Onlookers

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Onlookers

  • Artist
    Chelsea Gustafsson
  • Dates
    30 Jun—25 Jul 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Berlin

One of the bright stars in Michael Reid Murrurundi’s stable of exhibiting artists, Chelsea Gustafsson is making her European debut with a solo exhibition of small-scale, high-impact paintings at Michael Reid Berlin.

“I’m drawn to still life and using objects to tell a story,” says the artist, whose latest series builds on the tremendous creative breakthrough and critical success of her most recent Murrurundi show. “I find objects are perfect as a representational tool and my brain has a relentless tendency to contemplate all the big and little things going on in the world.”
Delighting in the alchemy of objects staged in sculptural arrangements, Gustafsson’s paintings toy with perceptions of scale, perspective and framing, layering pictures within pictures with striking trompe l’oeil effects. There is a nesting-doll quality to these cinematic scenes as she once again casts an array of iconic chairs and salvaged seating as her work’s stars.
But here, the pictorial layering is dialled up to an even more dynamic degree. Discarded packaging and fragmentary pictures are unboxed and seemingly collaged in space, drawing the viewer into endlessly fascinating, illusory worlds in miniature.
To discuss works from this exhibition please contact colinesoria@michaelreid.com.au

Artist Profile – Scott Perkins

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Eora/Sydney-based contemporary photographer Scott Perkins distils the natural world into minimalist poetry, producing ultra-refined, abstracted landscapes steeped in moody atmospheres. Shot in remote corners of Australia, New Zealand, Europe and beyond, his brooding forests and sweeping seascapes are pared back to elemental forms: softly gradated horizons, starkly silhouetted escarpments and silvery skies whose hazy, granular shimmer glints like celestial dust. Housed in bespoke, architecturally formed timber frames and softly glowing light boxes, each portal-like piece operates as much like sculpture as photography, drawing the viewer into meditative, ambiguous realms.

On the eve of our announcement of Perkins’s formal representation by Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin – and ahead of his touring solo show Uncertain Truths at Michael Reid Southern Highlands – we sat down with the artist to discuss the ideas and techniques that propel his practice. The conversation unfolded at High Res Digital, where Perkins was working alongside Australia’s pre-eminent fine-art printing specialist, Warren Macris, perfecting two new works that will appear exclusively in the Berrima iteration of Uncertain Truths, expanding on the series that debuted at Michael Reid Sydney in April 2025.

Read our interview with Scott Perkins below, and visit Michael Reid Southern Highlands – in person or online – to experience Uncertain Truths. For further information, please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au.

How did you first become interested in photography and when did you begin to pursue the practice professionally?

It had an unlikely incubation. The old adage that it takes 10,000 shots – I feel that applies to me. Years, indeed decades, of observing, of carving out discretionary moments to see inspiring photography, layering down my appreciation of the medium. And then some catalysts – my wife and a few bolshy photographer friends led to a Leica birthday present and being told to jump out of the observer nest into the exposed environment of actually trying to create something distinctive. The Leica global community helped shape the technical aspects, through their Academy programs, which I attended on several occasions. I should also recognise the formative influence of a gallerist whose keen eye gave me the confidence to press ahead.

What were some of your early creative influences, and how have they continued to inform your photography practice?

I see photography drawing inspiration from and pushing the boundaries of all the other disciplines. The development of more abstract forms and innovative treatments of light and shadow has contributed to our appreciation of minimalism and sculpture. My inspirations are both historic and contemporary. The early experimentation of Edward Steichen’s images which introduced abstraction to what was only a representational medium at the time, the genre creating work of Bern and Hilla Becher which revealed the hidden beauty in hard industry, the mastery of light in Ansel Adams epic American landscapes, the maestro, Hiroshi Sugimoto’s captivating reductions and abstractions, through to Andreas Gursky’s awesome contemporary dramas.

What have been some of the highlights of your photography career to date? 

My first encounter with Michael Reid personally was memorable. It was a Willy Loman moment – tubes in hand, a bag with a lightbox, the generous nudge afforded by Warren Macris, a rainy day, nervousness, fogged glasses and a belief that you miss 100 per cent of the shots you don’t take. That Michael even agreed to meet this unknown was astonishing – and, even more so, after a laboured unfurling of a few photographs, to see the look of surprise on his face and then the faces of the MR team who gathered around and the instantaneous reaction of “there is something here” was a thrilling moment.

