The Children are Now

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The Children are Now

  • Artist
    Mai Nguyễn-Long
  • Dates
    25 Oct 2025—7 Feb 2026
  • Gallery Location
    Talbot Rice Gallery

In September Mai Nguyễn-Long embarks on her next art residency project, representing Australia in a star-studded line up of international artists in The Children Are Now at Talbot Rice Gallery, Scotland. Curated by James Clegg, The Children Are Now examines the potency of imagination, apartheid education, militaristic games and generational trauma. Mai Nguyễn-Long will make and exhibit new ceramic works via ceramic studio access at the University of Edinburgh, and will show alongside Francis Alÿs, Monster Chetwynd, Ane Hjort Guttu, Kemang Wa Lehulere, Tuan Andrew Nguyen, Bob and Roberta Smith and Adéla Součková.

The Children are Now is a group exhibition that aims to represent the relationship of children to the key challenges we face today. Through artworks that capture the potency of children’s playful imaginations, it makes reference to apartheid education, militaristic games and generational trauma, asking how history is made to repeat itself in the face of those who are capable of reimagining everything. In the context of Childism, a movement to expose and redress the prejudices in how children are understood, and in collaboration with Children’s Humans Rights Defender from the Children’s Parliament, it will empower the voices of children. Shifting the emphasis of the phrase “the Children are the Future” from being a description of the fact that children will become the next generation, it acknowledges that young people are here and now the most powerful world-builders among us.

Sydney Contemporary 2025: Masters of Photography

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Sydney Contemporary 2025: Masters of Photography

At Sydney Contemporary 2025, Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin will present a significant exhibition of new and historic works by several of Australia’s most important and acclaimed photographers.

Forming a core thread of the gallery’s most ambitious art fair presentation to date, Masters of Photography will take visitors inside the distinct visual worlds of two of the country’s most acclaimed contemporary artists: award-winning photographer Petrina Hicks, debuting a new and beguiling body of work exclusively at Sydney Contemporary; and Australia’s first and still only Magnum-accredited photographer, Trent Parke, unveiling previously unseen images from the landmark series that first brought him global acclaim more than two decades ago.

The watery currents of Hicks’s new work continue through a curated collection of photographs now in their final editions, including Narelle Autio‘s cinematic surf scenes and Tamara Dean‘s dreamlike deep-sea visions, as well as a very special offering of one of the single most iconic and indelible images in the Australian photobook: Max Dupain’s Sunbaker from 1937.

A rising voice in contemporary photography, Scott Perkins will exhibit with Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin for the first time the announcement of his representation by the gallery. Final editions of essential works from the photographic archive of Dr Christian Thompson AO will provide a historical counterpoint to Recital, his live performance headlining Performance Contemporary, part of Sydney Contemporary’s public program.

To request a preview and secure priority access to works from our Masters of Photography exhibition, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Sydney Contemporary 2025: Painting

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Sydney Contemporary 2025: Painting

This year’s Sydney Contemporary presentation from Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin brings together an exciting assembly of contemporary painters whose technical mastery, searching intelligence and conceptual daring carry art’s most storied medium into new and innovative terrain.

The exhibition will mark the Sydney Contemporary debut of two major talents who both joined our stable of represented artists in April this year after previously gaining widespread attention as finalists in the National Emerging Art Prize. Naarm/Melbourne-based Indian Australian artist Sid Pattni, a finalist in this year’s Archibald Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, will exhibit at the fair on the heels of his first solo exhibition at Michael Reid Sydney, The Act of Putting it Back Together, which was widely acclaimed and acquired in its entirety well before the opening. Pattni is joined by Eora/Sydney abstract painter Kathy Liu, who has emerged in recent years as one of the most admired and closely watched figures within the Michael Reid network and was recently announced as a finalist in the 2025 Fisher’s Ghost Art Award at Campbelltown Arts Centre.

Accompanying Pattni and Liu are two of the most impressive, distinctive and heroic interpreters of the Australian landscape working in this country today. Celebrated West Australian artist Carly Le Cerf returns to Sydney Contemporary after a succession of major career triumphs and a creatively pivotal Blue Mountains residency, while Dyarubbin/Hawkesbury-based painter Julz Beresford will present her first full-scale series of monumental mountainscapes in a rotating exhibition unfolding over the course of the art fair.

