• Under the Same Constellation brings together artists in a collective gesture that marks the gallery’s fifth year. Spanning painting, sculpture, photograph, and installation, the exhibition reflects the breadth of practices that have shaped the programme since its inception. 

    Like stars held within a shared field, each artist maintains a distinct position while contributing to a larger constellation of ideas, histories, and perspectives. Seen together, these works trace both individual trajectories and the evolving identity of the gallery itself — one grounded in long-term artist relationships and a commitment to sustained dialogue.

    This exhibition is both a moment of reflection and a point of departure. It acknowledges the artists, collectors, and community who have shaped the gallery’s first five years, while looking ahead to what continues to unfold.

  • 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.

     

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  • Holly Anderson, Study for The Bridge, 2025

    Holly Anderson

    Study for The Bridge, 2025
    oil on panel
    18 x 13 cm
  • 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.'

     

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  • Sally Anderson, Olley’s jug with NF residency view south, 2025

    Sally Anderson

    Olley’s jug with NF residency view south, 2025
    acrylic on canvas
    60 x 80 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.

     

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    • Tom Blake constellations (index, chair), 2025 cyanotype, artist-made brass frame 51 x 41 cm
      Tom Blake
      constellations (index, chair), 2025
      cyanotype, artist-made brass frame
      51 x 41 cm
    • Tom Blake constellations (leaves on the sea), 2026 cyanotype, artist-made brass frame 41 x 31 cm
      Tom Blake
      constellations (leaves on the sea), 2026
      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.


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  • 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.

     

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  • Casey Chen, 109 Heavenly Stars and Spirits, 2026

    Casey Chen

    109 Heavenly Stars and Spirits, 2026
    glazed porcelain with overglaze enamel and platinum lustre - fired five times
    35 x 35 x 4 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.

     

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  • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro, Pink Bear, 2024

    Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro

    Pink Bear, 2024
    recontextualised lego
    96 x 96 cm
  • Savannah Jarvis
    Savannah Jarvis

    My practice explores how the sensations of the body can be understood in painting via the use of metaphoric expression.'

     

    Savannah Jarvis is an Meanjin/Brisbane artist whose multidisciplinary practice investigates pain and the historical difficulties in it’s communication. Exploring how we may begin to understand and articulate the complex relationship between pain, the medical body and language, her work is underpinned by the notion that pain is inexpressible in language alone. Jarvis believes that pain has an articulation, and that images instead may succeed the realms in which language has failed. In 2020, Savannah completed a BFA with Honours at the Queensland College of Art.

     

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  • Mason Kimber
    Mason Kimber

    Mason Kimber is a Sydney Gadigal based artist whose practice spans textural painting, sculptural relief and site specific installation. His work explores the relationship between architecture and memory, using surface, material and form to investigate how built environments can hold personal and collective histories. Through processes such as moulding, casting and framing, Kimber reimagines interior spaces as layered living structures embedded with traces of memory.

     

    After completing a Master of Fine Art in Painting at the National Art School in 2013, Kimber undertook a three month residency at the British School at Rome. There, his study of ancient frescoes and architectural surfaces deepened his interest in how painting can engage with the material language of buildings and cities.

     

    Drawing on a range of influences from ancient reliefs to the textures of domestic spaces, his work often reflects places from his own past. 'What that space is inhabited by and constructed from—light and shadow, weight and lightness, interior and exterior, movement or stasis—remains open to Kimber’s process'. - Jack Howard

     

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  • Fiona Lowry
    Fiona Lowry

    Fiona Lowry’s practice has explored the complexity of the human condition. Through the use of airbrushed pastels and monochromatic colour palettes, Lowry’s images maintain an overarching softness and ambiguity.

     

    Her paintings of the Australian landscape depict the bush as both alluring and unsettling. Rendered in dreamlike colour and diffused through her distinctive technique, these scenes become surreal theatres for human intervention, charged with unease and quiet menace.

     

    A winner of the Archibald, Moran Portrait, and Fleurieu Landscape Prizes, her work is held in major collections including the National Gallery of Australia, Art Gallery of New South Wales, National Portrait Gallery, and The University of Queensland Art Museum.


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    • Fiona Lowry Gaping red flowerheads, 2026 acrylic on canvas 183 x 142 cm
      Fiona Lowry
      Gaping red flowerheads, 2026
      acrylic on canvas
      183 x 142 cm
    • Fiona Lowry To live in a swarm of eyes, 2026 acrylic on canvas 154 x 122 cm
      Fiona Lowry
      To live in a swarm of eyes, 2026
      acrylic on canvas
      154 x 122 cm
  • Dylan Mooney
    Dylan Mooney

    Dylan Mooney is a proud Yuwi, Torres Strait and South Sea Islander man from Mackay in North Queensland working across painting, printmaking, digital illustration and drawing.

     

    Influenced by history, culture and family, Mooney responds to community stories, current affairs and social media. Armed with a rich cultural upbringing, Mooney now translates the knowledge and stories passed down to him, through art. Legally blind, the digital medium’s backlit display allows the artist to produce a high-impact illustrative style with bright, saturated colour that reflects his experiences with keen political energy and insight. 

     

    This blending of digital technology and social commentary is a uniting of the artist’s sense of optimism – pride within the works exude with profoundness and substance.

     

    Dylan is among artists who are rethinking digital technologies and artistic practices to consider contemporary issues around identity, desire and representation. Interested in the ways in which we can reframe the conversation around some of the voices that have been left out, the artist has made an important body of work that embodies a shift in representation of queer love among people of colour.

