Artist Profile – Kathy Liu

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Kathy Liu is an Eora/Sydney-based contemporary artist whose intuitive approach to abstract painting invites an enchanting, ethereal and entirely singular mix of fluid and figurative painterly forms. Casting the canvas as a conduit for her adventures through imaginative worlds, Liu’s open-ended process embraces serendipitous possibilities as pools of abstract colour begin to coalesce and enigmatic, inchoate figures emerge through diaphanous wafts of colour. Suggesting hazy memories, nocturnal musings or half-remembered dreams, the resulting paintings pulse with poeticism, emotion, a sense of magic and effervescent movement.

After completing her fine arts studies at the National Art School, Liu captured the attention of our curatorial team as a breakout star among the finalists of the 2023 National Emerging Art Prize and was invited to presented her work in successful group and solo shows at Michael Murrurundi. The artist was selected for the 2024 edition of Michael Reid’s annual Painting Now survey show at our flagship Eora/Sydney gallery before making her solo debut at the gallery in April 2025 with her widely celebrated series If you wait for long.

“Her work’s gossamer quality sees fragmentary images on the cusp of emerging or just fading away – an ambiguity that rhymes with Liu’s fluid, freeform approach and the happy accidents of her abstract practice,” noted an expansive Belle magazine profile published alongside the opening of Painting Now. Liu will present a new body of work at Sydney Contemporary 2025 and is currently working on a solo exhibition slated for early 2026. On the eve of our announcement of her representation by Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin, we visited the artist’s studio to discuss her brilliant career to date and the ideas and influences that inform her current painting practice.

Read our interview with Kathy Liu below. To receive early previews and priority access to her forthcoming series, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

What were some of your earlier artistic influences? How do they continue to inform your painting practice?

Among my many early artistic influences, French Symbolist artist Odilon Redon has been, and continues to be, one of the most significant. His practice of suggestive art and embrace of uncertainty inspired me to let my intuition guide my process. Redon’s acceptance of the accidental and indeterminate is an aspect of his practice that echoes within my own.

What initially drew you to painting? Are there themes, references or approaches that you returned to?

I just love the act of painting, naturally. Perhaps I was simply drawn to the sheer joy of painting and the profound sense of freedom that comes with it. My approach to painting is highly intuitive. Often, I begin a painting abstractly without a pre-set concept, letting the colours and shapes emerge on their own. Further along in the process, I find the ideas within the painting and bring these out. Sometimes, it feels less like I’m the one creating these paintings but more as if I’m merely there to help the artworks find their own storylines. This process reflects my subconscious mind, bringing up themes and narratives from my past life that I have almost forgotten.

What led you to pursue painting as a career?

When I first came to Australia as an international student, I studied in an area quite different from art. But after working in an office environment for a few years, I felt I was moving further away from what I truly loved. There came a point when I could no longer bear it, so I changed my career completely. I went to the National Art School to complete my fine art degree. I finally felt like I was at home and I knew that practising art was definitely where I belonged.

What have been some of your favourite career experiences?

I will say each painting has some breakthrough moments, which I really enjoy, and that also gives me motivation to keep painting. Five years of studying at the National Art School was my life-changing experience, where I met artists, philosophers, poets and makers. I am pleased I graduated from NAS with the COSO Architecture and Landscape in Painting prize. Since then, I have also been selected for various art prizes, but being a finalist at the National Emerging Art Prize in 2023 was especially a turning point for me. It provided me with opportunities to collaborate with the Michael Reid Galleries.

What are some of the ideas and experiences that have informed your more recent work?

I have always loved ancient frescoes, such as the Pompeii wall paintings. I am also very interested in mythologies and physics (the concept of time and entropy, et cetera). While I do not consciously try to represent them in my art, I think they do influence my aesthetic and process and are all potential inspirations for me.

How would you describe your approach to abstraction?

I start my paintings abstractly, thinking of surface, composition, colour, et cetera. I try not to decide on a fixed subject at an early stage. These abstract elements work to connect with a feeling or bring out a blurry impression, which is quite personal. There’s an undercurrent behind these abstract elements, so the painting suggests a potential narrative. It’s as if I’m presenting a question without a fixed answer, but I am happy without knowing the answer. I love colours and tones and how they work together to explain a pictorial space. I do not use paint heavily; rather, a lot of the time, I deduct from the painted surface. The original surface of linen or cotton itself can be part of the painting, too.

