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Summer '23.
18 January – 11 February

Summer '23.

Past viewing_room
  • Tom Blake.

    Portrait courtesy Parramatta Artists' Studios. Photo by Jacquie Manning.

    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 Blake
    loop (III) , 2022
    cyanotype, artist-made frame
    41 x 31 cm
    $2,600.00
    Click for more info / images.
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  • Joshua Charadia.

    Joshua Charadia.

    'Oil painting allows me to arrest a moment in time and capture a complexity of detail and form that are hidden within these images...'

    Joshua Charadia is a Sydney-based artist whose work casts an aesthetic and critical eye on the complex forms of Australia’s industrial landscape. He explores the nature of perception and awareness by drawing close attention to these ubiquitous yet overlooked scenes. Working with the slow mediums of oil paint and charcoal, Charadia affords time to these images, usually seen in passing or from a distance. 

     

    Charadia received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the National Art School, Sydney in 2017. He has presented solo exhibitions in Sydney and Katoomba, and been featured in group exhibitions throughout Australia. Charadia has been a finalist in numerous art prizes, including the 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 around Australia.

    • Joshua Charadia Nocturne 39, 2022 oil on board 40 x 30 cm
      Joshua Charadia
      Nocturne 39, 2022
      oil on board
      40 x 30 cm
    • Joshua Charadia Nocturne 40, 2022 oil on board 40 x 30 cm
      Joshua Charadia
      Nocturne 40, 2022
      oil on board
      40 x 30 cm
    • Joshua Charadia Nocturne 22, 2022 willow charcoal on Hahnemühle paper 100 x 71 cm
      Joshua Charadia
      Nocturne 22, 2022
      willow charcoal on Hahnemühle paper
      100 x 71 cm
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  • Casey Chen.

    Portrait by Peter Morgan.

    Casey Chen.

    Emerging ceramic artist Casey Chen’s practice references historical illustrations from an eclectic mix of folklore, mythology and pop culture.

    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 Kingdoms, Journey to the West, Water 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.

    • Casey Chen, Lollybomb 2, 2022
      Casey Chen, Lollybomb 2, 2022
      Click for more info.
    • Casey Chen Cannonbowl, 2022 glazed porcelain, ceramic colourants, enamels and gold lustre 9 x 14 x 14 cm
      Casey Chen
      Cannonbowl, 2022
      glazed porcelain, ceramic colourants, enamels and gold lustre
      9 x 14 x 14 cm
      Click for more info.
    • Casey Chen Big Robot 5, 2022 glazed porcelain, ceramic colourants, enamels and gold lustre; fired four times 37.5 x 21 x 21 cm
      Casey Chen
      Big Robot 5, 2022
      glazed porcelain, ceramic colourants, enamels and gold lustre; fired four times
      37.5 x 21 x 21 cm
      $ 5,950.00
      Click for more info.
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  • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro

    Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro

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

    Combining a playful sense of humour and an engagement with art historical precedents, the duo's work is characterised by the deconstruction and reinvention of prefabricated structures and objects into extraordinary sculptures and installations. Readymade materials often feature in their work, including Lego, Ikea furniture, car and aircraft parts, dinosaur bones, and reconfigured architectural structures.

    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro Ikebana Bubbly: Gold, 2022 acrylic gouache on booze box 61 x 52 cm
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      Ikebana Bubbly: Gold, 2022
      acrylic gouache on booze box
      61 x 52 cm
      Click for more info.
    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro Bamboo Minx, 2022 acrylic gouache on booze box 69 x 45 cm
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      Bamboo Minx, 2022
      acrylic gouache on booze box
      69 x 45 cm
      Click for more info.
    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro Floral Florence: Gold on Blue, 2022 acrylic gouache on booze box 62 x 49.5 cm
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      Floral Florence: Gold on Blue, 2022
      acrylic gouache on booze box
      62 x 49.5 cm
      Click for more info.
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  • Neva Hosking.

    Neva in her studio.

    Neva Hosking.

    ‘If my heart wasn’t in art, it would be snapped up by something botanical.’

    Taking her cues from the rich visual delights of her immediate environment, Hosking’s still life works are semi-autobiographical – displaying in their subject matter and aesthetic structure cues from Hosking’s personal life. Drawn from life, the artist’s painstaking methodology explores Hosking’s own collection of plants examined in an intensely detailed methodology. 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.

    • Neva Hosking, Good Omen (Persimmon), 2022
      Neva Hosking, Good Omen (Persimmon), 2022
      Click for more images & info.
    • Neva Hosking, Good Omen (Brugmansia), 2022
      Neva Hosking, Good Omen (Brugmansia), 2022
      Click for more images & info.
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  • Kyra Mancktelow.

    Portrait by Rhett Hammerton.

    Kyra Mancktelow.

    Kyra Mancktelow’s multidisciplinary practice investigates legacies of colonialism, posing important questions such as how we remember and acknowledge Indigenous histories.

