2026 Exhibition Program Highlights at Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin

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2026 Exhibition Program Highlights at Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin

Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin is pleased to share selected highlights from our 2026 exhibitions program and invite collectors to sign up for exclusive previews and priority access to these and other projects set to light up next year’s culture calendar. This dynamic slate encompasses new and ambitious bodies of work from many of the most acclaimed, in-demand and directional voices in Australian contemporary art.

We look forward to presenting these artists’ forthcoming projects at our Eora/Sydney and Berlin galleries – as well as with our second foray into the United States – across a packed year ahead. To discuss our forthcoming program with a gallery representative, please contact danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au or dean@michaelreid.com.au

 

John Honeywill

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John Honeywill

  • Artist
    John Honeywill
  • Dates
    6 Aug—5 Sep 2026
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Celebrated Meanjin/Brisbane-based contemporary painter and master of the still life John Honeywill returns to Michael Reid Sydney in August for his first solo exhibition in more than two years. Brought to life with meticulous precision and masterly control of light and mood, Honeywill’s paintings set everyday objects within deceptively simple compositions that appear quietly radiant and seemingly lit from within.

His acclaimed practice is propelled by a curious, almost ineffable affinity for the objects of his gaze – unsentimental yet emotionally resonant subjects that draw the eye with the quiet authority of their presence. From sugary sweets to elegant vessels enclosing fruit or delicately unfolding flowers, these still-life elements exude a serene stillness and subtle alchemy as they coalesce and converse in graceful, mesmerising arrangements.

By suspending these objects against ambiguous, softly luminescent planes – at times subtly reflective, at others gauze-like and atmospheric – and rendering them with astonishing, ultra-precise detail, Honeywill heightens their sense of poise and intimacy. His paintings stand as a paean to the interplay between an object’s presence and the artist’s perception – the organising idea behind his 2023 monograph, Presence and Perception.

To sign up for first access to the artist’s forthcoming series, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Aotearoa Art Fair 2026

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Aotearoa Art Fair 2026

  • Artist
    Scott Perkins
  • Dates
    30 Apr—3 May 2026
  • Gallery Location
    Aotearoa Art Fair, Auckland

Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin will travel to Auckland in April for the 2026 edition of the Aotearoa Art Fair, taking visitors inside the atmospheric worlds of New Zealand-born, Australia-based contemporary photographer Scott Perkins.

Distilling the landscape into a kind of minimalist visual poetry, Perkins’s abstracted nature scenes are imbued with mood and luminosity. Brooding forests and sweeping seascapes are pared back to elemental gestures: graduated horizons, silhouetted escarpments and silvery skies that shimmer with the granular glint of celestial dust.

Housed within bespoke architectural timber frames and softly glowing light boxes, these works hover between object and image, functioning as much as sculptures in the round as photographs. Having joined our stable of represented artists in 2025, soon after his widely acclaimed solo exhibition Uncertain Truths, Perkins has refined a singular practice that opens meditative thresholds through which unknowable yet intimately compelling places emerge, at once familiar and strange.

To sign up for first access to works from Scott Perkins’s Aotearoa Art Fair presentation, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Stacey McCall

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Stacey McCall

  • Artist
    Stacey McCall
  • Dates
    2 Apr—16 May 2026
  • Gallery Location
    Berlin

Michael Reid Berlin will usher in the European spring with the first international solo exhibition from Naarm/Melbourne-based contemporary painter and celebrated stalwart of our Murrurundi gallery Stacey McCall. The culmination of an extended artist residency in Paris, McCall’s upcoming series will build on the glittering success of her most recent Murrurundi show, Lucent, which similarly emerged from the sketchbooks she kept during a sojourn in the City of Light.

Titled after the gorgeous, gauzy glow that washes through each picture and lights up her elegant, effortlessly arranged accoutrements and tableware, Lucent found McCall honing her softly expressive painterly language rooted in tonal underpainting. Evoking the essence of her still-life objects with an economy of graceful gestures and pared-back textural markings that filter through clouds of earthy, peachy tones, McCall’s deceptively simple, deftly realised style feels perfectly attuned to the warm insouciance and easy eclecticism of a Parisian pied-à-terre.

