-
Claire Healy & Sean CordeiroDusk Till Dawn, 2002repurposed beach towels101 x 202 cm
-
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.
Request available works / Join Claire & Sean's preview list.
-
Jordan Gogos Dividing his time between fashion design and his art practice, Jordan Gogos spends the whole year considering the context of his work and the concept of sustainability.
-
-
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...
-
-
Casey Chen Casey Chen’s ceramics practice references historical illustrations from an eclectic mix of folklore, mythology and pop culture.
-
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.'
-
Sally Anderson 'Deep within, her paintings carry autobiographical elements heavy with memory and meaning...'
-
-
Dylan Mooney 'It's about telling our story of resilience, thriving, survival, how far we've come as a people, what we've achieved ... and where we'll be in the future.'
-
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.
-
Kyra Mancktelow Kyra Mancktelow’s multidisciplinary practice investigates legacies of colonialism, posing important questions such as how we remember and acknowledge Indigenous histories.
-
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.
-
Fiona LowryYou could almost pause and breathe out for a while, 2023acrylic on canvas175 x 225.3 cm
-
Fiona Lowry Lowry’s paintings of the Australian landscape portray the bush as strangely beautiful, alluring and steadfast.
-
-
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...'
-
-
Sally Scales 'We grew up knowing we had to use our voices for our families and communities. It's go time.'
-
Louise Zhang 'The greatest tool in painting is colour, because colour has the greatest way of manipulating perspective.'
-
-
Joan Ross Bold and experimental, Joan Ross' practice investigates the legacy of colonialism in Australia with a particular focus on reconfiguring the colonial Australian landscape and drawing attention to the complex and ongoing issues surrounding the effects of globalisation and colonisation.
-
-
Christopher Zanko 'Zanko creates permanence through the action of carving and simultaneously gives these homes and memories an enduring place to survive.'
-
VIpoo Srivilasa 'Central to Vipoo Srivilasa’s creative practice is art’s ability to elicit the sense of joy, whilst also acting as a conduit for serious issues...'
-
Thea Anamara PerkinsStation 8, 2024acrylic on board94.5 x 125 cm (framed)
-
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.’