COAST
©GrahamSinclair_Austinmer
with

AMY RAYMOND

Sydney, NSW


AMY RAYMOND is a Sydney-based LANDSCAPE artist creating unique seascapes that focus on the ever changing colours and textures of the ocean, beaches and rock pools that surround us. With a strong emphasis on the coastal lifestyle of Sydneysiders, Amy seeks to capture the movement and energy, often not only of the landscape but those who inhabit it. Amy’s art practice blurs the lines between realism and abstraction, with elements such as her unique figures representing life within the landscape rather than the individual. Colour and vibrancy are a recurring aesthetic that is used to spark a joyous and nostalgic response by the viewer. 



AMY RAYMOND  BONDI BATHERS,  2023 Acrylic and Ink on canvas 103x103cm

AMY RAYMOND  SOMEWHERE I’D RATHER BE, 2023 Acrylic and Ink on canvas 103x103cm, framed

AMY MATHIE

Woolongong, NSW

 

AMY MATHIE is an emerging artist from the Woolongong Coastal region who works full time as an art teacher.  When she has time, she enjoys painting landscapes on discarded stretcher frames she happens upon and immersing herself in the world of digital art.

AMY MATHIE  KIAMA COASTAL WALK  Oil on Canvas  94x94cm, float framed in Tasmanian Oak

Donald Keys

Balgownie, NSW


DONALD KEYS is not a narrative painter, but more a chronicler of Australian life—his works are figurative, and delineated in a contemporary realist style. Keys paints using vibrant colours that are quintessentially Australian. Early works displayed quite visible brush strokes to enhance texture which gave them a tactile quality while later works  focussed more on light and shade for depth and emotion. Donald's works generally feature people enjoying their leisure time surrounded by a mix of man-made structures, and the natural beauty of the Australian landscape. Keys has featured in over sixty exhibitions—twenty-one of those being solo shows.  

“I tend to see things with a colourful, more positive outlook, and have no desire to create images that depict ugly, sad situations.  Hopefully, when one views my paintings, they will see a moment in time in an optimistic light.” 


DONALD KEYS WALK OR SWIM 

38x23cm, framed or 15x9” 

syntetic polymer on wood panel


DONALD KEYS THE SHOW OFF

synthetic polymer on wood panel
23x38cm, framed

DONALD KEYS DIVE OVER IT

Synthetic polymer on wood panel
23x38cm, framed

AMY RAYMOND

Sydney, NSW


AMY RAYMOND is a Sydney-based LANDSCAPE artist creating unique seascapes that focus on the ever changing colours and textures of the ocean, beaches and rock pools that surround us. With a strong emphasis on the coastal lifestyle of Sydneysiders, Amy seeks to capture the movement and energy, often not only of the landscape but those who inhabit it. Amy’s art practice blurs the lines between realism and abstraction, with elements such as her unique figures representing life within the landscape rather than the individual. Colour and vibrancy are a recurring aesthetic that is used to spark a joyous and nostalgic response by the viewer. 



AMY RAYMOND  BONDI BATHERS,  2023 

Acrylic and Ink on canvas 
103x103cm, framed

AMY RAYMOND  SOMEWHERE I’D RATHER BE, 2023 

Acrylic and Ink on canvas 
103x103cm, framed

AMY MATHIE

Woolongong, NSW

 

Amy is an emerging artist from the Woolongong Coastal region who works full time as an art teacher. When she has time, she enjoys painting landscapes on discarded stretcher frames she happens upon and immersing herself in the world of digital art.



AMY MATHIE  'KIAMA COASTAL WALK'   

Oil on canvas 
94x94cm, float framed in Tasmanian Oak

DONALD KEYS 

Balgownie, NSW


Donald Keys is not a narrative painter, but more a chronicler of Australian life—his works are figurative, and delineated in a contemporary realist style. Keys paints using vibrant colours that are quintessentially Australian. Early works displayed quite visible brush strokes to enhance texture which gave them a tactile quality while later works  focussed more on light and shade for depth and emotion. Donald's works generally feature people enjoying their leisure time surrounded by a mix of man-made structures, and the natural beauty of the Australian landscape. Keys has featured in over sixty exhibitions—twenty-one of those being solo shows.  

“I tend to see things with a colourful, more positive outlook, and have no desire to create images that depict ugly, sad situations.  Hopefully, when one views my paintings, they will see a moment in time in an optimistic light.” 