Rounding out our contemporary painting survey are Meanjin/Brisbane-based still-life master John Honeywill and Muloobinba/Newcastle multidisciplinary artist Michelle Gearin, whose presence at Sydney Contemporary coincides with her latest solo exhibition, I’ll Be Your Mirror, at Michael Reid Sydney.

To request a preview and secure priority access to works from our contemporary painting survey, please email hughholm@michaelreid.com.au

Sydney Contemporary 2025: Sculpture

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Sydney Contemporary 2025: Sculpture

Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin’s 2025 Sydney Contemporary presentation will be grounded by a trio of expansive sculptural installations by three of country’s most exciting and important artists working at the forefront of their field.

Dharawal/Bulli-based multidisciplinary artist, academic and storyteller Mai Nguyễn-Long makes her return to Sydney Contemporary following a pair of career-defining institutional projects: her monumental, room-sized sculptural installation The Vomit Girl Project, which was commissioned for the 11th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art and was presented for seven months to international acclaim at QAGOMA in Meanjin/Brisbane; and her equally epic assemblage Doba Nation, which headlined the artistic program of this year’s Perth Festival. The artist’s newly completed collection of clay-formed figures debuts at Sydney Contemporary while she embarks on a prestigious two-month residency at Talbot Rice Gallery, University of Edinburgh.

A pride of fabulous feline sculptures by Naarm/Melbourne-based artist Troy Emery will slink, sashay and strike languorous poses on plinths and podiums in our Sydney Contemporary exhibition. Finished with silky, blush-pink tendrils and beadwork painstakingly threaded by hand, the artist’s new series dazzlingly distils his creative signatures, brought to life with a couturier’s skill and imaginative flourish. Emery’s Sydney Contemporary showing follows his most recent large-scale commission with French luxury house Hermès and the grand unveiling of his most ambitious project to date, Guardian Lion – a sprawling, illuminated, kaleidoscopic sculptural landmark now soaring high above Melbourne’s Southbank.

One of the most important figures working in contemporary sculpture over the last three decades, Eora/Sydney-based artist Linde Ivimey will present her first new body of work with Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin since joining the gallery’s stable of represented artists in August. Working with reclaimed materials – bone, fabric, wax, metal, hair – Ivimey creates powerful figurative sculptures that are at once raw, tender and deeply personal.

To request a preview and secure priority access to new works from our contemporary sculpture survey, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Sydney Contemporary 2025: First Nations

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Sydney Contemporary 2025: First Nations

As a powerful opening statement for Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin’s most ambitious art fair installation to date, the entry to our exhibition will be flanked by a magnificent trio of new bodies of work by three of the most accomplished and acclaimed voices in contemporary First Nations art practice: Regina Pilawuk Wilson, Gaypalani Wanambi and Betty Chimney.

Wanambi’s star turn at Sydney Contemporary closely follows the announcement of her triumph at this year’s Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA), the most prestigious prize dedicated to First Nations art. Working at the Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Art Centre in Yirrkala, Northeast Arnhem Land, the celebrated Yolŋu artist was awarded NATSIAA’s highest honour, the $100,000 Telstra Art Award, for her monumental, multi-panel work Burwu, blossom – a tessellating installation of reclaimed road signs dazzlingly reimagined with intricately etched depictions of the epic Ancestral journeys of Wuyal. Our 2025 Sydney Contemporary exhibition will be anchored by another composite etched-metal piece realised on the same dazzling scale as her Telstra work.

Award-winning painter, master weaver and 2025 Sulman Prize finalist Regina Pilawuk Wilson returns to Sydney Contemporary with a series of epic, colour-soaked canvases whose rhythmic, reverberating linework offers a contemporary painterly interpretation of a weaving tradition spanning generations. Widely celebrated on the international stage and recognised as Australia’s pre-eminent contemporary female Aboriginal artist, the senior Ngan’gikurrungurr artist and cultural leader is the cultural director of Durrmu Arts Aboriginal Corporation and co-founder of the Peppimenarti community. She joins our Sydney Contemporary exhibition with a spectacular suite of paintings that echo the heft, intricacy and tonal depth of her Sulman-shortlisted work, Wupun (sun mat).

