The Christmas Tree Bucket

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The Christmas Tree Bucket

  • Artist
    Trent Parke
  • Dates
    1 Nov 2025—6 Sep 2026
  • Catalogue
    Download now
  • Gallery Location
    National Gallery of Australia

The National Gallery of Australia is now presenting the entire suite of pictures from leading contemporary photographer Trent Parke’s iconic 2006–09 series The Christmas Tree Bucket in the NGA Collection Display – on view until September 2026. A tender and irreverent portrayal of his extended family coming together to celebrate Christmas, the series encapsulates Parke’s distinctive visual style and skilful use of light and colour, lensing suburban shibboleths with raw documentary candour and an eye for the uncanny that transforms the mundane into something transcendent.

Born in Mulubinba/Newcastle, Parke is one of the most insightful and compelling documentarians of contemporary Australia and the only Australian photographer to have become a member of the prestigious photo agency Magnum. All works from Trent Parke’s extraordinary photographic archive – including remaining editions from The Christmas Tree Bucket – are available to acquire by request, with a selection available to browse and acquire online. For assistance with this collection of photographs please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

Nasim Nasr | Artist Profile

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Nasim Nasr | Artist Profile

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

Alongside Michael Reid Berlin’s career-spanning survey for Nasim Nasr – who will deliver an intimate talk and a personal tour of her exhibition on Saturday, 29 November – the gallery is pleased to present our recent conversation with the Tehran-born, Eora/Sydney-based artist, exploring the ideas, experiences and dualities that have propelled her multifaceted art practice for more than 15 years.

“The enduring thread is the dialogue between East and West – between my past in Iran and my present in Australia,” says Nasr of the connective themes that weave through the works now on view at Michael Reid Berlin. “Each project lives under this umbrella of seeking harmony between two cultural worlds. The narratives often begin with experiences from the East but are articulated and transformed through my life in the West. My work also speaks to the dualities we carry: black and white, pain and joy, the half-hidden and half-revealed. We live in constant tension between control and release, hope and hopelessness, usefulness and uselessness. These opposing forces shape us and form the visual and emotional language running through my practice.”

Now completing the prestigious Cité Internationale des Arts studio residency in Paris, awarded by Creative Australia, Nasr is among the most original and essential voices in Australian contemporary art. Spanning photography, sculpture, performance and installation, her work has been exhibited across Australia and abroad – most recently at Photo London – and is held in major collections, including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Powerhouse Museum, Artbank and the Parliament House Art Collection.

Read our interview with Nasim Nasr below. Works from her solo exhibition can be explored and acquired online HERE, as well as at the gallery and by request.

For all enquiries, or to RSVP to Saturday’s public event, please email colinesoria@michaelreid.com.au

What were some of your early creative influences?

My earliest influences included contemporary artists such as Vanessa Beecroft and Shirin Neshat, whose approaches to performance, the female body and cultural identity deeply shaped my thinking. I was also inspired by European masters like Amedeo Modigliani and Alberto Giacometti, and by Persian poets including Forough Farrokhzad and Sadegh Hedayat. Their emotional depth, sense of vulnerability and explorations of identity have stayed with me throughout my practice.

These influences continue to appear in works such as Erasure (2010), where I reference Farrokhzad by writing and erasing her poetry Rebirth. In Restless (2015), a paragraph from Hedayat about masks and hidden identities is read in multiple languages. My performance Women in Shadow (2011, 2018) also reflects the visual and conceptual inspirations I draw from both Beecroft and Neshat. Across my practice, their impact can be seen in my ongoing focus on double identity, visibility, and the tension between what is revealed and what is concealed.

What ideas, experiences or themes do you return to in your work?

Across my practice, I return to themes shaped by my lived experience as an Iranian-born Australian woman – my first twenty years in Iran and the rest in Australia. Since moving here in 2009, photography and video have become central to my work, and the contrast between growing up under suppression in Iran and now creating freely in Australia continues to inform my narrative. I frequently explore double identity, displacement, cultural bipolarity, and the tension between relief and restriction.
The emotional and cultural contrasts between my life in Iran and my life in Australia remain fundamental. My work often seeks to build a bridge between East and West, between my past and my present. And yet the more I try to escape or erase my past, the more it reappears in my work.

What have been some of your favourite career experiences?