DONALD KEYS WALK OR SWIM 

Synthetic polymer on wood panel

38x23cm, framed

DONALD KEYS THE SHOW OFF

Synthetic polymer on wood panel

38x23cm

DONALD KEYS DIVE OVER IT

synthetic polymer on wood panel 
38X23cm


 GRAHAM SINCLAIR

 Thirroul, NSW

Graham Sinclair has a specific passion for reconstructing the landscape and still life through painting or sculpture.  He seeks inspiration from the typical such as the sea and the bush, as well as the nuances of the natural and built environments not always apparent but always around us. Graham is a Thirroul based artist, and active member of the visual arts community in the Illawarra and Southern Highlands, he is proud to have his works held in the collections of a number of galleries in Australia, as well as in private collections both in Australia and overseas.


©GrahamSinclair_Austinmer

GRAHAM SINCLAIR  AUSTINMER

Acrylic on Canvas
100x100cm    

GRAHAM SINCLAIR  WANIORA 

Acrylic on canvas
90x90cm SOLD
©GrahamSinclair_LittleAusti

GRAHAM SINCLAIR   LITTLE AUSTI  

Acrylic on canvas  
100x100cm 

IAN FLEMING

Gundaroo, NSW


Ian Fleming is an emerging artist who focuses mainly on painting landscapes that are inspired by his bush surrounds and using his painting techniques to create digital art & virtual reality environments.  Having just completed an honours degree in visual art from the ANU School of Art, Ian now works full time out of his home studio in Gundaroo,NSW. "Illuminating the world with his painting",  Fleming creates his atmospheric landscapes from photos rather than ‘en plein aire’  as he takes up the challenge of transforming paint into light, form and texture,  his interest is to "create art for arts' sake (and to make a living)". 


IAN FLEMING  PORTO LOUTRO BAY, CRETE  2023 

Oil on board
64x48cm, framed in Tasmanian Oak
IanFleming_Winteralong theTafifaCoast

IAN FLEMING  PORTO LOUTRO BAY, CRETE   2023 

Oil on board 
64x48cm, framed in Tasmanian Oak 

JACKIE ANDERSON

New Lambton, NSW


Jackie Anderson’s art practice explores new ways of interpreting both built and natural landscapes into abstract form.  Naturally drawn to the surrounds of her hometown in Newcastle NSW, Jackie thrives on its daily source of inspiration.

"I am endlessly inspired by the coastal surroundings here in my home of Newcastle, and the constant state of flux that the changing tides bring to the shoreline and beach environs."


JACKIE ANDERSON
OCEAN BATHS AT DAWN   2023
Mixed media on canvas
53x53x5cm, framed in Ash

JACKIE ANDERSON  OCEAN BATHS AT DAWN 2023 

mixed media on canvas, 
53x53x5cm, Framed in Ash
JACKIE ANDERSON
MARKERS IN THE SAND  2023
Mixed media on canvas
23x23x5cm, framed in Ash

JACKIE ANDERSON MARKERS IN THE SAND 2023 

Mixed media on canvas 
23x23x5cm, framed in Ash
JackieAnderson_TideLines

JACKIE ANDERSON TIDE LINE 2023 

mixed media on canvas 
23x23x5cm, framed in Ash 

JENNIFER BAIRD

Canberra, ACT

Jennifer Baird is a mid-career, multimedia artist, working across painting, collage and printmaking.  Baird trained as a textile designer screen printing on fabric, igniting a passion when she began screen printing on paper at Megalo Print studios in Canberra, where most recently she has been exploring lithography printing.   The move to the ACT over ten years ago saw Baird move away from her well known gouache seascapes to exploring the urban and rural landscapes around her new hometown, her style and colour palette also evolving, taking on a more minimalist approach through simplistic shapes and hard edges.   Seascapes still strongly feature with regular trips to the South Coast expressed through oil paint and screen printing. "coastal content keeps me in touch with her coastal origins" 

JENNIFER BAIRD  FROM CURRARONG  

oil on canvas 63x63cm, 
framed in oak

JESSICA OLPP

Melbourne,  VIC


JESSICA OLPP grew up in the beautiful bushlands of Warrandyte, and has lived and worked in France.  A self-taught artist,  Jessica began painting in 2020 as a means of self-expression and creating moments of calm in her busy life as a French teacher. Finding inspiration in ‘quiet’ colour palettes and the landscapes of both Australia and France, Olpp has recently begun to explore still life in her art practice, she is currently based in Caulfield North, Melbourne.