Yankunytjatjara artist and three-time Wynne Prize finalist Betty Chimney will present a new series of paintings concurrent with her latest solo exhibition, Katjarunkanyi – Breaking Dawn, at Michael Reid Sydney. A long-time artist and director of Iwantja Arts – the Indigenous-owned and -governed art centre in the rocky desert country of Indulkana on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands – Chimney is inspired by her ancestral Yankunytjatjara Country and her determination to maintain a strong connection to Country and culture.

The presence of Wanambi, Wilson and Chimney at Sydney Contemporary immediately precedes an exciting international foray, with all three artists set to star in Michael Reid’s forthcoming group exhibition The Stars Before Us All in Washington, D.C. – opening this October in conversation with the National Gallery of Victoria’s landmark exhibition The Stars We Do Not See at the National Gallery of Art.

To request a preview and secure priority access to new works by Gaypalani Wanambi, Regina Pilawuk Wilson and Betty Chimney, please email tobymeagher@michaelreid.com.au

Sydney Contemporary 2025

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Sydney Contemporary 2025

Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin returns to Carriageworks this September with our most ambitious art fair installation to date, presenting extraordinary new and collectable works by more than 20 leading Australian contemporary artists.

All works from our Sydney Contemporary 2025 exhibition – an expansive survey spanning painting, photography, sculpture, installation and more.

To receive an exhibition catalogue and sign up for first access, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Nasim Nasr

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Nasim Nasr

  • Artist
    Nasim Nasr
  • Dates
    20 Oct—21 Dec 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Berlin

From October, Nasim Nasr will exhibit a mini survey of historical works at Michael Reid Berlin. This exhibition will coincide with a residency at Cité des Arts, Paris, awarded by Creative Australia.

Scotty So

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Scotty So

  • Artist
    Scotty So
  • Dates
    8 Sep—12 Oct 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Berlin

Michael Reid Berlin is delighted to announce our first solo exhibition with Naarm/Melbourne-based contemporary artist Scotty So, one of the most exciting and distinctive voices in Australian contemporary art.

Described by Art Collector magazine in an expansive 2024 cover profile as “perhaps Australia’s most in-demand performance artist,” So works across various media – including photography, painting, sculpture, ceramics, video, installation and drag performance – to transform found, familiar and culturally resonant references into fictive and fabulous imagery that reflects on identity, performance and lived experience.

So’s work is represented in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Victoria, where he has featured in several landmark exhibitions, including the 2020 NGV Triennial, China: The Past is Present (2022), QUEER: Stories from the NGV Collection (2022) and Melbourne Now (2023).

In 2024, the Art Gallery of Ballarat staged a major solo exhibition, debuting his Hai Kot Tou series alongside the newly commissioned video work Begonia Queens. Represented in Australia by MARS Gallery, he has also exhibited internationally with presentations in Hong Kong, China and Europe.

For his Berlin debut, So will present a selection of photographs from his 2022 Shungay series, which pools influences from Asian erotic painting, European Chinoiserie, Instagram makeup culture and contemporary gay identity. Within these richly staged portraits, clothing styles of the Song and Ming dynasties appear alongside allusions to folk tales such as the rabbit deity and the split peach, as well as queer cinematic touchstones including M. Butterfly – layering history, artifice and mythology in images that are playful yet precise, and deeply resonant.

All works are now available to preview and acquire by request.

Artist Profile – Linde Ivimey

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To celebrate the news of Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin’s representation of Linde Ivimey, writer Carrie McCarthy met the artist at her Eora/Sydney home and studio to discuss the ideas, experiences, and material approach that guide her globally celebrated sculptural practice.

Perched on a stool at a workbench surrounded by an archive of totems and keepsakes, Linde Ivimey sits with her head bowed in concentration. Nearby, an audiobook plays; the text, a book on the mythology of ancient Mesopotamia. Her fingers move rhythmically as she pulls twine through a collection of tiny star-shaped bones, weaving them into a delicate lattice that will soon drape across a toddler-sized form waiting nearby.

“I’ve been making something out of nothing my whole life.”

Linde Ivimey

When the last piece is threaded, it will be pinned into place, before adding pearls or quandong seeds or a gemstone she once used to wear. She might add a flourish of peacock feathers or a veil of hand-dyed silk. Eventually, the form’s character will emerge – an uncanny evocation of Ivimey’s contemplations as she shaped it into being.