Could you tell us a bit about your collaborations with Warren Macris at High Res Digital?

Warren is the high priest of printing in Australia and so, of course, that was the aspirational place to go. Another cold call with an equally unexpected and generous reception. I never anticipated he would so willingly embark on the technical journey to help create an entirely new genre of lighboxes – and retain the sense of adventure despite the immense technical challenges of printing transparencies with such unforgiving gradients and tones. At times, as we jointly reject works with microscopic imperfections, I’m sure he rues that day. But he, along with a small community of framers – with special mention to Tugi at Graphic Art Mount – fabricators and other printers, have been true partners.

What was the starting point for your 2025 series, Uncertain Truths, and how did it evolve through the production process?

I am always working remotely. Out early, looking for light and shadow. In a boat at dawn, up a hill in a storm, walking in nature at dusk. Absence focuses the mind on what can be seen beyond the superficial, even if it’s wonderful. I suppose I’m looking to simplify and reduce and, in the process, expose some uncertainty. Hence “Uncertain Truths”. Each image can be understood at a simple level as landscape abstraction – the essential and timeless truth of what is factually there. But none are what they seem. Nor are they universally explainable. I hope every viewer has their own read. The best will tell a story that will sustain their engagement.

What were some of the experiences that informed the work?

There are works in this series shot in remote locations off the coast of Italy, Tasmania, the Kimberleys, and New Zealand. And yet none are overtly identifiable. I like that. Nature is a great leveller.

How do you view the series as a continuation of your previous work and perhaps as a point of departure?

The photographs are clearly family members. The large framed lightboxes intensify the photographic experience, while one work ventures into a more painterly approach. The black lightboxes fuse sculpture and photography – they are illuminated voids. And then there is a new format – small, deep-framed, wooden lightboxes – portals. They engage the viewer in a way that invites exploration. Two use Awagami paper that creates a very different experience, redolent of memories expressed through landscape.

What were some of the technical challenges in creating the works in this series, and how were you able to resolve them?

The lightboxes are technically challenging, requiring a degree of engineering and image quality that tests the marvellous crew at High Res Digital Printing. The new portals are finely milled by the craftspeople at Graphic Art Mount from specific timbers resistant to movement but capable of such treatment. And again, I use metallic papers that are beautifully printed by Pixel Perfect.

Could you tell us about some of your favourite works from Uncertain Truths? Is there a narrative thread running through the series?

You can’t choose between your children! I hope every work sustains the viewers’ engagement. I hope there is a vast array of different interpretations, drawing upon each viewer’s experiences. I hope they look marvellous on the wall.

Could you tell us about the two new works you have completed for your presentation of Uncertain Truths at Michael Reid Southern Highlands? How do they build on your series?

It was fascinating watching people engage with the portals and the reaction to the works on Awagami paper. So we have taken that and run with it, introducing new works in black portals on Awagami. And we have opened up a new, but connected, series – venturing into the abstract landscapes and taking the viewer deep into the embedded forests and trees. I’ve been looking for a different way to express what lurks in the forest. It’s a genre done well by many people. What I’m pleased with is how the confluence of light boxes, the deep portals and Awagami create a new way of experiencing these scenes.

What other projects are you looking forward to working on in the coming year?

More of the same but different. This year camera equipment is being lugged into far fetched seascapes, a remote archipelago and deep into more forests. More to follow!

Deme Ngayi Napa

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Deme Ngayi Napa

While Regina Pilawuk Wilson’s monumental work Wupun (sun mat) remains on view at the Art Gallery of New South Wales as a spectacular centrepiece of this year’s Sulman Prize, we are thrilled to announce that the senior Ngan’gikurrungurr artist and cultural leader has now completed a new collection of equally epic, colour-soaked canvases that will soon be on view in her next major solo show at Michael Reid Sydney.

Works from Wilson’s forthcoming exhibition have now arrived at our Eora/Sydney gallery, where they can be previewed in person or digitally by request. Please sign up to be the first to receive exclusive previews and priority access to Wilson’s extraordinary new paintings before her show’s official opening in early July.

Born in 1948 near Daly River, Northern Territory, Wilson is the cultural director of Durrmu Arts Aboriginal Corporation and co-founder of the Peppimenarti community. Situated amid wetlands and floodplains at the centre of the Daly River Aboriginal Reserve, Peppimenarti is an important site for Ngan’gikurrungurr people and continues to inform Wilson’s art and weaving practices.

