 2021 he was awarded the Fisher's Ghost Art Award South West Sydney Award, in 2020 he was awarded People’s Choice at the Adelaide Perry Prize, and in 2018 won 2nd place at the Belle ArtStart Prize. His works are held in the National Art School collection and private collections in Australia, New Zealand, The United Kingdom, & USA.


    Join Joshua's preview list / Find out more.

  • Joshua Charadia, Underpass, we met halfway, 2025

    Joshua Charadia

    Underpass, we met halfway, 2025
    oil on board
    30 x 40 cm
  • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
    Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro

    Working as a collaborative duo since 2001, Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro’s practice reflects a preoccupation with the dynamics of global mobility, fallout of consumer society, and contemporary notion of home.

     

    Combining playful humour with art historical references, the duo transform prefabricated structures and readymade materials, from Lego and IKEA furniture to car parts and architectural fragments, into ambitious sculptures and installations defined by deconstruction and reinvention.

     

    Winners of the Sulman Prize in 2022, Claire & Sean have exhibited widely in Australia and internationally. Their installation Life Span featured in Australia’s presentation at the 53rd Venice Biennale, and they have participated in major exhibitions including the Auckland Triennial, the Australian Biennial of Art, and the Oku-Noto Triennale, Japan. Their work has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions across leading institutions in Australia, Europe, and the United States.

     

     Join Claire & Sean's preview list / Find out more.

    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro Madame Pellier's Sommelier on Silver, 2022 acrylic gouache on booze box 53 x 62.5 cm
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      Madame Pellier's Sommelier on Silver, 2022
      acrylic gouache on booze box
      53 x 62.5 cm
    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro Blue Carnation Skinny Bitch, 2022 acrylic gouache on booze box 66 x 26.2 cm
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      Blue Carnation Skinny Bitch, 2022
      acrylic gouache on booze box
      66 x 26.2 cm
    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro Not Under My Roof, 2009 82.5 x 88.2 cm (image size) 100.5 x 106.5 cm (framed)
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      Not Under My Roof, 2009
      82.5 x 88.2 cm (image size)
      100.5 x 106.5 cm (framed)
  • Casey Chen
    Casey Chen

    Blending childhood nostalgia with long-standing East Asian ceramic traditions, Chen applies his imagery to hand-thrown plates and vases, which are then fused with geometric patterns from traditional sources. The result is a cultural pastiche, and a dynamic conversation between traditional craft and contemporary perspective.

     

    Casey’s recent work draws upon imagery and motifs from the archetypal tales of the four great classic novels of Chinese literature: Romance of the Three KingdomsJourney to the WestWater Margin and Dream of the Red Chamber. His resulting works are both a self-exploration and an homage to the rich and enduring history of Chinese porcelain craft and Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints.

     

    Chen graduated from the National Art School in December 2020 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree majoring in ceramics, and was the recipient of the annual Harvey Galleries National Art School Exhibition award. Casey has been a finalist in numerous awards, and won the Muswellbrook Art Prize 2023.

     

    Join Casey's preview list / Find out more.

  • Casey Chen, Havoc in heaven 3, 2025

    Casey Chen

    Havoc in heaven 3, 2025
    glazed porcelain, ceramic colourants, enamels, and gold lustre; fired 5 times
    42.5 x 22 x 23 cm
  • VIpoo Srivilasa
    VIpoo Srivilasa

    A Thai-born Australian artist recognised as a leader in the field of ceramics, Vipoo Srivilasa creates work that engages with complex questions of queerness, migration and spiritual meaning, using an aesthetic and medium that is accessible, uplifting and beautiful.

     

    Vipoo has exhibited extensively around the world, including Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Saatchi Gallery, London; Ayala Museum, Philippines; Yingge Ceramics Museum, Taiwan; Nanjing Arts Institute, China and the National Gallery of Thailand. His work is held in national and international public collections across the globe including Henan Museum, China; Roopanakar Museum of Fine Arts, India; Craft Council, UK, and the National Gallery of Australia. In 2021, Vipoo was awarded the Ceramic Artist of the Year by the American Ceramic Society for his contribution to the global clay community.

     

     Join Vipoo's preview list / Find out more.