JessicaOlpp TOMBÉE de la NUIT DANS la BAIE  2023

JESSICA OLPP  TOMBÉE de la NUIT DANS la BAIE 2023

KATE CARRUTHERS

Braidwood, NSW

KATE CARRUTHERS CALALA BEACH,  2023  

Oil on Ply
100x50cm

KATE is a landscape painter from Scotland, living in Braidwood, NSW. Kate is one half of Braidwood Clayworks, who have been running pottery workshops and creating wheelthrown stoneware and one-off ceramic pots out of their back garden pottery in Braidwood for over 5 years..

KATE CARRUTHERS WIMBLE BEACH, 2023 

Oil on ply 
40x30cm

KATE CARRUTHERS   MALUA BAY, 2023  

Oil on ply, 
40x30cm

MICHAEL WARNER

Braidwood, NSW

Michael is one half of Braidwood Clayworks, who have been running pottery workshops and creating wheelthrown stoneware and one-off ceramic pots out of their back garden pottery in Braidwood for over 5 years.


ROBYN BOOTH

Sutton, NSW

Robyn has been working as a ceramicist over many years - Robyn's practice is refreshingly varied, evidence of her skill and confidence in the medium is her continuous experimental approach with form and application.   After years of teaching and working out of various spaces Robyn has set up her own kiln & ceramic studio on her rural property in Sutton, NSW. 


©RobynBooth_whalegirl pod

ROBYN BOOTH   WHALE GIRL POD 

Slip cast, clear glazed midfire clay 

VERONICA O'LEARY

Tathra, NSW

VERONICA'S landscape and still life paintings are informed by her dedication to the act of drawing from the natural world.  She has an extensive collection of artist books kept from travels in Australia, Brazil, Samoa, Sri Lanka and Jordan and these often become the source for further developed paintings. 

O’Leary’s base is now her coastal studio in Tathra NSW where she teaches art classes and paints out of.  Initially trained at the Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne, Veronica later went on to complete a Masters in Visual Art at Charles Sturt University and lectured in Creative and Visual Arts at TAFEs and colleges around Australia. Her interest in painting landscape is a response to the environment in which she lives and works. In recent years she has explored the impact of fire on Australia’s changing landscape in a series of large oils which capture a fierce intensity and energy.  She has been a multiple finalist in the Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize and the Mosman Art Prize. She was also a finalist in the NSW Countryscapes Landscape Award, the Noosa Gallery Art Award and the Meroogal Historic Trust Award.

In 2020 she was shortlisted as a finalist in the Glover Prize and awarded the Hangers Choice Award and the People’s Choice Award. She was also selected as a finalist for the John Leslie Landscape Prize. Her concertina book 'A Surfeit of Tastes' was Highly Commended in the works on paper section of the Tastes of Art, Rutherglen Art Prize.

VERONICA O'LEARY STORM OVER TATHRA

Oil on board
33x33cm, framed

VERONICA O'LEARY STORM OVER TATHRA 

Oil on board 
33x33cm, framed

VERONICA O'LEARY BACKWASH 

 Oil on board 
 44X55cm, framed

VERONICA O'LEARY STORM OVER TATHRA 

 Oil on board 
 33x33cm, framed

VERONICA O'LEARY STORM OVER TATHRA 

 Oil on board 
 33x33cm, framed


Senga Peckham

VIC, Australia


From The Garden Series 

The Kanji symbol for the Japanese concept of ‘Ma’ combines ‘door’ and ‘sun’, together the two characters depict a door through the crevice of which the sunlight peeps in. Lockdowns and restrictions have made us pause in our regular activities, it is an interval in time, a silence almost between the beginning and the end, uncertain and unpredictable but also a space/an emptiness full of possibilities, the door slightly open for change and the sunlight peeping through. These cyanotype prints in the ‘from the garden’ series made during covid restrictions in Victoria explore this concept of ‘Ma’. Using resources close to hand at home, some Japanese paper left over from another project, converting my laundry to a dim-room and working with plants from the garden and the sun, this meditative process with uncertain and unpredictable results, is full of hope and possibility. 


Bio 


A late arrival to image making, Peckham uses photography to explore the impermanence and interconnectedness of all things, encouraging the viewer to pause and see beyond what is immediately present. During covid restrictions in Victoria she chose to experiment with the slow-paced, unpredictable alternative photographic processes, recycling available material close to hand and honouring nature, to create unique one off prints of lumens, cyanotypes and botanical contact prints. Peckham’s interest in photography was nurtured through an MA in Museum Studies, several photography courses in London and enhanced as a board member of the Ballarat International Foto Biennale for several years in addition to assistant to the Festival Director and curatorial responsibilities. Peckham has exhibited in solo and group shows both nationally and internationally. 