    An emerging Quandamooka artist with links to the Mardigan people of Cunnamulla, Kyra’s practice includes sculpture, ceramics and printmaking – each applying a unique and distinct aesthetic. Her use of local materials in her sculpture, including clay, emu features, and pandanus leaf, strengthens her connection to Country, and her printmaking exploring intergenerational trauma as a result of forced integration on colonial missions.

    • Kyra Mancktelow, Untitled (Y2806VIII), 2022
      Kyra Mancktelow, Untitled (Y2806VIII), 2022
      Click for more images & info.
    • Kyra Mancktelow, Untitled (Y2806IV), 2022
      Kyra Mancktelow, Untitled (Y2806IV), 2022
      Click for more images & info.
    • Kyra Mancktelow Gubagulabu (Y1205), 2022 unique bronze sculpture 24 x 29 x 22 cm
      Kyra Mancktelow
      Gubagulabu (Y1205), 2022
      unique bronze sculpture
      24 x 29 x 22 cm
      Click for more images & info.
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  • Danie Mellor.

    Danie Mellor.

    ‘There is a knowledge system that exists culturally and linguistically in almost every ecological place, so it makes sense to consider Country as a temporal as well as physical space.'

    Danie Mellor is a contemporary artist living and working in Bowral, New South Wales. His multidisciplinary research and practice explore intersections between contemporary and historic culture, and the legacies of cultural memory and knowledge. Born in Mackay, North Queensland, his maternal Aboriginal heritage is Ngadjon/Mamu with Scottish and Irish settler ancestry from the Atherton Tablelands and Cairns region, and his father’s family emigrated to Australia from California in the early 1900s.

  • DANIE MELLOR 
    By the river (burna mija), 2022
    acrylic on board with gesso and iridescent wash
    80 x 100 cm
    $40,000.00 – SOLD
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  • Dylan Mooney.

    Portrait by Rhett Hammerton.

    Dylan Mooney.

    Mooney’s emerging art practice includes painting, printmaking, digital illustration and drawing – influenced by history, culture and family, which respond to community stories, current affairs and social media.

    Mooney is a proud Yuwi, Torres Strait and South Sea Islander man from Mackay in North Queensland. 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.

    • Dylan Mooney Phaius Australis – Swamp Orchid, 2022 digital illustration hand-painted with Yuwi ochre 120 x 88 cm | ed. of 5 + 2 AP 60 x 44 cm | ed. of 10 + 2 AP
      Dylan Mooney
      Phaius Australis – Swamp Orchid, 2022
      digital illustration hand-painted with Yuwi ochre
      120 x 88 cm | ed. of 5 + 2 AP
      60 x 44 cm | ed. of 10 + 2 AP
      large: $5,550 | small $3,300 + framing
      Click for info.
    • Dylan Mooney Graptophyllum Excelsum – Scarlet Fuchsia, 2022 digital illustration hand-painted with Yuwi ochre 120 x 88 cm | ed. of 5 + 2 AP 60 x 44 cm | ed. of 10 + 2 AP
      Dylan Mooney
      Graptophyllum Excelsum – Scarlet Fuchsia, 2022
      digital illustration hand-painted with Yuwi ochre
      120 x 88 cm | ed. of 5 + 2 AP
      60 x 44 cm | ed. of 10 + 2 AP
      large: $5,550 | small $3,300 + framing
      Click for info.
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  • Thea Anamara Perkins.

    Thea Anamara Perkins.

    ‘It’s about taking charge of representation – I find that painting is a very simple and direct way of communicating things that I want to say.’

    Thea Anamara Perkins is an Arrernte and Kalkadoon artist whose practice incorporates portraiture and landscape to depict authentic representations of First Nations peoples and Country. With a delicate hand, Thea answers heavy questions about what it means to be Indigenous in contemporary Australia, and how Aboriginal people can and should be portrayed.

  • THEA ANAMARA PERKINS
    Bungalow 10, 2022
    acrylic on clayboard
    30.5 x 40.5 cm
    $9,900.00 – SOLD
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  • Joan Ross.

    Joan Ross.

    Bold and experimental, Joan Ross' practice investigates the legacy of colonialism in Australia, particularly in regard to its effect on Indigenous Australians.

    Since the late 1980s, Joan has exhibited across a range of mediums, from drawing, painting, photography and sculpture to installation, video, and virtual reality. Her experimental works combine colonial iconography and landscape painting with collaged elements of western commodity culture connected to land tenure and Aboriginal peoples' active presence on the land.

  • Joan Ross, I tried holding you tighter, 2022
    Artworks

    Joan Ross

    I tried holding you tighter, 2022
    hand painted digital print
    60 x 47cm
    edition of 18 + 2 AP
    $3,500
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  • Rebecca Selleck

    Rebecca Selleck

    Rebecca Selleck is a functional design artist with a focus on interactive sculpture and installation, blending animatronics, assemblage, casting and sound.