One of the most significant breakthroughs came shortly after I moved to Australia in 2009. In Iran, I had been a painter and drawer focusing on nude female bodies—work I was never allowed to exhibit. When I arrived in Australia, I was taken to Maslin Beach, a nude beach in South Australia, with the idea that I could finally draw freely. Instead, that moment became a turning point. After years of censorship, I suddenly found myself in a place where nudity was permitted, yet I instinctively felt the need to cover myself. This contradiction pushed me toward photography and video, exploring self-censorship and concealment in a free country.

The first photograph I ever took – Image of Liberation (2010) – emerged from this experience and remains my most published work. That moment of cultural shock was also a creative pivot that reshaped my entire practice. Another breakthrough came during COVID, when I began working with glass – a medium I’d never imagined using. I revisited the historical tradition of tear collectors used by women in 17th-century Persia and reimagined them through a contemporary lens. What began as an experiment became a meaningful extension of my practice, and the work was received extremely well. Glass tear collectors have since become an ongoing part of my artistic journey.

Could you tell us about Forty Pages?

Forty Pages began from a place of pain, frustration and exhaustion. Between 2009 and 2015, I was exhibiting internationally while still travelling on an Iranian passport. The process was extremely difficult: visas, interrogations, long airport stops and the constant anxiety of being treated with suspicion. Every journey felt heavy. I wasn’t yet an Australian citizen and became acutely aware of how a single document could control your movement, your freedom, and even your sense of self.

When I finally became an Australian citizen in 2015, I felt compelled to close that chapter by transforming it into art. I used my old Iranian passport and its forty pages filled with stamps, marks and traces of those years of struggle. In the series, the accumulation of stamps becomes a form of scar tissue as I build them onto my face, layer by layer, until I no longer recognise myself.

The iconic portrait where I cover my face shows only Australian entry stamps – symbolising a new identity and a new sense of belonging. Half revealed, half obscured, it reflects the complexity of migration and living between cultures.

Ten years later, I see Forty Pages as an emotional and political self-portrait. It still resonates, especially as global borders and migration debates remain fraught. It reminds me how fragile—and powerful—identity documents can be. Today, I travel freely with my Australian passport, and physical stamps barely exist. The fact that the work continues to speak to others shows that these struggles are not just personal, but global.

How does photography relate to your broader art practice?

Photography is deeply connected to all facets of my practice. The concept always comes first, and then the medium that feels most truthful brings it to life. Photography often becomes the primary form because it captures the immediacy of my emotional and lived experience, particularly through self-portraiture. Using myself as the subject allows me to express personal narratives in the most direct, honest way. But my ideas rarely feel complete in a single form. Video, performance and installation expand the narrative and add layers of meaning. Many works begin as photographs but find deeper resonance through movement, sound or the physical presence of the body.

Although self-portraiture is central, I also cast other models when needed. My very first subjects were my brother and sister, whose presence allowed me to explore identity and family history from different perspectives. In this way, photography becomes both foundation and connective tissue – an entry point that opens into performance, video and installation.

Could you tell us about your latest body of work, Unspoken Words?

Unspoken Words is a photography and video series developed over the past two years in response to witnessing global conflicts and the pressure around speaking – or staying silent. Today, no matter how you speak up, there are consequences; yet remaining silent creates an internal battle. This tension between expression and suppression became the emotional starting point for the work.

I began by reflecting on my own “unspoken words”, the things I carry but often cannot voice. From there, the work expanded into a broader meditation on collective silence, political pressure and the emotional weight of global crises. The melting blue ink in my hands and mouth – formed from an ice cube – became the central metaphor. Blue ink was the first ink I used as a child to learn to write, and it is also the ink used today to sign treaties and documents that govern nations. In the series, the ink represents the fragility of truth, the instability of speech, and the way words can be frozen, controlled or dissolved. Through this visual language, Unspoken Words explores the struggle between voice and silence, the personal and the political, and the weight of what we say and what we don’t.

How do you view the series as a continuation and a departure within your practice?

Most of my recent works – Measure of Love, 33 Beads, Forty Pages, and now Unspoken Words – are studio-based photographic series. In many ways, Unspoken Words continues this direction, but it also marks a shift through its use of blue and its focus on more internal, global conflicts. My process often begins with what I call a “mental pregnancy”– a period of pressure, reflection and emotional build-up. Once the idea is fully formed, I move into the studio and create the work in a single, focused moment. I frequently place myself in the image when the concept emerges from lived experience, because embodying it allows the emotion to transfer directly to the audience.

