Jim Naughten

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Jim Naughten

  • Artist
    Jim Naughten
  • Dates
    3—30 Nov 2025

Jim Naughten is a British artist whose work explores the complex and fragile relationship between humans and the natural world. Originally trained as a painter, he now works primarily with photography, digital manipulation, and, more recently, Artificial Intelligence.

Drawing from a deeply creative and classically trained foundation, Naughten champions new frontiers in photographic practice—where analogue traditions are extended through digital technologies and AI. His images—featuring surreal subjects such as pink zebras, neon gibbons, crested birds, and roving wolves—are vivid, unsettling, and dreamlike.

They explore the space between memory, imagination, and ecological anxiety. Through this lens, Naughten confronts the environmental crisis with unflinching directness, using the “shock of the new” to highlight the realities of biodiversity loss and climate change. His recent projects, Mesozoic (2023) and Biophilia (2025), reflect a growing urgency in his practice and a call to reconnect with the natural world.

Naughten’s works are meticulously constructed—painterly in their approach, layered and refined through time and digital technique. Influences range from the psychological portraits of Diane Arbus to the lush, documentary-style interventions of Richard Mosse and Patrick Waterhouse. He frequently collaborates with ecologists and conservationists, and has supported environmental initiatives including fundraising for the  Jane Goodall Institute.

His work is held in major public and private collections, including the Wellcome Collection, the Imperial War Museum, the Horniman Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Honolulu Museum of Art, and the Boca Raton Museum of Art in Florida. Through striking imagery and cutting-edge visual storytelling, Jim Naughten urges us to remember the wonder and fragility of the natural world—and our shared responsibility to protect it.

 

Preview catalogues and early acquisitions are now available by request. Please email: dean@michaelreid.com.au

Artist Profile – William Yang

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To celebrate the announcement of Michael Reid Berlin’s representation of William Yang, we visited the Queensland-born photographer, performance artist and cultural trailblazer at his Eora/Sydney home, where he lives and works alongside his vast photographic archive spanning more than five decades.

Yang had been one of the most important and prolific chroniclers of Australian cultural life over the last 50 years, capturing the celebrated and the marginalised, the public and the radically personal with unwavering clarity, empathy and candour.

From his essential works of social documentary – lensed at the front lines of the parties, protests and performances through which LGBTQIA+ identity, autonomy and community came to be expressed and defined – to his intimate, diaristic portraits of family, friends and lovers, many of which were set against the ravages of the AIDS era, Yang has built an extraordinary body of work that today stands among the most significant social archives of the past half-century.

“William Yang is widely regarded as one of Australia’s most significant photographic storytellers, blending autobiography, social history and performance in a body of work that has helped redefine the nation’s visual narrative,” says Michael Reid OAM. “His work endures not only for its aesthetic and documentary power, but also for its gentle, unwavering commitment to truth-telling – across generations and cultures.”

Following the artist’s recent solo exhibition at Michael Reid Berlin, which brought together 14 key works from across his career, Yang’s permanent, ongoing representation in Europe offers further recognition of his work’s enduring resonance and global significance, while affirming our commitment to celebrating his practice on the international stage. Alongside this announcement, we are delighted to present a curated selection of iconic and indelible photographs once again drawn from across distinct stages of his career. Many are now in their final editions and are exclusively available to explore and acquire on the Michael Reid Berlin website or by request.

Propelled by his medium’s capacity for storytelling, Yang often inscribes and reanimates his photographs with handwritten recollections of encounters with his subjects, charting the ebb and flow of their relationships over time and offering intimate reflections on how each picture came to be. The sum of these stories is at once an urgent record of a vanishing queer and artistic underground and an ever-evolving statement of the artist’s subjectivity – expressed with an unvarnished immediacy that belies the quiet beauty and fleeting moments of grace in all the grit and glitter.

“A photograph captures a specific moment in time. You don’t have to do anything special to do this, it just happens, it’s part of the nature of photography,” Yang writes in the introduction to his 1997 book Friends of Dorothy. “Because it is the nature of the world to change and move onward, these moments can never be repeated. To take a photograph of an event as opposed to writing a document means that you have to be there.” Yang has always been there – bearing witness to the cultural, political and personal histories of the past half-century.

In recognition of his contribution to Australian visual culture and LGBTQIA+ visibility, Yang was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in 2021 – the same year that Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA) staged his landmark retrospective Seeing and Being Seen, which traced his career from his exuberant early days documenting Sydney’s queer scene to his acclaimed bodies of work reflecting on cultural identity and family history.