How has your work’s expansion in scale influenced your approach?

Painting on a larger scale requires whole-body movement, which allows for a more immersive art-making process. With a large-scale painting, I can spend more effort on building the surface and also have room for more details to develop. I don’t often work on a small study first and then enlarge it to a large scale, but instead go straight to the big canvases. I make lots of mistakes, correct them, redo, destroy, and redo again, all on the same painting. The paintings become a record of the whole process over a period of time. It shows my thinking, struggle and breakthrough all together.

How do you feel your painting practice is evolving with the series you’re currently working on?

I feel more freedom with how to apply or deduct paints, and also more focused on the surface and how pictorial space is developing. With the expansion in scale, I’m trying to create a more immersive experience for the viewers. I am looking forward to participating in this year’s Sydney Contemporary Michael Reid group exhibition and my solo exhibition at the beginning of next year.

Photographs by Jonathan Cohen.

Mai Nguyễn-Long

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Mai Nguyễn-Long

We are delighted to announce that the next presentation in Michael Reid Sydney’s upstairs exhibition space will be a homecoming of sorts for Mai Nguyễn-Long. After an impressive trifecta of large-scale offsite projects – at QAGOMA, John Curtin Gallery and Michael Reid Murrurundi – the multidisciplinary artist will return to our Eora/Sydney gallery in May for her first solo show since her 2023 debut.

Works from Nguyễn-Long’s self-titled solo exhibition – her second at Michael Reid Sydney since joining our stable of represented artists – will be available to preview and acquire by request in the lead-up to our opening celebration on Thursday, 15 May. This installation will include a suite of the artist’s Vomit Girl sculptures from her monumental assemblage Doba Nation, which debuted at John Curtin Gallery as the centrepiece of this year’s Perth Festival program.

Nguyễn-Long’s Vomit Girl figures first emerged through her artistic and scholarly practice from a feeling of voicelessness. “The recurring motif came from a sense of being erased: having no identity, language, or voice to speak with,” says the artist, whose practice lends expressive form to ineffable aspects of diasporic experience, materialising her attempt to mend what feels irreparably broken.

Reflecting on the messy edges of history, family and cultural identity, these Vomit Girl figures draw together like a sprawling archipelago, appearing playful yet resilient as they engage in their imaginary conversations. Nguyễn-Long’s Michael Reid Sydney installation will be on view concurrently with her sprawling, room-sized commission for the 11th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, The Vomit Girl Project, which now has an extended run at QAGOMA until Sunday, 13 July.

“Among the works that merit – and reward – prolonged viewing [is] Mai Nguyễn-Long’s ceramic arrangement, The Vomit Girl Project,” writes Sophia Cai in her Freize magazine review of APT11. “Nguyễn-Long’s array of uncanny hand-built ceramics referencing Vietnamese mythology elicits totemic interpretations, blending contemporary body horror with questions of cultural identity.”

To request a preview and priority access to sculptures from Mai Nguyễn-Long’s forthcoming solo show at Michael Reid Sydney, please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba Trio (Doba Nation), 2024
dimensions variable
$2,430
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (AWAD342), 2024
38.5 x 15 x 15 cm
$2,100
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Vomit Girl/Doba Vigit (Doba Nation) AWAD519, 2024
61 x 37 x 38 cm
SOLD
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (Doba Nation) AWAD520, 2024
39 x 20 x 20 cm
$2,100
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (Doba Nation) AWAD517, 2024
30 x 14 x 15 cm
$2,100
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (Doba Nation) AWAD537, 2024
23.5 x 11 x 13 cm
$900
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (Doba Nation) AWAD522, 2024
28 x 12 x 12 cm
$1,650
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (Doba Nation) AWAD516, 2024
30 x 14 x 24 cm
$2,100
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (Doba Nation) AWAD521, 2024
34 x 11 x 11 cm
$1,650
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba (Doba Nation) AWAD525, 2024
16 x 7.5 x 9 cm
$900
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Deep Blue Mongrel Dog (Doba Nation) AWAD534, 2024
5.5 x 4 x 9 cm
$500
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba with Handles AWAD166, 2023
17 x 21.5 x 18 cm
$900
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Vomit Girl/Doba Vigit (Doba Nation) AWAD518, 2024
97 x 32 x 32 cm
SOLD
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Dobakapi Calendrical AWAD314, 2024
51 x 34 x 28 cm
$3,300
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Dobakapi Mammiform Shooting Buds (AWAD323), 2024
88 x 44 x 44 cm
$5,500
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Dobakapi Mammiform (AWAD311), 2024
59 x 37 x 33 cm
$3,300
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Dobakapi – Vomit Girl: Vigit (Scar Jar) AWAD57, 2017-2022
48 x 23 x 23 cm
$2,800
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Vigit (Spirit Bird)
8 x 2.5 x 2.5 cm
$900
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Dobakapi 2, 2023
46 x 22 x 22 cm
$2,800
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Vigit Hefeco 7 (One Arm), 2023
56 x 29 x 23 cm
$3,300
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Blue and White Dobakapi 2, 2024
54.5 x 28 x 23 cm
$3,300
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Blue and White Dobakapi 1, 2024
55 x 26 x 32 cm
$3,300
Mai Nguyễn-Long
Doba – Vomit Girl: Vigit (Doba Pollop), 2022
18 x 18 x 17 cm
SOLD