    • Vipoo Srivilasa The Guardian of Friendship, 2026 glazed earthenware, cobalt pigment with gold lustre and mixed media 32 x 19 x 9 cm
      Vipoo Srivilasa
      The Guardian of Friendship, 2026
      glazed earthenware, cobalt pigment with gold lustre and mixed media
      32 x 19 x 9 cm
    • Vipoo Srivilasa Faces of Fortune, the Deity of being rich!, 2025 glazed porcelain, gold lustre and mixed media 48 x 29 x 12 cm
      Vipoo Srivilasa
      Faces of Fortune, the Deity of being rich!, 2025
      glazed porcelain, gold lustre and mixed media
      48 x 29 x 12 cm
  • CHRISTOPHER ZANKO
    CHRISTOPHER ZANKO

    Christopher Zanko is an artist based in the Illawarra/Dharawal region of the New South Wales south coast. Drawing on the architecture and culture of his hometown, he reimagines suburban environments through a distinctive, deeply personal lens.

     

    Influenced by Japanese woodblock carving, Zanko focuses on the details that shape domestic identity – from red brick facades to tyre swans and terrazzo porches. Through meticulous, meditative carving, he preserves these quiet suburban markers as enduring records of place and memory.

     

    A finalist in the Brett Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship, Sulman and Wynne Prizes, and the King’s School Art Prize, his work is held in major collections including the White Rabbit Collection, Museums of History NSW, Wollongong Art Gallery, and the University of Wollongong.

     

    Join Christopher's preview list / Find out more.

    • Christopher Zanko DIALED IN, 2026 acrylic on carved woodblock 40 x 35 cm
      Christopher Zanko
      DIALED IN, 2026
      acrylic on carved woodblock
      40 x 35 cm
    • Christopher Zanko RESOLVE I, 2026 acrylic on wood relief carving 40 x 35 cm
      Christopher Zanko
      RESOLVE I, 2026
      acrylic on wood relief carving
      40 x 35 cm
    • Christopher Zanko RESOLVE II, 2026 acrylic on wood relief carving 40 x 35 cm
      Christopher Zanko
      RESOLVE II, 2026
      acrylic on wood relief carving
      40 x 35 cm
  • Natasha walsh
    Natasha walsh

    Natasha Walsh's practice is informed by an understanding of the artist as an alchemist. Known for her transformation of pigments on copper surfaces, Walsh's work acutely observes delicately-painted figures that emerge from the surface. ‘From the moment that I prepare the surface, it begins to naturally oxidise. I experiment with applying different ground pigments which change colour in response to this process. These paintings visibly age as I work on them. As such, my attempt to transfix time is inherently impossible and this interests me.’

     

    Walsh has been a recipient of multiple awards, prizes, and scholarships, including The Brett Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship, Mosman Art Prize, and The Kilgour Prize, and has been a finalist in The Archibald Prize four times, The BP Portrait Award (London National Portrait Gallery), The Royal Scottish Academy Annual Exhibition (Edinburgh), and The Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition (London).

     

    Join Natasha's preview list / Find out more.

    • Photo credit: Alfonso Chavez-Lujan
      Natasha Walsh
      Interior garden, 2025
      pencil on paper
      30 x 23 cm
    • Natasha Walsh The window opening onto the Magnolia, 2025 oil & pigment on copper 41 x 32.5 cm (plate), 48 x 53.5 cm (framed)
      Natasha Walsh
      The window opening onto the Magnolia, 2025
      oil & pigment on copper
      41 x 32.5 cm (plate), 48 x 53.5 cm (framed)
  • Louise Zhang
    Louise Zhang

    Louise Zhang is an Australian multidisciplinary artist working across painting, sculpture, and installation. Her practice investigates the interplay of aesthetics and cultural identity, often embracing contrasts to evoke a sense of otherness. Drawing inspiration from mythology and botany, Zhang weaves together symbols and motifs into compositions that balance harmony with dissonance.

     

    Materially, her practice is highly considered, paying great attention to her choices in paint, she utilises the historical and instinctive associations of colour to create visual dichotomies from her subjects. In the sweeping visual landscapes of her work, the textural consideration of her paint creates windows into another world, some elements of her works are within our grasp and others remain deeper within. As a deconstruction of the world around her, she weaves together symbols from reality and memory, transforming them into something more lucid and surreal, documenting identity in the process of its own making.

     

    Join Louise's preview list / Find out more.