Bones have been an intrinsic part of Ivimey’s idiosyncratic art practice for more than 20 years, representing strength and fragility, mortality and survival. Inspired by a childhood fascination with the wishbone from a Sunday roast, Ivimey began using bone as the basis of her experimentations when she was still too young to understand she was tapping into a history of artmaking that stretches back to Paleolithic times.

As she and her art practice matured, Ivimey gravitated towards the symbolism of Ancient Egyptians, Etruscans and the Cycladic people, as well as artists such as Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Balthus, whose depictions of fleshy bodies and desire still inform her work.

While travelling through Europe, Ivimey discovered an appreciation for the stories of saints and their patronages, and studied Edward Hopper, whose ability to make the ordinary compelling resonated deeply.

Her sculptures evolved to incorporate more talismans and remnants of domesticity. A ribbon from a special gift, champagne foil from a shared celebration, laundry lint, remnants of candles, bits of broken jewellery; everything had potential and all of it had meaning.

“It’s wonderful to have the works here in my studio. They’re very much like family members. Babies I haven’t had are really growing up … renegade little teenagers now.”

Linde Ivimey

It’s impossible to feel alone in Ivimey’s studio – there is always a presence there, demanding to be recognised. If it sounds a little magical and esoteric, to a certain extent it is.

Many collectors, curators and gallery staff have mentioned feeling protective of Ivimey’s sculptures in a way that extends beyond the standard need to care for a valuable piece of art.

Despite being devoid of any recognisable facial features, they personify recognisable emotions, hopes and vulnerabilities. There are definite dark undertones, but there is also a strong impression of humour and playfulness.

Though not always strictly autobiographical, the visual language Ivimey employs is deeply personal. Her work is both a salve and an invitation to better understand ourselves – a way to make sense of life and reflect on humanity.

Perhaps the humanness inherent in her sculptures exists because there is no clear delineation between Ivimey’s art practice and her life. Her home, above her studio, is less a dwelling than an art installation within which she finds sanctuary and serenity.

“What I live out in my art is what I let out.”

Linde Ivimey

Located in an area of inner Sydney once known as a centre of manufacturing, the converted warehouse holds the imprints and energy of the many makers who came before – carpenters, distillers, printers, and photographers have all made this place their own. Warm timber floors reflect the building’s history, as does the staircase, the steps of which dip in the middle from almost two centuries of footfall.

Swathes of fabric hang from exposed beams to break the cavernous space into discrete areas for researching, making, dining or entertaining, though no one thing in her life is ever really separate from another.

During the day, sun beams through long sash windows, illuminating piles of heavily-thumbed books and curious collections such as antique pocket watches, rosary beads, and a cabinet of uranium glassware.

“There is one hand directed towards death, but there is another hand directed towards rebirth – another use, and another life.”

Linde Ivimey

At night, the living space is lit softly by chandeliers of strung bone. Though orderly, every surface shows signs of an artist for whom making is a compulsion even in her downtime.

Pencil sketches on brown notepaper sit alongside notepads with lists of possible exhibition titles. Dainty Swarovski crystals sparkle across a small black square of velvet, some already strung onto fine cotton strands. To the side, burgeoning experiments with clothing ties are beginning to come together. Though there might be simultaneous projects on the go, it feels cohesive rather than erratic.

Ivimey is pragmatic enough to understand why audiences might be confronted by the inclusion of bone in her work, though, as she says, “bones are the stuff of us.” Prior to discovering chicken wishbones, Ivimey’s childhood dream had been to become a doctor, and she remains intensely curious about the biology of ‘being’.

She never stops learning, investigating, and evolving, and neither do her sculptures. There have been times of significant ill health and upheaval throughout her career, but the one constant has been her ability to pour those experiences into her art in such a way that they reflect the complexity of all our lives. 

“I think we spend a lot of our adult life reconciling our childhood and I think that happens for me through my sculptures – making… tending to those figures… They’re meant to do something… They’re meant to be therapeutic. A lot of the sculptures have content that helps me look after the little girl in me I still need to look after. And the big grown-up woman.”

Linde Ivimey

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