Maxine Salvatore

VIC, Australia


Senza Protezione

I have named this unique state cyanotype of a knight’s cuirass, Senza Protezione (No Protection). All’s well and good on the fighting front until a new breed of virus launches itself into existence. While the exquisitely etched breastplate may protect the chest against violent physical assaults, it is rendered useless upon the inspiration of a minute viral organism. 

Eva Schroeder

ACT, Australia


By the end of Canberra’s first Lockdown in 2020 I felt the need to discover something new – a deep craving to learn, to create by hand, and to be surprised! Simultaneously, my passion for photography remained the stable foundation from which I wanted to spring into this new discovery. In this frame of mind, I decided to take part in a Cyanotype Workshop held by PhotoAccess here in Canberra. Whilst relatively simple in technique, the minimalistic quality of the Cyanotype, the beauty of the blue, and nature’s printing potential were all responsible for rekindling my creativity! 

Kim Sinclair

Sutton, NSW


Skull & Blooms, 2021

Throughout the recent lockdown, Kim has turned her focus on her surroundings, exploring the flora & fauna that exists on the NSW rural property she lives at with her family.   Living on a property means living closely with nature and being real witness to the evolution of life.   Skull & Blooms is both a reference to this cycle of life and a response to the tension felt during lockdown;  while spring bursts into life, the psyche still feels a 'dormancy' from ongoing lockdown that persist as a result of the health pandemic gripping the world and ending lives.


Aritst Bio

Kim Sinclair obtained a BFA from the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto, Canada, majoring in Photomedia. At a time when photography was entering its’ digital revolution, Kim continued her work utilising traditional silver gelatin and film print methods, telling stories through multiple imagery, layering techniques and sequencing methods. Largely influenced by her drawing & painting background, her loose brush work, painterly application and hands-on arrangements became integral components to the final aesthetic and common characteristics recognised throughout much of her early work. Sinclair’s considered composition, cropping, and inclusion of fragments of information within an image are all intentional components of the narrative, significant to the story she is conveying. Since moving to Canberra in 2001, Kim has tutored many classes in traditional darkroom and alternative photographic practices and continues to produce, exhibit and contribute to art projects including, more recently, her investigations in printmaking practices.


Ian Skinner

ACT, Australia


‘Simple as a flower’ series

“… simple, as a flower, blooms …”

The title of this series refers to the 1968 poem Auto Wreck by Karl Shapiro in which he tries to makesense of senseless death. In the appalling analogy of this line of the poem Shapiro is referring to cancer, however the analogy could apply to any disease. When preparing for this exhibition I noticed the physical similarities between the radial inflorescence of Acacia flowers and the corona-like structure of the Covid virus. I have arranged individual blooms in ways to express the process of infection through proximity.


Distancing Years Cyanotype collage

This collage explores not only the idea of our preventative physical distancing during the pandemic,

but also the divisions that have been increasing in our politics, friendships and associations as the

views of science and emotion tear at our civility.

The offset grid is fragile and slightly haphazard, set against a whirling and confused background.




Carolyn Young


Eliza and the Satin Bowerbird

During the first Covid-19 lockdown I felt there was more time for observing birds. Just prior to this period, I had been researching John Gould, the 19th century English naturalist who was nicknamed ‘The Birdman’, and who travelled to Australia to research his book, “The Birds of Australia”. In researching the life and work of John Gould, I began to learn more about his wife Eliza, also his illustrator, and who accompanied him to Australia. Apart from her legacy of drawings, not much else remained of Eliza in the public domain. Wanting to celebrate Eliza’s life, I created an artwork that features a portrait of her sitting inside the outline of a male Satin Bowerbird (derived from one her illustrations). In the background is an extract from one of her letters home, to her mother in England, which includes descriptions of the birds encountered.


A Lunata & A Rubida

These wet cyanotypes are of wattle collected off my property in the past 2 weeks. Nature learning has been a big covid-lockdown focus (for me and a bunch of my friends anyway).



Artist Bio

Carolyn Young is a visual artist based in the Canberra Region, who specialises in photography. Her artworks engage in ideas around land stewardship and the relationship of human beings to the environment, and often involves collaboration with ecologists. Carolyn holds a PhD in Visual Arts from The Australian National University (2017), and honours degree in Natural Resources. Carolyn has exhibited extensively, been the recipient of several grants including the Friends of the National Library Creative Arts Fellowship 2018 and photography prizes including the 2016 CCP Salon Pat 

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