“[My mother] thought being Chinese was a complete liability and wanted us to be more Australian than the Australians,” says Yang in an interview with QAGOMA. “So, the Chinese part of me was completely denied and unacknowledged until I was in my mid-30s and I became Taoist. It was through my engagement with Chinese philosophy that I embraced my Chinese heritage. People at the time called me Born Again Chinese, and that’s not a bad description, but now I see it as a liberation from racial suppression – I prefer to say I came out as a Chinese.”

“I would like my art to convey feelings, emotions, what it is like to be a sentient human: experiencing joy, laughter and sadness, to realise we are vulnerable, that we have our failings, we do bad things, but we are capable of forgiveness, kindness and love.”

WILLIAM YANG

“By combining photographs with words in his award-winning slide projection monologues, he expands on the context of his images and avoids the risk of cliché,” notes Michael Reid OAM. “Sadness (1992) recounts the grief his family felt after the 1922 murder of his uncle, paralleled with the loss experienced by the gay community during the AIDS crisis. These monologues have been presented at major festivals and venues in Australia, Europe, and North America, blending image, memory, and live narration to create a deeply affecting form of documentary theatre.”

Yang began 2025 with Milestone at the Sydney Festival – a performance marking his 80th birthday that drew on his vast archive of photographs and interwove them with personal reminiscence. Radiating his trademark warmth, humour and candour, Milestone was hailed by The Sydney Morning Herald as “a body of work that speaks a universal language, inviting us to forget about those differences that are only skin deep and reflect on the things that are truly important.” A creative triumph and deeply moving, Milestone set the tone for a year of milestones – from his solo exhibition at Michael Reid Berlin to the announcement of his ongoing European representation, establishing 2025 as a defining chapter in his brilliant career.

“Prior to our representation of William in Berlin, it had always been a not-so-secret thrill of mine to be photographed by William, while running about Sydney,” says Michael Reid OAM. “As this country’s foremost documentarian, the entire archive of William’s practice is heading to the State Library of New South Wales. Should William capture your photograph, you will live on for hundreds of years within a prestigious museum. William can make people almost live forever.”

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 presents a significant exhibition of new and historical works by several of Australia’s most important photographers.

Forming a core thread of the gallery’s most ambitious art fair presentation to date, Masters of Photography begins by drawing visitors into the distinct visual worlds of two of the country’s most acclaimed contemporary artists: Petrina Hicks, debuting the final four works from her award-winning Mnemosyne series exclusively at Sydney Contemporary; and Trent Parke, Australia’s first – and still only – Magnum-accredited photographer, 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 undersea visions, as well as a very special offering of one of the most iconic images in the Australian photobook: Max Dupain’s Sunbaker (1937).

A rising voice in contemporary photography, Scott Perkins is exhibiting with Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin for the first time since the announcement of his representation by the gallery. Final editions of major works from the photographic archive of Dr Christian Thompson AO provide a historical counterpoint to Recital, his live vocal work headlining Performance Contemporary as part of the fair’s public program, while sun-splashed pastel portraits from the latest series by Gerwyn Davies, Calypso, similarly complement his newly commissioned, large-scale textile work, now positioned above the Carriageworks bar and dining space as a playful addition to the Installation Contemporary program.

To discuss works from our Masters of Photography exhibition at Sydney Contemporary, 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 marks 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, arrives 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 interpreters of the Australian landscape working 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 presents 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 discuss 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 is grounded by a trio of significant installations by three of the country’s most exciting and important artists working in the field contemporary sculpture.

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 presented for seven months to international acclaim at QAGOMA, Meanjin/Brisbane; and her equally epic 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 slink, sashay and strike languorous poses 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 collaboration with French luxury house Hermès and the grand unveiling of his most ambitious commission 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 is presenting 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 discuss 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

Offering a powerful opening statement for our most ambitious art fair presentation to date, the entry to the Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin booth is flanked by a trifecta of magnificent new works from 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 presentation is anchored by another composite etched-metal piece realised on the same breathtaking 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 internationally and recognised as one of Australia’s pre-eminent contemporary Aboriginal artists, 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 presentation 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 presents a new series concurrent with her 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 Aṉangu 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 show The Stars Before Us All in Washington, D.C. The exhibition opens next month in conversation with the National Gallery of Victoria’s landmark exhibition The Stars We Do Not See at the National Gallery of Art.

To discuss available work 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 – are available to explore and acquire online below.

To discuss works from Sydney Contemporary 2025, 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
  • Catalogue
    Download now
  • 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.

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