With her distinctive and richly evocative approach to still life, McCall allows the cumulative impact of timeworn objects and artfully undone florals and fruit to conjure a familiar yet faraway mood.

To sign up for first access to works from Stacey McCall’s first solo exhibition at Michael Reid Berlin, please email colinesoria@michaelreid.com.au

Sid Pattni

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Sid Pattni

  • Artist
    Sid Pattni
  • Dates
    5—28 Mar 2026
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Naarm/Melbourne-based artist and 2025 Archibald Prize finalist Sid Pattni will follow up a banner year with a new succession of projects across the Michael Reid network and beyond – commencing in April with his first large-scale solo exhibition staged across our flagship ground-floor gallery, followed by his Michael Reid Berlin debut.

Born in London and raised in Kenya before moving to Melbourne via Boorloo/Perth, the Indian-Australian artist first approached painting as a way of processing the dissonance of navigating multiple cultural identities. Arriving at an entirely original painterly language, Pattni draws on visual traditions codified and co-opted under empire – from Mughal miniature painting and Indian textiles to British botanical drawings and 19th-century Company Paintings – recasting their compositional logic as symbols of containment and their intricate embellishment as a site of critique.

In his hands, colonial portraiture becomes a lens for exploring diasporic identity and the external projections through which selfhood is constructed. A breakout star of the 2023 National Emerging Art Prize, Pattni joined the Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin stable in the same week he was announced as an Archibald finalist for his self-portrait subtitled The Act of Putting It Back Together, which later lent its name to his tremendously successful Michael Reid Sydney debut.

“Pattni invites us to examine the inheritances that exist within the subconscious of our collective and individual psyche,” writes Louise Martin-Chew in an eight-page Vault magazine cover story. “His criticality sits within an aesthetic that is richly decorated, beautiful and seductive, to ‘symbolise how cultural artefacts were appropriated and recontextualised during empire, and how these reinterpretations continue to influence diasporic self-perception. What feels new … is a deeper emotional intensity.”

To preview and acquire works from Sid Pattni’s forthcoming Eora/Sydney and Berlin exhibitions, please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

Melbourne Art Fair 2026 | Troy Emery

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Melbourne Art Fair 2026 | Troy Emery

Troy Emery is among the most distinctive and accomplished voices in Australian contemporary art. The Naarm/Melbourne-based artist’s forthcoming showing at Melbourne Art Fair 2026 will be his first significant presentation in his home city since joining the Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin stable of represented artists in 2023.

Remixing references to art and natural history, decorative crafts and the conventions of museum display, Emery’s widely celebrated soft-sculptural practice reflects on our position within – and apart from – the natural world, casting magnificent, otherworldly animal forms as playful representations of the unknowable other. Adorned with silky tendrils, soft knitted loops and dazzling Day-Glo threads, his tufty creatures exude a captivating mystique with a touch of camp – haughty and inscrutable beneath their lurid pelts.

Appearing to melt into their own being, Emery’s impossible creatures are meticulously fashioned by hand with a couturier’s precision and imaginative flourish. More recently, Emery has introduced hand-threaded, scintillating glass beadwork to his sculptures, further enriching a material palette that has, throughout his career, stood in opposition to the hard, masculinist conventions and monumental pretensions of art-historical sculpture.

At Melbourne Art Fair, a pride of his fringed and fabulous felines will slink, sashay and strike languorous poses on plinths and podiums throughout the Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin booth, appearing at once as decorative objects unto themselves and as emblems of ecological ruin and contemporary alienation. This presentation follows the unveiling of his largest sculptural commission to date, Guardian Lion – a sprawling, kaleidoscopic, illuminated landmark now soaring above Southbank and welcoming visitors to the arts precinct abutting the National Gallery of Victoria.

Emery has exhibited across Australia and internationally since completing a Master of Fine Arts at the University of Sydney in 2009. His work is held in numerous significant private and public collections, including the National Gallery of Victoria – where his room-sized pom-pommed panther was a centrepiece of Melbourne Now (2023) – as well as Artbank, City of Townsville, Goulburn Regional Art Gallery, Deakin University Art Museum, Deloitte Australia, Macquarie University Art Gallery and Maitland Regional Art Gallery.