     

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  • Dylan Mooney, New Beginnings, 2023

    Dylan Mooney

    New Beginnings, 2023
    digital illustration on paper
    Large: 118.9 x 84.1 cm | ed. of 5 + 2 AP
    Medium: 84.1 x 59.4 cm | ed. of 10 + 2 AP
  • Thea Anamara Perkins
    Thea Anamara Perkins

    Thea Anamara Perkins is an Arrernte and Kalkadoon artist whose practice incorporates portraiture and landscape to question representations of First Nations peoples and Country. With a delicate hand, Thea answers heavy questions about what it means to be First Nations in contemporary Australia, and interrogates portrayal.

    Thea’s middle name Anamara is an Arrernte word that describes a river and a Dreaming that runs north of Mparntwe (Alice Springs) – the place that keeps calling her back and has been the wellspring of art and activism for her family, and by extension, the nation. Perkins continues her family’s commitment to what she calls “strong and ready communication” and is part of an extraordinary dynasty of First Nations activists and creatives that includes activist Charles Perkins (her grandfather), Arrernte elder Hetti Perkins (her great-grandmother), curator Hetti Perkins (her mother) and acclaimed film director Rachel Perkins (her aunt).

     

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    • Thea Anamara Perkins Ulkere, 2026 acrylic on clayboard 90 x 120 cm
      Thea Anamara Perkins
      Ulkere, 2026
      acrylic on clayboard
      90 x 120 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.

     

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  • 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.

     

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  • Mimili Maku Arts
    Mimili Maku Arts

    Mimili Maku Arts is a vibrant contemporary art studio and cultural centre founded and governed by a strong board of Anangu directors. The art centre is located in Mimili Community on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands. The centre is a thriving cultural space, connecting cultural leaders of our community with the contemporary art world. Their mission is to support future generations of Anangu to continue living on country whilst being able to access a culturally affirming income through artmaking.

     

    Through painting, these artists share stories connected to Country, family, and Tjukurpa (ancestral law and creation stories). Their works are distinguished by bold compositions, intricate mark-making, and deeply considered use of colour, reflecting both personal narrative and cultural knowledge passed down through generations.

     

    N.Smith Gallery continues its commitment to supporting and showcasing leading contemporary Aboriginal artists, fostering meaningful connections between artists, collectors, and community.

  • Marilyn Russell
    Marilyn Russell

     

    Marilyn Russell is a Bidjigal woman from the coastal community of La Perouse in South-Eastern Sydney. Her artmaking practice is a continuation of the centuries-old tradition of shellwork, passed down through generations of Aboriginal women, including her late mother, Esme Timbery, and great-great-grandmother, Queen Emma Timbery.

     

    Marilyn’s connection to this craft began in her childhood, learning the intricate art of shellwork by watching her mother. Today, she continues the tradition with her own unique interpretation, often working alongside her daughter and granddaughter, ensuring that this cultural knowledge is passed down through the family.

     

    Not just an homage to family and culture, Marilyn’s work is also a powerful statement on the intersection of tradition, identity, and history. Through the painstaking process of creating these important objects, she tells stories of connection to Country and family, while inviting a broader conversation about the land and its ongoing significance.

     

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  • James Tylor
    James Tylor

    James Tylor is a multi-disciplinary visual artist whose practice explores Australian environment, culture and social history through photography, video, painting, drawing, sculpture, installation, sound, scent and food.

     

    James’ artistic practice specialises in experimental and historical photographic processes. He uses a hybrid of analogue and digital photographic techniques to create contemporary artworks that reference Australian society and history. The processes he employs are the physical manipulation of digital photographic printing, such as the manual hand-colouring of digital prints or the application of physical interventions to the surfaces of digital prints. James also uses the historical 19th century photographic process of the Becquerel daguerreotype with the aid of modern technology to create new and contemporary daguerreotypes. Photography was historically used to document Aboriginal culture and the European colonisation of Australia. James is interested in these unique photographic processes to re-contextualise the representation of Australian society and history.


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  • 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).

     

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  • This series features seven miniature nighttime landscapes painted on copper, each depicting a constellation linked to one of the seven alchemical planets where its cosmic energies were believed to reside. Historically, the movement of these celestial bodies into their ruling signs governed the timing of sacred alchemical experiments, allowing practitioners to harness specific forces within their corresponding metals. Crucially, each piece highlights how these ancient constellations are visually transformed and inverted when viewed from the Southern Hemisphere, bridging esoteric tradition with a fresh geographic perspective.
  • 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.

     

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  • 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.

     

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  • Louise Zhang, Somewhere, The Moon Held Its Colour, 2026

    Louise Zhang

    Somewhere, The Moon Held Its Colour, 2026
    acrylic and oil on canvas, stained oak frame
    75.5 x 55 cm
  • Kate Vassallo
    Kate Vassallo

    Kate Vassallo is an Australian visual artist of Maltese heritage, born and based on Ngunnawal, Ngunawal and Ngambri Country in Canberra. Working across painting, drawing and installation, she considers labour, control and time through visual abstraction. 

     

    Vassallo graduated from the Australian National University School of Art in 2010 with First Class Honours and a University Medal. She has since exhibited regularly throughout Australia, including recent exhibitions at Art Gallery of New South Wales, Goulburn Regional Art Gallery and Canberra Contemporary Art Space. 

     

    When making, she designs complex sets of rules and systems. Heavily focused on materiality, this disciplined creative process is repetitious and slow moving. While structured and preplanned, equally important to Vassallo is leaving space for agency, intuition and chance. Her practice is an ebb and flow of controlling and letting go, while wanting to create artworks that elicit soft sensations of light, space, time and memory.