The Hunt

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We are thrilled to present the latest release from leading contemporary Australian artist Joseph McGlennon. Titled The Hunt, this spectacular new suite of sweeping, panoramic scenes is a landmark entry in the artist’s celebrated body of work and the culmination of more than a decade of unparalleled photographic mastery.

The Hunt will debut with a special presentation from our offsite projects platform, Michael Reid Beyond, where the works will be staged against the gracefully weathered grandeur of the original colonial homestead at Throsby Park – a suitably handsome setting for the artist’s singular blend of old-world sumptuousness and bold contemporary vision.

The recipient of the 2015 Bowness Photography Prize – the country’s most prestigious award for photography – McGlennon’s work is held in numerous private and public art collections in Australia and abroad. His hybrid photographic practice is underpinned by an extraordinary technical rigour, producing images that meld lavish beauty with a powerful message about environmental fragility, colonial dislocation and the destructive folly of our attempts to dominate nature.

With his majestic recreations of animals in their habitats – from the first kangaroos seen by European eyes to the extinct Tasmanian Tiger fresh from killing its prey – the artist brings his subjects out of the realm of exotic specimen or historical curiosity and pushes them, living and breathing, into today.

Drawing on the primal tooth-and-claw drama of a 17th-century European deer hunt reimagined in the New World of colonial Australia, The Hunt marks a dazzling departure from the orthodoxies of contemporary photography by paying homage to the great Flemish painter Frans Snyders.

Looking back across time to march contemporary art forward, this collection of six new photographs channels the emotional elements of Snyder’s style: attention to detail, dramatic lighting and rich textures. These absorbing details add depth and complexity to the narrative, emphasising the interplay between light and shadow and creating a sense of movement within each image.

The components of these sprawling, tapestry-like scenes were all captured on a trip through the rugged outback landscapes around Castle Rock in the Flinders Ranges area of South Australia. After shooting hundreds of individual photographs, McGlennon spends weeks layering and arranging them to arrive at his final composition.

Throsby Park is a property of national significance, marking one of the first European settlements outside Sydney and the opening of the Southern Highlands of New South Wales. The Throsby Park Historic Site includes the 75-hectare core of the 400-hectare grant given to Dr. Charles Throsby in 1819. This rare, surviving property offers a strong sense of continuity from its early colonial origins and continuous family ownership. It symbolizes early colonial Australia and the lifestyle of its wealthier members, reflecting its use as an intense commercial mixed farm until Charles Throsby’s death in 1856.

The site is an intact example of a high-quality, intensely farmed cultural landscape that spurred rural expansion and squatting empires. It features rare 1830s farm buildings, played a key role in developing the colonial beef export industry, and is now known for equestrian activities. The property also contains archaeological deposits offering insights into its colonial activities. Conrad Martens celebrated Throsby Park’s qualities in a 1836 painting.

Throsby Park House, the centerpiece, possibly influenced by John Verge, is a significant milestone in Australian rural architecture. An early example of the ‘large verandahed cottage’ style, it sits atop a hill overlooking Moss Vale, making a strong visual statement with its position and surrounding landscape. The house, along with its furniture, represents the blend of English architectural demands, colonial climate, building conditions, and the aspirations of its builder.”

Michael Reid OAM

 

To receive a preview of The Hunt by Joseph McGlennon, please email dean@michaelreid.com.au

PHOTOGRAPHY: REAL AND IMAGINED | NGV, MELBOURNE

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PHOTOGRAPHY: REAL AND IMAGINED | NGV, MELBOURNE

  • Dates
    13 Oct 2023—4 Feb 2024
  • Gallery Location
    Offsite & Museum

To celebrate the landmark NGV exhibition, Photography: Real & Imagined, Michael Reid Sydney presents an accompanying offering of works. Photography: Real & Imagined is on display from 13 October–4 February 2024 at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Fed Square, Melbourne. Entry is free

Narelle Autio, Nici Cumpston, Marian Drew, Derek Henderson, Trent Parke, Dr Christian Thompson AO, Petrina Hicks & David Moore

Alice Watson | Spring Paintings

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Alice Watson | Spring Paintings

  • Gallery Location
    Offsite & Museum

Alice Watson’s colour-drenched Spring Paintings chime with their namesake season. They bring to mind the distinct feeling of buoyancy when we thaw out from winter – and after the thawing:  a terrific energy and sense of possibility.

Watson’s works are inventive and elegant – made ever more striking against the bronze and steel fittings of the La Cornue showroom in Surry Hills, Sydney – where Spring Paintings is on show. 