In 33 Beads, for example, I confronted the tension between holding on and letting go—of memories, objects, traditions. Placing myself physically within the work made the tension feel authentic. Across all these series, the first take is often the strongest – the moment where emotion and concept meet honestly. With Unspoken Words, I continued this approach while pushing into new themes such as silence, consequence and global conflict. The melting ink introduced a new metaphor and visual effect, marking a subtle evolution in my practice while remaining connected to the psychological intensity of my earlier work.

Looking across the works in your Michael Reid Berlin career survey, what themes or shifts define the last decade of your practice?

The enduring thread is the dialogue between East and West – between my past in Iran and my present in Australia. Each project lives under this umbrella of seeking harmony between two cultural worlds. The narratives often begin with experiences from the East but are articulated and transformed through my life in the West.
My work also speaks to the dualities we carry: black and white, pain and joy, the half-hidden and half-revealed. We live in constant tension between control and release, hope and hopelessness, usefulness and uselessness. These opposing forces shape us and form the visual and emotional language running through my practice. Over ten years, you can see the shift from performance and self-portraiture into more experimental works with objects, materials and metaphor. I leave it to the audience to decide whether these works contradict, complement or complete each other. My aim is to open space for viewers to reflect on the tensions and harmonies between these worlds – just as I do in my own life.

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

I am currently working on a fifteen-year video screening survey at the Cité des Arts Auditorium in collaboration with a French pop composer who is creating sound compositions in response to my visuals. Together, we are presenting fifteen years of my video art, accompanied by her live performance – a dialogue between image and sound that highlights the connection between East and West. At the same time, I am developing a new photographic series titled Imprints during my residency. I am also researching a rare 7th-century Persian book, exploring hidden histories of slavery, lust and loneliness experienced by women. This research will inform a new body of work I hope to release next year, alongside potential exhibition opportunities.

PAINTING NOW | Heath Nock

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PAINTING NOW | Heath Nock

  • Artist
    Heath Nock
  • Dates
    4—28 Dec 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Having trained in the classical tenets of still-life oil painting, Mulubinba/Newcastle-based painter Heath Nock now takes an iconoclast’s approach to the genre, expanding its field of vision to encompass found images from the cultural past and treating this eclectic source material as objects to be observed, dissected and remade with a still-life painter’s eye.

Nock applies the techniques of the Dutch masters to fragments of vintage advertising, old photographs and print ephemera – giving painterly weight to images once fleetingly consumed. “Using photos and advertising, cropping to create a new story with a sense of ambiguity,” he explains, “I want the viewer to question the work and be lost in the moment.”

Across his Painting Now series, these reframed relics become the “stuff of life” – playful, nostalgic and laced with irreverence. Nock’s intriguingly cropped, close-up compositions flirt with the language of mid-century magazines and 1970s leisure culture: suntanned bodies hog the frame, childhood snapshots are steeped in a halcyon glow, cigarette models offer a wink of louche, macho laconicism from a time when vice was aspirational. In the artist’s hands, this imagery is both homage and subtle critique – a witty meditation on how masculinity, desire and memory are staged and sold.

Following a landmark year that included a residency in Germany’s prestigious Young Artist Residency Weidingen and an acclaimed exhibition at UTS Gallery, Nock’s first showing with Michael Reid Sydney displays a thrilling expansion of his painterly vocabulary. What begins as an act of appropriation arrives as something more intimate and evocative – a portrait not of the figures he paints, but of the images themselves, newly luminous, transportive and alive.

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

Explore more from Painting Now HERE.

PAINTING NOW | Dhukumul Wanambi

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PAINTING NOW | Dhukumul Wanambi

  • Artist
    Dhukumul Wanambi
  • Dates
    4—28 Dec 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Yirrkala-based artist Dhukumul Waṉambi brings ancestral songlines into motion with Marrakulu Monuk – an animated digital painting that translates her clan’s sacred saltwater miny’tji into luminous, swirling form. “Instead of painting Marrakulu Monuk onto bark with ochres, I wanted to make it digital while staying true to our traditions,” says the artist, who works as a filmmaker and digital artist with The Mulka Project.