Artist Profile – Sid Pattni

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Sid Pattni is an Australian artist of Indian descent whose work unpacks the intricacies of identity, culture and belonging within a post-colonial framework. Born in London, raised in Kenya and now based in Naarm/Melbourne, Pattni aims to contribute to the ongoing discourse surrounding art and its role in communicating the complexities of diasporic identity.

Working primarily in painting and embroidery, Pattni was awarded the Kennedy Prize in 2023 for his portrait of Mostafa “Moz” Azimitabar and was shortlisted for the 2024 National Emerging Art Prize. In May 2025, he was named a finalist in the Archibald Prize for Self-portrait (the act of putting it back together) – his first shortlisting for the Art Gallery of New South Wales’s flagship program and one of the country’s most prestigious and closely watched cultural accolades.

Following this significant career milestone, Pattni will present his first solo exhibition with Michael Reid Sydney in July 2025. On the eve of our announcement of the artist’s representation by Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin – and as he completes a new body of work for his Michael Reid exhibition debut – we visited Pattni’s Melbourne studio to discuss the ideas and influences that propel his practice.

Read our interview with Sid Pattni below. To receive early previews and priority access to his forthcoming series, please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

What were some of your earlier artistic influences? How do they continue to inform your painting practice?

Growing up between cultures, I was surrounded by rich but conflicting visual languages – everything from Bollywood posters and Indian textiles to the Western art we studied in school. Early on, I was drawn to the intricacy and symbolism of Indian miniature painting, but it wasn’t until much later that I understood its colonial entanglements. These influences still underpin my practice today. I’m interested in how aesthetics shaped under empire can be reclaimed and reconfigured to tell new stories – stories about migration, memory and identity.

What initially drew you to painting? Are there themes, references or approaches that you returned to?

Painting became a way to process the dissonance I felt as someone navigating multiple cultural identities. Over time, I’ve returned again and again to themes of hybridity, belonging, and erasure. I often reference historical visual formats – Mughal miniatures, Company paintings, colonial portraiture – not as homage, but as a means of critique and reimagining.

What have been some of your favourite career experiences?

Winning the Kennedy Prize for my embroidered portrait of Mostafa “Moz” Azimitabar was a powerful moment, not just because of the recognition, but because it felt like an artwork that truly honoured someone’s story and resilience. Another major milestone was The Story of Us project, where I merged painting with oral storytelling from former refugees. That intersection of visual and auditory storytelling deepened my understanding of what art can do: it can hold space, provoke empathy, and reframe narratives that are too often simplified or ignored.

What are some of the ideas and experiences that have informed your more recent work?

My most recent work continues to investigate the long shadow of colonialism on diasporic identity. I’ve been particularly focused on how external projections – constructed through orientalism and the colonial gaze – have been internalised by communities, including my own. The National Emerging Art Prize work and my upcoming show at Michael Reid Sydney explore these ideas through composite visual languages: Mughal miniature structures, British botanical drawings, and faceless figures. These paintings are a response to inherited ways of seeing, but also an invitation to look again – more critically.

Could you tell us about Self-portrait (the act of putting it back together), which has been shortlisted for the 2025 Archibald Prize?

