
Sandi Rigby at Grace Cossington Smith Gallery

Promotion of Australian printmaking and members work.


Ro Murray is a multi-disciplinary artist, who moves between Mt Victoria, Sydney and Killcare. Her art practice is influenced by a career in architecture and later attending the National Art School. Since 2018 her practice has focussed on lino printing, both with uncarved blocks of colour and with carved blocks. She builds series of unique and repeated prints. Ro has enlarged her prints into wall paintings and wall constructions. Her recent lino prints on pianola rolls connect narrative and place in a landscape journey. They combine personal experiences of the location with topographic and historical research.
Ro has staged many solo exhibitions and been selected for many art prizes and awards. In the last year her printed rolls were selected for the Canberra Art Biennial, Arte Laguna Prize Venice, and Artist Book Awards Manly Library, and acquired by the State Library NSW.
She is part of the mountains-based collaboration Murray and Burgess making installations about the environment, and a committee member of Modern Art Projects Blue Mountains.
www.romurray.com.au @romurray



STILL: National Still Life Award is Yarrila Arts and Museum’s national biennial acquisitive art award. Established in 2017, STILL aims to recognise excellence, diversity and innovation in contemporary still life practice while broadening the interpretation of this enduring genre.
STILL: National Still Life Award is open to artists at all stages of their practice and working across all mediums, including but not limited to painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture, video and installation.
STILL 2025 has a prize pool of $36,000.
Awards
STILL: National Still Life Award: $30,000 (acquisitive)
Coffs Coast Artist Award: $5,000
People’s Choice Award: $1,000
Award winners will be selected by a panel of judges.
Key dates
Applications open 1 April, 9am
Entries close 6 July
Finalists announced 18 July
Artwork deliveries 11-15 August
Exhibition opens Saturday 6 September
Exhibition closes Sunday 9 November
Key information
Artist must be an Australian Resident
Artists may submit up to 3 entries.
Download the Conditions of Entry here
ENTER HERE
Do you have a question? Email us at still@chcc.nsw.gov.au

Recycled Dreams: My Journey with Paper and Pulp
I have recurring dreams that infiltrate my life and influence my practice. One of these dreams is of endless hills of discarded clothing, and the quality of the dream is that I must find homes for every item. A heavy weight to bear. Coupled with growing up on a remote dairy farm with an acute awareness of resource limitation, I vividly remember my mother repurposing old cloth to make new clothes for me. These experiences are some of the reasons why recycled cotton pulp medium is at the forefront of my practice, alongside my concern for the environmental issues that fast fashion causes.
I am also drawn to and affected by undulating textural elements in my lived environment. When I traverse the cityscape, I photograph and mentally absorb surfaces for future reference in my studio. Textures of hard mottled concrete, brick and bitumen surfaces sprayed with paint by graffiti artists, council and construction workers hold my attention.
My pulp medium is made from a cutting, tearing, and mechanical beating process of cotton clothing and domestic cloth. I receive donated used cloth from my immediate community, holding the accompanying story of each item along with my own experiences to retell stories through the medium of pulp prints and objects that are meticulously layered with delicately sprayed textural surfaces.
I am constantly developing my practice and learning new techniques. I find traveling and visiting artists’ studios an important part of my practice. Most recently, I was accepted as an artist-in-residence at the Morgan Conservatory in Cleveland, USA, where I had a month to explore my practice using top facilities and to share and learn new techniques.
While I was in America, I visited New York City and Dia Beacon gallery where I was deeply inspired. One artist who particularly moved me was Senga Nengudi, for the way they use weight and color in their sculptures. Another significant influence is Katharina Grosse, whose immersive, large-scale painted installations challenge conventional relationships between architecture and painting. Grosse’s bold approach to color and texture resonates with my own explorations in pulp medium, inspiring me to push boundaries between materiality and space.
Through my work with Sydney Printmakers, I hope to continue exploring these themes of sustainability, texture, and storytelling, bringing my unique perspective on recycled materials to our collective exhibitions and sharing my techniques with fellow artists in the community.
www.instagram.com/melissa_j_harvey


4th Biennial
National Monoprint Prize
Winners Announced

First Prize: Andrew Totman Second Prize: Lesley Duxbury
Exhibition Dates: 24th April – 17th May
FIRESTATION PRINT STUDIO 2 Willis Street Armadale Victoria 3143 Australia Ph 03 95091782
OPEN: Wednesday – Saturday 11am – 4pm
View 35 selected Monoprints HERE

Now in its 13th year, the biennial Hazelhurst Art on Paper Award promotes excellence and innovation in the field of art on paper while supporting and encouraging artists who specialise in this medium.
Curator of the exhibition, Dr Victoria Wynne-Jones, tells ArtsHub, “The most interesting thing about the Award is that paper is not just a medium – it can also be the subject matter.”
She continues, “In the past we’ve had quite large-scale installations, we’ve had photographs printed on paper, we’ve video installations incorporating paper – they all engage with the materiality of paper without making work on paper.”
Wynne-Jones says the Award has a broad remit of material definitions, and can include painting, drawing, sculpture, installation, photography, mixed media, performance and video. Over the history of the Award, Wynne-Jones says she has observed that artists have become “more creative and innovative. I think every time works are chosen by the judge to be the winners, they sort of push the envelope”. She adds that some of the works have also become more expansive in scale with time.
Entries for the Hazelhurst Art on Paper Award have opened and, with a prize pool of $26,000 and an average of 80 finalists chosen each year, it is a good one to consider. The judge for this year’s prize is Daniel Mudie Cunningham, a previous Curator at Hazelhurst Arts Centre, and now Director of Wollongong Art Gallery.
Wynne-Jones says that, as a curator working on the Award exhibition , she has found its diversity “quite liberating”, adding that she is “an artist-led curator, and I just try and create a cohesive journey for gallery visitors through the space”.