For previews and priority access to works from Troy Emery’s forthcoming Melbourne Art Fair series, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Melbourne Art Fair 2026 | Gaypalani Wanambi

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Melbourne Art Fair 2026 | Gaypalani Wanambi

The first Melbourne Art Fair showing for celebrated Yolŋu artist Gaypalani Wanambi follows her historic triumph at the 2025 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA), where she received the highest accolade bestowed by Australia’s most prestigious First Nations art prize for her multi-panelled work Burwu, blossom – a tessellating installation of reclaimed road signs dazzlingly reimagined with intricately etched depictions of the epic Ancestral journeys of Wuyal.

Wanambi’s presence at Australia’s longest-running art fair will see her match the monumentality of her earlier, prize-winning work with a new suite of composite etched-metal artworks realised on an equally breathtaking scale.

Working with Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Art Centre at Yirrkala in Northeast Arnhem Land, Wanambi is the leading female practitioner within the Found Movement – in which salvaged metal road signs recovered on Country are reimagined as raw material for extraordinary works of art – a practice that carries forward the legacy of her pioneering father, the renowned artist Mr Wanambi (1962–2022).

To request a preview catalogue and secure early acquisitions, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Melbourne Art Fair 2026

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Melbourne Art Fair 2026

For five days in February, Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin will travel to the Victorian capital with an ambitious installation at Melbourne Art Fair, anchored by large-scale bodies of work by two of the most celebrated and original voices in Australian contemporary art: Yolŋu artist and 2025 Telstra Art Award–winner Gaypalani Wanambi, and leading Naarm/Melbourne-based contemporary artist Troy Emery.

For preview requests and acquisition enquiries, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

Raylene Walatinna

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Raylene Walatinna

  • Artist
    Raylene Walatinna
  • Dates
    5—21 Feb 2026
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

In February, Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin will present our first full-scale solo exhibition from Yankunytjatjara artist Raylene Walatinna. A major force within the dynamic school of First Nations painters at Iwantja Arts in the rocky desert country of Indulkana on the Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands, Walatinna is the daughter and frequent collaborator of acclaimed artist Betty Chimney, as well as an exceptional talent in her own right.

The mother–daughter duo often works together on collaborative paintings, continuing the custom of older women passing on their knowledge of Tjukurpa (cultural stories) and Ngura (Country) to younger generations. As a solo artist, Walatinna produces only a limited volume of work, making her forthcoming exhibition – her most ambitious project to date – a truly significant occasion.

Revealing the influence of her trailblazing mother – a three-time Wynne Prize finalist and one of the most highly regarded artists represented by the gallery – Walatinna’s work channels the rich tones and elemental rhythms of the desert in a celebration of her family’s enduring connection to Country and Yankunytjatjara cultural history.

Her forthcoming solo exhibition follows a star turn in Heirloom, our Murrurundi gallery’s most recent collaborative exhibition with Country Style magazine, as well as a celebrated showing alongside several of her Iwantja Arts peers in the group exhibition Ngura pilunpa – Peaceful Country at Michael Reid Southern Highlands. “My mum has always been my closest friend. I learnt how to paint from her – she is a very good teacher. Over time, I’ve developed my own way of working too,” says Walatinna in a profile published in Country Style’s 2025 Art Issue alongside the opening of Heirloom. “My paintings are different to my mum’s – even though we are often painting the same Country. Our shapes usually connect in different ways, and we have different ideas on how to use colour.”

Both artists begin with the Tjukitji (soakage) and the Iwantja Creek, sites of profound importance to Yankunytjatjara people. “It is a landscape that’s deeply embedded in their family history,” writes Hannah James in Country Style. “Raylene recalls travelling as a child while her father worked as a stockman at various cattle stations.”

Works from Raylene Walatinna’s forthcoming presentation are now available to preview digitally and in person by request. To receive a preview catalogue, book a private viewing at Michael Reid Sydney or register early acquisition interest, please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

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