The Archibald piece started as a meditation on what it means to be seen – particularly when my identity has often been misrepresented or erased. I leaned into the tropes of historical portraiture but stripped away my face, retaining only the eyes and garments. This removal of identity isn’t about anonymity; it’s about reclaiming the gaze and disrupting traditional power dynamics in portraiture. As I worked, the painting became more introspective – it evolved into a conversation between the viewer, myself, and the histories that sit between us.

Could you tell us more about the series you are working on for your upcoming exhibition?

The July exhibition at Michael Reid continues my engagement with colonial visual traditions. The floral borders, inspired by British botanical illustrations, are no longer literal – they’re invented, composite, almost dreamlike. They symbolise how cultural artefacts were appropriated and re-contextualised during empire, and how these reinterpretations continue to influence diasporic self-perception. What feels new in this body of work is a deeper emotional intensity.

Photographs by Tim O’Connor.

Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes 2025

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Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes 2025

The Art Gallery of New South Wales has just announced the finalists of this year’s Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes – three of this country’s most prestigious, closely watched and vigorously contested cultural accolades. Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin is thrilled to share that two artists represented in our stable and upcoming program have been selected for the Class of 2025: Regina Pilawuk Wilson and Sid Pattni.

Congratulations to Ngan’gikurrungurr artist Regina Pilawuk Wilson, whose extraordinary, monumentally scaled painting Wupun (sun mat) has been shortlisted for this year’s Sir John Sulman Prize. Wupun (sun mat) will be on view at the Art Gallery of New South Wales from Thursday, 10 May, and is now available to acquire from Michael Reid Sydney.

Born in 1948 near Daly River, Northern Territory, Wilson is the cultural director of Durrmu Arts Aboriginal Corporation and co-founder of the Peppimenarti (meaning ‘large rock’) community. Situated amid wetlands and floodplains at the centre of the Daly River Aboriginal Reserve, 300 kilometres southwest of Darwin, Peppimenarti is an important site for Ngan’gikurrungurr people and continues to inform Wilson’s art and weaving practices – skills she inherited from her grandmother and mother.

Wilson’s Sulman-shortlisted painting depicts wupun (sun mat), which are traditionally woven for decorative use with yerrgi (pandanus) and merrepen (sand palm) by the women of Peppimenarti.

Joining Wilson at the Art Gallery of New South Wales’s flagship program is Sid Pattni, whose Self-portrait (the act of putting it back together) has been shortlisted for the 2025 Archibald Prize. The exciting news of Pattni’s Archibald Prize debut arrives as we look ahead to his first solo exhibition with Michael Reid Sydney. Works from this upcoming show are now available to preview and acquire by request.

Pattni’s Archibald self-portrait examines how he has come to understand himself through visual languages shaped by orientalist and colonial histories. “The work borrows and adapts imagery from a range of sources – including Company paintings, botanical drawings and Mughal miniatures – and links disparate pieces together,” says the Indian-Australian artist, who was born in London, raised in Kenya and now lives and works in Naarm/Melbourne.

“Crucially, these references are about getting it wrong; about producing pictures that speak of the here and now,” says the artist. “I’m very attracted to the cycle of collapsing interpretations, telling a story of how India is perceived externally and how generations of Indians came to internalise and inhabit Western projections of ‘Indian-ness’ today.”

Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin wishes to once again congratulate Regina Pilawuk Wilson and Sid Pattni. To enquire about the artists’ available work and upcoming releases, please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

 

 

Calypso

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Calypso

“A cloying cocktail, a Coolangatta motor inn, the sweetest mangoes, syncopated steel drums piped out across a pool deck,” says Eora/Sydney-based contemporary artist Gerwyn Davies, setting a languorous scene as he lists the namesakes of his upcoming series, Calypso. “The term is used to name a variety of things, each summoning the swelter and sweat of Summer.”

Fashioning wild costumes with found objects and fabulously gaudy materials, Davies works at the nexus of performance, photo media and soft sculptural assemblage to construct personae poised between real and ersatz. These adventures in magnificent excess upend our expectations of a photo portrait – that it must reveal some essential truth about its subject. Instead, the self is slippery and unstable: a conga line of pop-cultural archetypes, visual puns, queer iconography and contorted, abstracted figures set against uncanny, sun-kissed spaces brought to life with hyperbolic, cinematic style.