Simply, the Award recognises outstanding artworks created with, on, or about paper. It is about celebrating the potential of paper as a medium for artistic expression.
Wynne-Jones reflects, “I think often, still in this day and age, art is very hierarchical, and painting reigns supreme. It’s just nice to have an award that celebrates paper, and I think differentiating it from drawing is a key aspect. While drawing is a preparatory process for many artists, the Award demonstrates that working on paper is an end in itself.”
She adds that this very familiarity with paper as a material makes the exhibition extremely accessible. “I think it’s very elemental,” says Wynne-Jones. “I feel like working with paper is something humans have been doing for a very long time. I guess, if you think about it, drawing on paper is the first art that we make as children. So it’s very accessible in that way too.”
Wynne-Jones continues: “It can also be quite an intimate medium. And, in this day and age, there’s also the element that it is a natural material, so it’s biodegradable and not terribly hard on the environment. That’s probably an added attraction for many artists. And it’s also very cheap (!), which also makes it accessible.” And her tips for entering? “Just take risks and be brave.”

The exhibition has closed, but Sasha’s review remains of interest
Launch of Art of Roslyn Kean and opening of Ground Lines. March 2025
I first encountered the work of Roslyn Kean over thirty years ago, many years before I met the artist. I was blown away by its sense of spiritual presence – its ability to draw you in from the outside world and to create a meditative oasis. I love that experience of surrendering to a work of art and being drawn into a special realm, that once a medieval cleric described as neither existing entirely in the slime of earth nor entirely in the purity of heaven, a realm in which you can contemplate an alternative, spiritual reality.
It came as a bit of a shock, when I first met Roz Kean – this very organised, hyperactive person who seemed to cram into 24 hours what we mere mortals could manage in about a week. I suppose I imagined her to be some sort of Zen Buddhist mystic reciting a haiku, instead of a highly organised and committed artist with her feet firmly planted on the ground and living in the here and now.
As a Mokuhanga artist, Roz Kean has travelled an unusual path. As an artist, she initially trained in Sydney, then at the Slade in London and, only after that, while studying in Tokyo and already in her early thirties, she became completely seduced by Japanese traditional woodblock printmaking and has devoted the rest of her life to its study – in Japan, in Tibet and elsewhere. If in Australia, we had a different cultural framework and respected our artists as much as we respect our sportspeople, we would celebrate her as a national living treasure.
A few years ago, when we embarked on our collaborative journey of working on this monograph, I came to understand the richness and complexity of her oeuvre. Roz Kean has never been a derivative artist – not at least since she left her teens – she grasps techniques and concepts and then creates art that is intrinsically her own. Prints in this Ground Lines exhibition could not have been made by any other artist. The blend of the organic and the geometric, the intricacy of the woodcutting technique and the ethereal sense of beauty are all a hallmark of her art.
She is also a thinking artist, one who rarely repeats herself and with each exhibition or with each new body of work, there is a conceptual development – creating a new thematic unity within the exhibition. I signed off on the text of the book in December 2023, so when writing a book on a living artist it is always a ‘work in progress’ and, if the timeline was different, I would have included some of the prints from this Ground Lines exhibition in the book. What I find quite exciting about this exhibition is that the artist adopts what I could term an earth worm’s perspective on the world yet through it examines the whole universe, almost conceived as a universal statement.
Prints, including the Ground Lines diptych, Lines from my Garden and Enshrined in the City, are wonderful contemplations on how the microenvironment affects the global macroenvironment. If one thinks of the closest we come to in English literature to a haiku, William Blakes’s “To see a World in a Grain of Sand / And a Heaven in a Wild Flower,/ Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand / And Eternity in an hour.” In this exhibition, Roz Kean presents for our contemplation, how an invasive weed from a manicured lawn can affect the whole environment and how the spot where water and earth meet can more broadly designate the meeting of the celestial and the terrestrial. She gives voice to the murmurings of water and to the wind in the grass; and she explores the patterns of steppingstones or the fence posts in a paddock. It is a question of contemplation and, through the help of the artworks, we are introduced to a greater and more universal reality.
As an art community, we need to take ourselves seriously and speak with dignity and respect about our tribal elders – the art tribe in general and the tribe of printmakers in particular. Roslyn Kean is one of our tribal elders – an exceptional artist – an exceptional technician, thinker, innovator, teacher and creator. Beagle Press, that for the past 45 years has established a reputation for publishing important books on Australian art and artists, books of exceptionally high production quality, and has been our collaborator on this volume. I hope that you will find this as a serious and beautiful book – over 200 pages with a text of about 50,000 words and profusely illustrated. Hopefully this will set a benchmark for the publication of monographs on contemporary Australian printmakers.
Today, for me, it is a double humbling honour. The first is to open this outstanding exhibition – Ground Lines, and the second, to launch of this glorious book – The art of Roslyn Kean. Both present a celebration of the work of one of our most significant contemporary artists – Roslyn Kean.
Sasha Grishin

Andy Totman, Gary Shinfield and Lois Waters have been selected as Finalists in this Prize. Congratulations to all!

Artists and designers from across Australia, including young people aged 7 to 18 years, are invited to submit work on the theme of the environment.
This is your chance to be part of the conversation around climate issues and inspire a sustainable future.
A $46,000 prize pool across 4 categories:
This year’s esteemed judges are contemporary artist Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran and design curator Keinton Butler.
Entries close 19 May.
Enter the 2025 Environmental Art & Design Prize
Submissions close Monday 19 May 2025, 5pm.

Lois Waters was the overall winner of the Burnie Print Prize with her work Pleat 4.