Using a self-made digital brush that mimics the fine marwat of Yolŋu bark painting, Waṉambi animates the infinite movement of her Marrakulu homeland’s waters at Gurka’wuy. “My father inspired me to make paintings like this,” she notes of the late artist and cultural leader Mr Waṉambi. “He was the first to take miny’tji that are normally painted onto bark and burial poles, and make them move.”

By transposing cultural knowledge and a time-honoured visual language into the digital realm, Waṉambi continues her father’s legacy of artistic innovation – a mantle shared by her sister, award-winning contemporary artist Gaypalani Waṉambi – and embodies the experimental spirit of Painting Now.

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

Explore more from Painting Now HERE.

PAINTING NOW | Columbiere Tipungwuti

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PAINTING NOW | Columbiere Tipungwuti

  • Artist
    Columbiere Tipungwuti
  • Dates
    4—28 Dec 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Columbiere Tipungwuti paints the celestial figures of Tiwi ceremonial culture – Japarra, the moon-man who brought mortality to the world, and japalinga, the stars whose ochred forms adorn dancers’ bodies in ceremony and yoyi. “I paint Japarra because I want to tell that story from long ago – what he did on earth and keep that story going,” says the artist. The story tells of Japarra’s fateful encounter with Purukuparli and Wai-ai, which led to the death of their child and Japarra’s ascent to the sky, where his white light reminds the Tiwi people of the cycles of life and death.

“In parlingarri – old time – Japarra saw the family out bush; the baby died from the sun, and Japarra wanted to take him up for three days and bring him back alive. But the father said, ‘Karlu’ – ‘no’. After fighting, Japarra flew up and stayed in the sky to become the moon and look down on the whole world. Now everyone around the world can’t come back; they must follow that father and his son and die when it is their time.”

On bark and canvas, Tipungwuti renders the ancestral moon-man in stark black and white, his face striking, solemn and compelling. “Japarra is white – the moon-man has a white body. All the stars are white and the moon is white too,” he explains of his elemental palette, made from white ochre gathered on Country at Wurankuwu.

“I want to share my story and the story of my painting with people from all over the world,” says Tipungwuti, who also has a background in dance – performing ballet in Sydney in the 1980s and yoyi on the Tiwi Islands.

A finalist in the 2024 National Emerging Art Prize, Tipungwuti showed his paintings to great acclaim this year at UNSW Galleries in Parlingarri Amintiya Ningani Awungarra: Old and New, a widely celebrated exhibition curated by José Da Silva with Jilamara Arts. In Painting Now, Tipungwuti continues this lineage, transforming Tiwi creation stories into powerful, luminous images that bridge earth, sky and spirit.

“In years gone by, there was a strong Tiwi tradition of producing nude figurative ironwood carvings that tell [Japarra’s] story,” writes cultural critic and researcher Tristen Harwood. “Tipungwuti’s paintings draw on these important cultural influences to create innovative works grounded in his knowledge of the old stories and connection to longstanding practices of storytelling.”

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

Explore more from Painting Now HERE.

PAINTING NOW | Jo Chew

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PAINTING NOW | Jo Chew

  • Artist
    Jo Chew
  • Dates
    4—28 Dec 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

In the painted worlds of Nipaluna/Hobart-based artist Jo Chew, built forms become vessels for an open-ended meditation on vulnerability, hopefulness, loss and longing. “A poem doesn’t need to describe everything and a song doesn’t need to make sense – I feel it can be the same with a painting,” says the artist, whose vibrant, sun-dappled paintings derive from collaged compositions; fragmentary photographs, drawings and found references spliced together “in the hope of finding something that speaks to me.”

This process achieves an almost trompe-l’œil effect, with her large-scale paintings retaining a collagistic sense of pictorial layering in space – an illusory interweaving of paper and paint, memory and material. In doing so, her practice breathes new life into the medium, in step with the curatorial ambitions of Painting Now.

Despite the work’s compelling ambiguities, themes slowly coalesce through Chew’s Painting Now series, in which house-like structures repeat in various guises and take on poetic resonance. Whether temporary and improvisational – tents and makeshift A-frames – or suggesting past visions of a future utopia – modernist dream houses and geodesic domes – her recurring pitched forms invoke a universal language of shelter, inviting reflections on our longing for refuge and a place to call home.