Realised on a truly spectacular scale, Wilson’s Sulman piece depicts wupun (sun mat), which are traditionally woven with yerrgi (pandanus) and merrepen (sand palm) for decorative use by the women of Peppimenarti.

Since winning the highest honour at the 2003 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards, Wilson has been a fixture on the contemporary art map. Her rhythmic, intricately detailed works are beloved globally and held in the collections of the British Museum, AGNSW, the NGV and QAGOMA. She has exhibited at LACMA in Los Angeles, the Moscow Biennale, the National Museum of the Arts in Washington, D.C. and numerous other important institutions across the globe.

For first access to works from the artist’s upcoming show, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

A view with a view

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A view with a view

Michael Reid Sydney is delighted to present the latest solo exhibition from award-winning Dharawal/Wollongong-based contemporary painter India Mark. Titled A View With a View, this sublime collection of intimately scaled, exquisitely composed and tonally rich still-life paintings is now showing in our upstairs exhibition space and will be welcomed with an opening celebration on Thursday, 19 June, 6–8pm.

“The beauty of painting still life is that there are endless possibilities, even when your subject material is limited,” says the artist, who cites 20th-century still-life maestro Giorgio Morandi among her enduring creative influences. Like Morandi, Mark delights in returning to simple and familiar objects, treating these repetitions as a chance to look closer – to hone in on nuanced details and subtle variations in light and colour. “There are certain objects in this series that I have painted many times; I will never tire of painting them.”

This project of refinement through close observation and a return to familiar forms was the animating force of Mark’s new series, coupled with the influence of A Dictionary of Colour Combinations by 20th-century Japanese artist, teacher and kimono designer Sanzo Wada. “This series has been a way of returning to aspects of still life I have explored before and really loved; the objects, colours and compositions are all things I intentionally wanted to revisit.”

Since her solo debut, Night Music, which followed the announcement of her representation by Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin, Mark has continued to amass a passionate following with a succession of accolades and group showings such as Light & Life at Tweed Regional Gallery and Tender at Ngununggula. She has been a finalist in the Brett Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship and the Portia Geach Memorial Award, and is the recipient of the Ashurst Emerging Artist Prize and The Lester Prize (Emerging).

Alongside her studio practice, Mark also lectures in observational drawing and painting at the University of Wollongong. “[This] has allowed me to strip my understanding of painting back to the essentials,” she says. “It’s helped me to be more spontaneous with my own painting. I’ve become more comfortable with experimentation.”

Now, the creative breakthrough sparked by these recent experiences has culminated with A View With a View – a series Mark sees as a homecoming of sorts, albeit with the renewed confidence of an artist whose practice is going from strength to strength.

“I used to work on pairs of paintings simultaneously. Painting two works was a great way of creating nice conversations between the works,” says the artist. “For some reason, I stopped working this way for a while, and I missed those dialogues and connections between separate paintings. For this show, I decided to only work this way, painting pairs and trios of paintings that related directly to each other.”

Mark notes that two favourites from her series – both featuring glass surfaces – are works that at first posed challenges before leading to a shift in her point of view. “The way I paint glass is quite awkward; it’s not my strength in painting, and I think I love these particular works because I actually like the awkwardness of the glass objects,” she explains. “Awkwardness is a funny and persistent element of painting that I used to try to avoid. Now I have an affection for it.”

To discuss works from A View With a View by India Mark, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Masters of Australian Photography: Max Dupain

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Masters of Australian Photography: Max Dupain

Michael Reid Sydney is continuing our Masters of Australian Photography series with a new exhibition centred on one of the single most iconic and indelible images in the Australian photobook: Max Dupain’s Sunbaker.

Showcasing masterful storytelling through the work of the 20th century’s greatest visual innovators, Masters of Australian Photography is now presenting a rare edition of Dupain’s elegant, enduring, totemic image from 1937, drawn from an important private collection and available to view and acquire below.

“Max Dupain’s Sunbaker is Australia’s best-known photograph,” note the curators at the NGV, where, as with all of this country’s most important institutions, the work is enshrined in the museum’s permanent collection. “Following the depletions of wartime, sunlight had a special meaning as an elemental force capable of promoting physical and spiritual wellbeing. The artist positioned his camera almost at ground level to emphasise the sunbaker’s domination of his environment and his almost palpable connection with the replenishing forces of nature.”