We first took notice of the artist through our inaugural National Emerging Art Prize (NEAP) platform, where her Three Chairs  2021 placed as a finalist. This year, Alice was called on to produce a collection of works for our dedicated NEAP booth at the Affordable Art Fair, a project which has culminated in this beautiful exhibition. 

I talk to Alice from her home in Albury about the driving force behind Spring Paintings, the importance of staying the course directly after (and between) prize acknowledgments and the artists that inspire her to set paint to canvas. Her replies, edited for length, are interspersed among photographs below:

Q: I’m interested in how you came to arrive at your style and aesthetic. Can you talk me through this process?

A: I’ve always been fascinated by a form filled with a solid colour. You might notice that there is very little evidence of blurred paint in my work. One of my main techniques is to draw with my left hand in permanent marker (to acquire a sense of freedom) but paint with my right hand (to maintain a sense of form).

I feel the need to have a sense of expression but control in my work. When I was a child I would reduce the shape of a watermelon to the bare minimum with ‘puff paint’ on a t-shirt. (very 80’s). I did screen printing in my HSC, drawn to the idea of clear cut lines and shapes. My later career move to become a graphic designer, as Adobe and Apple were changing the face of design in computers, The later career move to become a graphic designer, as Adobe and Apple were changing the face of design in computers, was also exciting to me. The idea of solid blocks of colour to create an aesthetic.

In those days it was not considered artistic to play with pixels but I still looked at a line on a canvas as I did a zoomed in photograph in photoshop or a vector in Illustrator, with wonderment. Stencils and aerosol paint was also another medium I toyed with. Always a contained line. The challenge was to find a way to bring life and expression to a 2D plane. And I was always considering how this could be achieved with a brush and paint.

Q: Can you speak to the genesis of Spring Paintings?

A: . I am drawn to arrangements of food or flowers with strong shadows as if I was looking through a view finder on a camera.  My subject matter is a nostalgic thing from my childhood. I come from a strong line of cooks, gardeners and creatives. I just love the arrangements and shapes and I have an overwhelming sense of getting into my studio once I have an image that speaks to me.

Q: You were selected as a finalist in the inaugural National Emerging Art Prize (2021) for your work Three Chairs. Can you tell me how this prize came to your attention?

A: One day I started listening to the Interview with an Artist podcast on my drive ‘back from town’. It was Willy Russo interviewing Amber Creswell Bell. They were discussing the prize and I rushed around over the next few days to write an artist statement and get my painting to Sydney.

Q:  How has your practice developed in the intervening years after you achieved finalist honours at NEAP?

A: Since the first National Emerging Art Prize, I just kept painting. No real choice in the matter. I need to paint as a kind of therapy. I have had a lot of trauma and hardship in my life as well as a recent ADHD diagnosis. Painting is my strong hold. A link to a healthy mental space. NEAP was a a huge compliment and moral booster, and the response I get locally at my solo shows is also wonderful. But I paint because I need to. When Amber emailed me regarding the Affordable Art Fair I was thrilled. But I already had work ready to go. I just paint in my studio as much as I can.

Q:  No artist is an island. Are there particular painters, Australian or otherwise, that motivate you?

A: When I started thinking seriously about how to paint (in the same fashion as manipulatimg a computer picture or a spayed stencil ) it was Zoe Young’s work that was a lightening bolt moment. I had this culmination in my head of an expressive line from Matisse, ripped up pieces of flat coloured paper and a pile of chewed apples cores from my kids as subject matter. But is was considering Zoe’s work technically, that helped me take the big leap with a paint brush. I also covet John Bokor, Jane Guthleben, Stephen Ormandy, Laura Jones, Catherine Cassidy, Thomas Lineker and Kate Vella.

On the emerging artist front, and particulary from the NEAP: Brooke Whelan, Jennifer Rosnell, Andrea Sinclair, Sue Tesoriero, Emily Gordon, Sophie Witter and Julz Beresford.

Stacey McCall | Winter Paintings

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Stacey McCall | Winter Paintings

Stacey McCall is an Australian artist working in the inner Melbourne suburb of Kensington.

Stacey’s detailed underpainting glows through transparent layers of colour, a muted palette reflecting her love of things earthen and handmade. Patterns and motifs evoke memories and nostalgia for the viewer. Shapes and light keenly observed and captured with gestural intuitive brushstrokes. There is a gentle yet robust quality to her marks, interpreting the ephemera that sits quietly while life whirls around, time passing, children growing older. 

After completing a Fine Art degree in Gold and Silversmithing, Stacey spent the next twelve years designing and making bespoke jewellery, eventually opening a small workshop and store. But after the birth of daughter number three her art practice was homeward bound and after daughter number five her creativity was nurtured by knitting, drawing and painting. Now that her daughters are in their teens and beyond, Stacey’s garden studio provides the perfect space to grow her art practice.