  • Louise Zhang, Tapestry: Peony and Pearl, 2024

    Louise Zhang

    Tapestry: Peony and Pearl, 2024
    acrylic on linen
    101 x 60 cm
  • Joan Ross
    Joan Ross

    With a bold humanist style, Ross’ cross-disciplinary practice is driven by a desire to examine Australia’s shadowed colonial histories. Fluoro and furious, she reimagines colonial imagery, layering each work with cultural references that reflect shared eras – critiquing the ongoing effects of greed, globalisation and colonisation, all while leaving you with a smile.

     

    Joan Ross recently presented a major career survey at the National Portrait GalleryJoan Ross: Those trees came back to me in my dreams, selecting portraits from the collection to show alongside her own works – extending her long-standing exploration of collecting and collections.

     

    Her practice spans roles as educator, mentor and judge, with works held and presented by leading institutions. In recent years, Ross has expanded into virtual reality, presenting Did you ask the river? at ACMI, followed by Collector’s Paradise for the National Gallery of Australia and I give you a mountain, projected onto the façade of the Art Gallery of South Australia.

     

    Join Joan's preview list / Find out more.

    • Joan Ross M’lady Ikebana, 2015 hand-coloured pigment print on rag paper 91 x 71 cm / 109.5 x 90.5 x 4 cm (framed)
      Joan Ross
      M’lady Ikebana, 2015
      hand-coloured pigment print on rag paper
      91 x 71 cm / 109.5 x 90.5 x 4 cm (framed)
    • Joan Ross They popped up everywhere, 2026 acrylic on board 51 x 40.5 cm
      Joan Ross
      They popped up everywhere, 2026
      acrylic on board
      51 x 40.5 cm
    • Joan Ross The tears of the past, 2026 acrylic on board 41 x 30.5 cm
      Joan Ross
      The tears of the past, 2026
      acrylic on board
      41 x 30.5 cm
    • Joan Ross Infiltration, 2026 acrylic on board 41 x 30.5 cm
      Joan Ross
      Infiltration, 2026
      acrylic on board
      41 x 30.5 cm
  • Carly Dodd
    Carly Dodd

    Carly Tarkari Dodd is a Kaurna, Narungga, and Ngarrindjeri artist and curator whose practice spans weaving, jewellery, sculpture, and cultural storytelling. Taught traditional Ngarrindjeri weaving by Aunty Ellen Trevorrow, she combines ancestral knowledge with contemporary materials to create works grounded in cultural resilience.

     

    Through adornment and regalia, Dodd transforms raffia, ribbon, and fabric into bold wearable forms celebrating cultural continuity. Her work has featured at Australian Fashion Week, in Vogue Australia, and in national and international exhibitions. A finalist in the MAKE Award and the Rigg Design Prize, she was named South Australia’s NAIDOC Young Person of the Year in 2018. Based on Kaurna Country, she continues to share knowledge through workshops, with works held in public and private collections.

    • Carly Dodd Untitled 1, 2025 linen, polyester filling and cotton yarn 59 x 27 x 23 cm
      Carly Dodd
      Untitled 1, 2025
      linen, polyester filling and cotton yarn
      59 x 27 x 23 cm
    • Carly Dodd Untitled 3, 2025 linen, polyester filling and cotton yarn 74 x 27 x 25 cm
      Carly Dodd
      Untitled 3, 2025
      linen, polyester filling and cotton yarn
      74 x 27 x 25 cm
  • Neva Hosking
    Neva Hosking

    Neva Hosking is an artist who clearly takes great personal delight in the living. Taking her cues from the rich visual delights of her immediate environment, Neva’s still lifes are semi-autobiographical, displaying in their subject matter and aesthetic structure cues from her personal life. 

     

    In Neva’s work, the paper is as much the work as the marks she leaves upon it. The printed grids on the paper act as windows to both project upon and to peer at, to let the viewer peek through, and to keep them at just the right distance. Drawn from life, the artist’s painstaking methodology explores Hosking’s own collection of plants examined in an intensely detailed technique. Once framed, Neva’s works become windows into her greenhouse — an invitation into her personal world. Devoid of colour, focus is made on the line and form of the artist’s subjects to engage a sense of attention that enables the elevation of otherwise overlooked plants.

     

    Join Neva's preview list Find out more.

  • Neva Hosking, Yellow Saraca Shades Anthurium Guatemala At Pats, Innisfail, 2024

    Neva Hosking

    Yellow Saraca Shades Anthurium Guatemala At Pats, Innisfail, 2024
    ink on paper
    27 x 20 cm (sheet)