Sunbaker represents the shifts in Dupain’s practice from private snapshot to public domain, from ardent modernist experimentation to determined recording of actuality and form,” note the curators at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, where the work is also held in the permanent collection. “Within this image is Dupain’s pervasive interest in the individual body as a metaphor for social wellbeing and an exemplar of pure form.”

Flanked by rare editions of other essential works from Dupain’s photographic archive, Sunbaker is now showing in the upstairs exhibition space at Michael Reid Sydney.

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

Derek Henderson

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Derek Henderson

Derek Henderson

Teetering and cascading between beauty and visual clash, the art of Derek Henderson has, over many decades, commanded attention. He is considered the most significant contemporary photographer to come out of New Zealand.

Today, he lives globally, exhibiting his work across the world. Derek embraces well-formed allure. His photographs are full, even with his use of negative space or the oxygen that he places around an image; the artworks are always full of emotion, meaning, and inquisitive interest. Derek’s photographs are calm and often tender, even when the subject should be fierce.

In Waitoa Slaughter House #2, 2009, Derek amplifies the humanity of the slaughterhouse workers amidst what is a brutal, and possibly emotionally degrading, workplace. Because of this, I love this photograph and always have. I am continually drawn back to the drowsy, lush, cascading heroic spray of roses that can be found in the ROSA series from 2021.

Likewise, an entirely new artwork in this exhibition is the White Hydrangeas. Derek takes the beautifully botanic and masterly abstracts the flowers into the contemporary.

I will leave you with a key work from his series, The Terrible Boredom of Paradise, 2004, an exquisite, almost Gothic horror of subtext visual emotion—of growing up as a teenager in the Land of the Long White Cloud. Of growing up in the lands that gods still roam and yet being a 16-year-old seething against an imprisoning, chafing beauty. You feel it. You really feel it.

Michael Reid OAM

For acquisition enquiries, please contact hughholm@michaelreid.com.au

Florescence – The Flowering

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Florescence – The Flowering

Michael Reid Sydney is delighted to present Florescence: The Flowering, an expansive exhibition of spectacular new work by Gaypalani Wanambi and Djirrirra Wunuŋmurra Yukuwa, two leading Yolŋu artists working at the Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Art Centre in Yirrkala, Northeast Arnhem Land.

Launching alongside Yolŋu Power at the Art Gallery of New South Wales – which charts the world-significant artistic flowering that has emerged from Yirrkala from the 1940s to the present – Florescence offers a contemporary complement to AGNSW’s sweeping historical display by centring the perspectives of two extraordinary talents at the forefront of an exciting new generation of Yolŋu artists.

Both Wanambi and Wunuŋmurra share the essence of their Country through their art. Their designs are structured in ways akin to a flower that grows from the body of a plant, at once highly decorative and expressive of identities embedded in place. Each land flowers in a different way. In Florescence, Wunuŋmurra’s intricate bark paintings and Wanambi’s shimmering etched metal works circle a towering forest of the two artists’ ḻarrakitj.

Florescence is Wanambi’s first large-scale release of new work since she was awarded the prestigious Ravenswood Australian Women’s Art Prize and comes soon after the announcement of her shortlisting in the upcoming Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards. “Her works are intricate and iridescent, like a piece of fine jewellery, and reveal the hand of a staggering talent,” notes a Vogue story published in the lead-up to Wanambi’s showing in Yolŋu Power at AGNSW.

Florescence arrives at a moment of burgeoning critical attention and institutional recognition for Yirrkala artists on the international stage. In addition to Yolŋu Power, it coincides with the grand opening of The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s spectacularly reimagined Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, as well as the landmark exhibition 65,000 Years: A Short History of Australian Art at The Potter Museum of Art.

While carrying on the creative legacies of their forebears, Wanambi and Wunuŋmurra have extended their practice beyond classical, sacred designs to grow into their own informal interpretation of their homeland. The land has blossomed in a new way. Florescence will be welcomed with an opening celebration on Thursday, 19 June, 6–8pm. Together with several of their peers from the Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre, both artists will be present for this very special occasion.

To RSVP to our public celebration or enquire about available work, please contact dean@michaelreid.com.au

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.

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