In Calypso, these elements conjure a world of Australian tropical kitsch – one not too far removed from the parochial torpor of Porpoise Spit, albeit queered and reimagined with warm nostalgia and knowing camp.

For further information regarding works from Calypso by Gerwyn Davies, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

 

Max Dupain

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Powerhouse: Contemporary Australian Photographers

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Powerhouse: Contemporary Australian Photographers

  • Artist
    Dr Christian Thompson AO, Petrina Hicks, Tamara Dean, Nici Cumpston OAM, Luke Shadbolt, Catherine Nelson, Scott Perkins, Trent Parke and Narelle Autio
  • Dates
    25—30 Mar 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now
  • Gallery Location
    Brisbane Powerhouse, Beyond

The next major presentation from our offsite projects platform, Michael Reid Beyond, will be an expansive group exhibition starring ten leading Australian contemporary photographers at Brisbane Powerhouse.

Michael Reid Beyond’s takeover of the vast riverside multi-arts precinct opens in March, and we are now inviting collectors to register their interest to be the first to receive exclusive previews and priority access to works selected for our Meanjin/Brisbane exhibition.

Curated by Beyond program manager Dean Andersen, this dynamic photography survey will mark the return to Brisbane Powerhouse of globally acclaimed multidisciplinary Bidjara artist Dr Christian Thompson AO after his epic photographic installation at the venue, Maya Barbadi (pictured), which was the centrepiece of his citywide outdoor exhibition staged for the queer-focused Melt Festival in late 2024.

Thompson will be joined in our Brisbane exhibition by many of the brightest stars in Michael Reid’s stable of represented artists and Australian photography more broadly, including Petrina Hicks, Tamara Dean, Nici Cumpston OAM, Luke Shadbolt, Catherine Nelson, Scott Perkins, Trent Parke and Narelle Autio.

This dynamic assembly includes some of the most important and influential image-makers working today, and all are represented in the most significant public and private collections in Australia and beyond. Their singular, boundary-pushing practice sits at the forefront of one of contemporary art’s fastest-growing markets: photography.

Launched in 2024, Michael Reid Beyond operates as a moveable projects space, hosting temporary exhibitions in artists’ studios, empty buildings, outdoor settings, regional museums and other newly activated sites.

We are excited to bring this unique platform to the dazzling industrial setting of Brisbane Powerhouse for our first presentation in the River City.

For previews and first access to works from the show, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Snakes and Mirrors

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Snakes and Mirrors

  • Artist
    Petrina Hicks
  • Dates
    20 Feb—30 Mar 2025

Following its acclaimed, four-month-long run at the Museum of Australian Photography in Melbourne, Snakes and mirrors – a sublime new body of work from internationally acclaimed contemporary artist Petrina Hicks – is now making its European debut with her show’s opening today at Michael Reid Berlin.

All works from Snakes and mirrors – including this year’s Korea-Australia Arts Foundation Prize-winning piece, Mnemosyne IV – are now on view at our Berlin gallery.

Hicks’s arrival at Michael Reid Berlin comes after a remarkable year for the artist. In addition to her Museum of Australian Photography (MAPh) show and her Korea-Australia Arts Foundation award, it follows the record-breaking secondary sale of her 2005 work Shenae and Jade, followed by another landmark auction result for her 2013 work Venus, and an acclaimed solo exhibition in Perth, Australia. “Petrina Hicks has been at the forefront of a tidal wave of visual change, aesthetically and in terms of market value,” noted Michael Reid OAM on the occasion of the two Deutscher and Hackett auctions and their extraordinary results.

For enquiries, please email colinesoria@michaelreid.com.au

Ten Australian Photographs – Folio Two, 1952-1994

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Ten Australian Photographs – Folio Two, 1952-1994

Ten Australian Photographs – Folio Two, 1952-1994 presents ten iconic images by Australia’s most revered photographers, capturing six decades of Australian history and culture.

The folio showcases work by photographers recognised nationally and internationally for their powerful storytelling and excellence.

From Mervyn Bishop’s profound depiction of Indigenous land rights
to Greg Weight’s intimate portrait of artist Emily Kame Kngwarreye, each photograph is a timeless piece that reflects Australia’s rich diversity.

This collection embodies the extraordinary legacy of Australian photography and the country’s unique cultural and social evolution.

This is a museum-quality body of work.

Folio Two is priced at $33,000 GST incl.

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