Brought to life during her final months in her long-term home, Chew’s exploration of how we dwell and what we treasure is tinged with a quiet acceptance of transience. “It doesn’t mean things or places can’t be treasured,” she says. “Just that nothing is really ours to keep.” The artist notes a nostalgic thread running through her constructed images: “A desire to get something back that we can’t quite retrieve,” she says. “But they’re not dark or depressing; I think there’s an appreciation for something from the past and an optimism that something similar might still be found. Many of my works this year have a feeling of something hidden and forming, suggesting a period of rest and reflection; cocoon-like, perhaps.”

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

Explore more from Painting Now HERE.

PAINTING NOW | Brenton Drechsler

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PAINTING NOW | Brenton Drechsler

  • Artist
    Brenton Drechsler
  • Dates
    4—28 Dec 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

South Australian contemporary painter Brenton Drechsler joins Painting Now 2025 with his most ambitious body of work to date. A two-time National Emerging Art Prize finalist who recently joined the stable of artists represented by Michael Reid Northern Beaches and Southern Highlands after a succession of sold-out solo shows at both spaces, Drechsler has taken Painting Now as an opportunity to significantly dial up his work’s scale and scope while honing the distinctive visual language for which he is already widely celebrated. On his largest canvases yet, Drechsler’s work attains a newly cinematic heft, deepening the ongoing dialogue between visibility and concealment – belonging and displacement – that emerges from his queer subjectivity and animates his visually dazzling, conceptually rich practice.

Within these expansive and arresting compositions, recurring motifs appear in deliberately “foreign” spaces: vintage cars, building facades and flashes of the artist’s trademark green-and-white stripe. “The stripes stand in for my physical self,” he says. “They take up space and attract attention – things that don’t come naturally to me.” That double movement – to stand out and blend in at once – threads through the series with quiet persistence.

A curatorial prompt to consider the visual language of auteurs such as Wes Anderson became a springboard for a bolder palette and dramatic sensibilities befitting the work’s broader scale. Here, punchy pinks and cardamom reds meet tender tonal harmonies, while precise drawing loosens into gestural passages; “mistakes” remain visible as signs of the artist’s hand. “Dean encouraged me to look at cinematic devices and framing,” says Drechsler. “It opened me up to composition in new ways – to big reds, saturated pinks and how colour can create mood.”

Drechsler describes these adventures in colour as both exciting and somewhat nerve-racking. “Are they too much?” he wonders. “Maybe. But that tension is part of what it means to make art as an emerging queer artist. The overarching message is that we all fit, wherever we are, and that we are valued and belong in any room we occupy. Painting taught me that.”

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

Explore more from Painting Now HERE.

Private Collection

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Private Collection

  • Artist
    Sidney Nolan, William Dobell, Elioth Gruner, Arthur Boyd, Tom Roberts
  • Dates
    17 Nov—12 Dec 2025
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Spanning the late 19th to mid 20th centuries, this private art collection from Perth, Western Australia, has been steadily assembled over the past twenty years.

The purpose of this collection has been to delight and intrigue its owner. How each artist delved into their subject has been of central importance to their acquisition. The use of the entire surface, the subject, the play of negative space, and the artist’s unique technique were all carefully considered and contrasted prior to acquisition. Chosen for their strength as art museum–quality examples, the works were selected for their artistic merit rather than the prominence of their makers’ signatures. Each artwork has been appraised as a fine example of its period. Every piece has been collected with an eye for the object itself—not, as can often be the case, in the spirit of the trophy collector who pursues a signature above all else.

After decades of collecting with vigour and curiosity, the collector–now in a downsizing phase–has decided to release a portion of the collection to the market. This presents a rare opportunity to acquire fresh and compelling artworks that would sit comfortably within any art museum or private collection.

Please consider.

– Michael Reid OAM

 

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

Of Cages and Feathers

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Of Cages and Feathers

  • Artist
    Kristin Schnell
  • Dates
    19 Jan—28 Feb 2026
  • Gallery Location
    Berlin

Michael Reid Berlin is delighted to announce Of Cages and Feathers – our forthcoming solo exhibition by German, Baltic Sea–based contemporary photographer Kristin Schnell, who is currently exhibiting her work not far from our Eora/Sydney gallery as a finalist in this year’s prestigious Head On Photo Awards.