    Selleck uses her practice to reciprocally investigate and challenge her own perceptions within a culture of conflicting truths. Her work overlays time and place to express the need for human accountability and the painful complexity of animal and environmental ethics in Australia.

    • Rebecca Selleck, Falling Branches #11, 2021
      Rebecca Selleck, Falling Branches #11, 2021
      Click for more info.
    • Rebecca Selleck, Falling Branches #25, 2021
      Rebecca Selleck, Falling Branches #25, 2021
      Click for more info.
    • Rebecca Selleck, Falling Branches #20, 2021
      Rebecca Selleck, Falling Branches #20, 2021
      Click for more info.
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  • James Tylor.

    James Tylor.

    James Tylor is a multi-disciplinary artist whose practice explores Australian environment, culture and social history through photography, video, installation, 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.

    • James Tylor We Call This Place (Karrkungga), 2020 Daguerreotype with engraved text 10 x 12.5 cm
      James Tylor
      We Call This Place (Karrkungga), 2020
      Daguerreotype with engraved text
      10 x 12.5 cm
      View more details
    • James Tylor, We Call This Place (Kauwiyarlungga), 2020
      James Tylor, We Call This Place (Kauwiyarlungga), 2020
      View more details
    • James Tylor We Call This Place (Marriyarta), 2020 Daguerreotype with engraved text 10 x 12.5 cm
      James Tylor
      We Call This Place (Marriyarta), 2020
      Daguerreotype with engraved text
      10 x 12.5 cm
      $ 5,500.00
      View more details
    • James Tylor We Call This Place (Karta), 2020 Daguerreotype with engraved text 10 x 12.5 cm
      James Tylor
      We Call This Place (Karta), 2020
      Daguerreotype with engraved text
      10 x 12.5 cm
      View more details
    • James Tylor We Call This Place (Murrkangga), 2020 Daguerreotype with engraved text 10 x 12.5 cm
      James Tylor
      We Call This Place (Murrkangga), 2020
      Daguerreotype with engraved text
      10 x 12.5 cm
      View more details
    • James Tylor We Call This Place (Tarntanya), 2020 Daguerreotype with engraved text 10 x 12.5 cm
      James Tylor
      We Call This Place (Tarntanya), 2020
      Daguerreotype with engraved text
      10 x 12.5 cm
      View more details
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  • Natasha Walsh.

    Natasha Walsh.

    'My practice thrives on experimentation... I actually don’t enjoy confronting my reflection. At times the vulnerability of this can be very disheartening and unpleasant.'

    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.’

  • Natasha Walsh Whispers threaded together under a rolling sky, 2021-22 oil & gold leaf on copper 40 x 56 cm...
    Natasha Walsh
    Whispers threaded together under a rolling sky, 2021-22

    oil & gold leaf on copper
    40 x 56 cm / 57 x 72 cm (framed)

    $24,750

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  • Louise Zhang.

    Louise Zhang.

    'The greatest tool in painting is colour, because colour has the greatest way of manipulating perspective.'

    Louise Zhang 张露茜 is a Chinese-Australian multidisciplinary artist whose practice explores the dynamics of aesthetics, contrasting the attractive and repulsive in order to navigate the senses of fear, anxiety and a sense of otherness reflecting her identity.

     

    Zhang's  work is inspired by horror cinema, Chinese mythology and botany, adopting and placing symbols and motifs in compositions of harmonic dissonance. Her practice explores Chinese mythology – paintings, sculptures and scroll-like banners that incorporate demons, dismembered body parts and organs drawn from anatomy books – overlaid with illustrations of flowers, bones, scholar rocks and auspicious imagery presented in a sugary palette. The aim is to create a visual cacophony, a disjointed and disorientating mash-up of symbols and imagery in an attempt to in part reconcile and make sense of the fissures and contradictions that define her own identity.

    • Louise Zhang Lucheng (one part of home), 2021 acrylic on canvas, custom frame coated in satin 2-pack paint 122 x 203 cm Finalist in the 2022 Fisher's Ghost Art Award Finalist in the 2023 Ravenswood Australian Women's Art Prize
      Louise Zhang
      Lucheng (one part of home), 2021
      acrylic on canvas, custom frame coated in satin 2-pack paint
      122 x 203 cm

      Finalist in the 2022 Fisher's Ghost Art Award
      Finalist in the 2023 Ravenswood Australian Women's Art Prize
    • Louise Zhang Scholar Garden #2, 2021 acrylic on board 51 x 40.5 cm
      Louise Zhang
      Scholar Garden #2, 2021
      acrylic on board
      51 x 40.5 cm
    • Louise Zhang Python egg on scholar rock (small), 2022 polyurethane, foam clay, resin, spray paint, flatback pearls, glitter, chromatic pigment 26 x 35 x 27 cm
      Louise Zhang
      Python egg on scholar rock (small), 2022
      polyurethane, foam clay, resin, spray paint, flatback pearls, glitter, chromatic pigment
      26 x 35 x 27 cm
  • VIEW MORE AVAILABLE WORKS BY LOUiSE
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