Michael Reid x La Cornue | Joanna Gambotto

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Michael Reid x La Cornue | Joanna Gambotto

  • Dates
    26 Apr—20 Jul 2023
  • Catalogue
    Download now
  • Gallery Location
    Offsite & Museum

For the Autumn iteration of our seasonal collaboration between Michael Reid Sydney and luxury kitchen brand La Cornue, we have selected Polish-born, Sydney-based painter, Joanna Gambotto.

The first dedicated Australian La Cornue showroom opened in Surry Hills last year, designed by our friends at Thomas Hamel & Associates. The exquisite finishes of this showroom provides a fitting backdrop for the paintings of Gambotto, who works with rich oils on board.

Autumn is a collection of ten still life/interiors (the subject for which the artist is best known and for which she was awarded ‘Peoples Choice’ at the 2022 Dobell Drawing Prize) that move from her studio to the nooks and quiet corners of her home.

Gambotto’s domestic interiors are a wunderkammer of things – eclectic toys, utensils, furnishings and books. Her largest works appear to possess the same vastness as landscapes, as though the hallways and rooms recede forever into the horizon. The smallest pieces are testaments to the wonder of ordinary things, in much the same vein as Elisabeth Cummings and Margaret Preston before her.

Joanna Gambotto’s paintings are viewable on-site and by private appointment at La Cornue, Sydney
14 Foveaux St, Surry Hills NSW 2010

To arrange a viewing or for any sales related enquiries, write to willkollmorgen@michaelreid.com.au

Deme Nagyi Napa

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Deme Nagyi Napa

Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin are thrilled to present a pop-up exhibition from Ngan’gikurrungurr woman and senior artist Regina Pilawuk Wilson in Melbourne (Naarm) this month.

Occurring alongside the artist’s presentation in the 9th TarraWarra Biennial – 1st April to 16th July 2023 – we will host a pop-up exhibition of seven new Regina Pilawuk Wilson paintings at the Collingwood Yards Arts Precinct in Melbourne.

This represents an exciting opportunity for Victorian collectors to view and connect with pieces from one of Australia’s most significant senior Indigenous artists.

Get in touch: willkollmorgen@michaelreid.com.au

Collingwood Yards
35 Johnstone Street, Collingwood VIC 3066

Collingwood Yards is easily accessible by public transport with plenty of street parking nearby. Our pop up exhibition space is located between entry 35A and 35B on the ground floor.

Wednesday March 29th   11am – 5pm
Thursday March 30th. 11am – 5pm
Friday March 31st 11am – 5pm
Saturday April 1st  11am – 4pm
Sunday April 2nd   11am – 2pm

 

Destiny

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Destiny

In early 2022, the Michael Reid team began working towards a solo exhibition with renowned Yolŋu artist Mr Wanambi, alongside the Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre in Yirrkala. In early May, we were saddened by the news of his sudden passing.

The artist’s family and the team at Yirrkala were fully aware of what this exhibition meant to Mr. Wanambi and requested that the exhibition continue as planned. It was with great sorrow that this exhibition took place posthumously.

Mr. Wanambi’s family authorised the use of his name in written form but request that it not be spoken aloud in the presence of people from Arnhem Land or in the Miwatj region. His spirit has a long journey to go on, to return to his origin point. Calling his name aloud could distract and delay his spirit’s return in a new form. His family have authorised the use of his preferred title ‘Destiny’.

‘Destiny’ exhibited across our galleries in Sydney and Berlin, and marked the grand opening of our new space, Michael Reid Art Bar. Mr Wanambi’s legacy is vast and unfolding, and we look forward to sharing his boundary pushing talents & unbreakable vision with you.

Awakening

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Awakening

Thou wast not born for death, immortal Bird!

John Keats, Ode to a Nightingale

McGlennon’s parrots stand in opposition to the cultural roles that have been mapped out for these birds. They are not subject to human whims, nor obliged to play the comedian to an audience. In these impossibly sharp-focused vignettes they appear as indigenous warriors standing guard over their ancestral lands, their plumage exhibited with pride and defiance. They are lords and guardians of the bush overseeing the grand, Romantic spectacle of life returning from the ashes.

John McDonald, 2020 full essay on page 13 of the exhibition catalogue.

Awakening was Jospeh McGlennon’s 9th solo exhibition with Michael Reid in the Ballroom of The Bond Building, Woollahra. In Awakening McGlennon presents the native Australian birds as heroic survivors of the bushfires displaying themselves triumphantly against bare landscapes and brooding, cloudy skies. They are romantic figures: as indomitable as the earth itself, as proud as soldiers who have won a victory over a deadly enemy.

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