Works from Schnell’s first Michael Reid solo presentation – are now available to preview and acquire by request ahead of her show’s official opening in January 2026.
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“My bird models are originally from Australia. Colonial trade carried their ancestors to Europe, and generations have lived behind bars, far from their natural habitats,” says Schnell, whose Head On–shortlisted work is showing at Paddington Reservoir Gardens until this Sunday, 30 November. “With the Head On Festival exhibition, they return home – at least visually – and that makes me very happy.

Staged with colourful, geometric sets and lighting that cleverly quotes the poppy, slick visual language of commercial photography – devoid of any natural context but for a hint of trees and sky – Schnell’s pictures pull focus to her feathered subjects’ beauty and quizzical interactions. Yet by pointing to the inherent strangeness of pet culture and the confinement of wildlife for human amusement, the artist also allows a subtle melancholy to creep into her otherwise bright, sunny scenes.

 

To sign up for first access to editions of works selected to feature in Of Cages and Feathers by Kristin Schnell, please contact our Berlin gallery manager, Coline Soria, colinesoria@michaelreid.com.au

The Stars Before Us All | Washington, D.C.

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The Stars Before Us All | Washington, D.C.

  • Artist
    Regina Pilawuk Wilson, Emily Kam Kngwarray, Betty Chimney, Gaypalani Wanambi, Owen Yalandja, Timo Hogan, Rover Thomas, Rammey Ramsey, Nici Cumpston OAM, Charlie Tjapangati, Djirrirra Wunuŋmurra Yukuwa, Dr Christian Thompson AO, Garry Namponan, Lex Namponan, Maureen Ali, Jennifer Brown, Sylvia Marragawaidj, Vicki Yatjiki Cullinan, Leigh Namponan and Nancy Jackson.
  • Dates
    15 Oct—9 Nov 2025
  • Catalogue
    Download now
  • Gallery Location
    1717 K St NW Washington DC

Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin is thrilled to present The Stars Before Us All: Australian First Nations Art – an expansive exhibition in Washington, D.C. that brings together new and collectible work by more than 20 luminaries of contemporary Australian First Nations art.

The Stars Before Us All is showing from October 15 to November 10 at Michael Reid Galleries’ temporary exhibition space at 1717 K St NW, Washington, D.C. (1000 Connecticut Ave NW building) in the U.S. capital’s downtown Golden Triangle district.

With a focus on living, practicing artists – whose extraordinary work continues cultural traditions on a continuum spanning 65,000 years – The Stars Before Us All echoes the work of the National Gallery of Victoria, whose concurrent exhibition, The Stars We Do Not See, begins its two-year North American tour at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Curated by Myles Russell-Cook, the NGV’s ambitious show is the largest presentation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art ever staged outside Australia, representing a watershed moment for First Nations artists on the world stage. Michael Reid Galleries’ concurrent presentation, The Stars Before Us All, meets this moment with a dazzling and diverse collection of more than 30 works by many of the most important and acclaimed voices in Australian contemporary art.

The Stars Before Us All opens a window into an extraordinary contemporary art tradition,” says our founder and chairman, Michael Reid OAM. “It reveals a culture that, after millennia of relative isolation, has in the last two decades burst onto the global stage, offering audiences not only works of great aesthetic power but also a vision of art as continuity, survival, renewal and growth. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art is not just Australia’s unique addition to the art world. It is among the world’s oldest, deepest, most original and ever-evolving art traditions.”

The Stars Before Us All marks a major milestone – not just for our gallery, but for Australian art more broadly,” says Michael Reid Galleries director Toby Meagher. “To present these extraordinary First Nations artists in Washington, D.C., alongside a landmark National Gallery of Victoria touring exhibition, underscores the growing global significance of Indigenous voices in contemporary art.”

The Stars Before Us All marks the United States debut for many of the show’s stars, including Yolŋu artist Gaypalani Wanambi, recipient of the $100,000 Telstra Art Award at this year’s Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA). Joining Wanambi are many of her fellow NATSIAA alumni, including Kuninjku artist Owen Yalandja; Pitjantjatjara artist Timo Hogan; and Ngan’gikurrungurr painter, master weaver and cultural leader Regina Pilawuk Wilson, who is visiting the United States for the occasion and was our the guest of honour at the show’s opening celebration.

For all enquiries, please email tobymeagher@michaelreid.com.au or hughholm@michaelreid.com.au

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