previous Exhibitions
Sydney Contemporary 2024
At Sydney Contemporary 2024, Alcaston Gallery is proud to present a curated selection of significant work by leading Australian contemporary artists whose practice inspires and challenges the national and international perception of the Australian landscape, Djakaŋu Yunupiŋu, Betty Kuntiwa Pumani, Dean Smith and the late Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori (c.1924 - 2015) - four artists intrinsically connected to a particular landscape or skyscape in Australia; a Country or place embedded in their knowledge and recalled from memory in their practice.
Visit Alcaston Gallery at Booth G01 - Carriageworks, Gadigal Land/Sydney, 5-8 September 2024.
Djakaŋu Yunupiŋu
Distinguished Yolŋu artist and winner of the prestigious 2024 Wynne Prize, presented by the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney, Djakaŋu Yunupiŋu presents a breathtaking collection of largescale monochromatic paintings on reclaimed timber board, bark, paper and larrakitj (hollowed tree trunk). Yunupiŋu’s celestial paintings depict the Djulpan story, the Yolŋu Poetic Law of the Pleiades constellation, in her own retelling of the inherited knowledge passed down to her by her father. A rising star in Australian contemporary art, Yunupiŋu is celebrated for her sublime and sophisticated interpretations of Yolŋu knowledge.
Betty Kuntiwa Pumani
Highly respected ngangkari (traditional healer) and one of Australia’s most distinctive and sophisticated painters, Betty Kuntiwa Pumani is renowned for her visionary compositions of her ancestral Country, Antara in northwest South Australia. Beyond the visual landscape, Pumani's paintings of Antara speak to deeper resonances relating to family, ancestors, and inherited knowledge, becoming part of the ongoing, eternal story of her Country. A two-time winner of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards, at the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory; winner of the Wynne Prize, at the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Len Fox Painting Award, at the Castlemaine Art Museum, Pumani is a highly celebrated and sought after artist.
Dean Smith
Internationally renowned ceramicist and painter, Dean Smith's practice draws from his Māori ancestry and his observations of the landscapes of Aotearoa (New Zealand) and Victoria, Australia. Smith’s work conveys the delicate and intangible aspects of a landscape - capturing elusive fleeting moments of colour, light and form. A specialist in his process, Smith’s hand-built ceramic sculptures are commanding and serene, gleaming with their crystalline glazes. His paintings transfer the shimmer of his ceramics to canvas, emitting the light, beauty and vulnerability of the sub-alpine plateau landscapes of Victoria's high-country that has inspired his current collection - a place of metallic snow gums, and ice-laden meadows of grey and violet grasses. Smith' considered practice has been celebrated in several major national and international awards and he has undertaken artist residencies in Taiwan, Denmark and Poland.
Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori (c.1924 - 2015)
Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori (c.1924 - 2015) is one of Australia’s most influential and important contemporary artists. A master of composition and colour, her practice was deeply transformative to the national and international perception and appreciation of the Australian landscape painting, and her oeuvre continues to shape the Australian contemporary art scene.
To mark 100 years since Gabori's birth and to honour her continuing artistic legacy, Alcaston Gallery and the Estate for Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori (c.1924 - 2015) presents an exclusive release of paintings by the late artist. In blushing fuchsia and audacious swathes of reds and oranges these paintings boldly portray Gabori’s home and Country on Bentinck Island, Queensland in the dazzling colour and light of the Gulf of Carpentaria.
Pedro Wonaeamirri • Ngiya Purrungbarri – My Bark Painting
Alcaston Gallery is honoured to present Pedro Wonaeamirri's exhibition Ngiya Purrungbarri – My Bark Painting, the first exclusively bark exhibition of Wonaeamirri's career.
As one of the few Tiwi people of his generation who speaks old or classic Tiwi, Wonaeamirri’s contemporary art practice is steeped in Tiwi tradition. His commanding paintings on bark reveal a profound knowledge of heritage, meticulously depicting the Jilamara (design) with artistic confidence and an exceptional sense of ...
Nellie Ngampa Coulthard •Ngura Itjanungka – Country After Rain
Alcaston Gallery is delighted to present Nellie Ngampa Coulthard’s fifth solo exhibition Ngura Itjanungka - Country After Rain.
Coulthard’s paintings of Yankunytjatjara Country are refined in both technique and composition. Accenting bold pinks, golden browns and burnt oranges - the colours of the central and eastern deserts of Australia – her paintings are defined by the outstretched linear branches of the Acacia Murrayana Wattle that sit at the heart of her ...
ALCASTON GALLERY COLLECTORS EXHIBITION•MIND MAPPING COLOUR - ALL ABOUT ARTISTS 2024
'colour is always more than colours'....
Alcaston Gallery presents Mind Mapping Colour – All About Artists, a significant collectors' exhibition featuring paintings and sculptures from some of Australia’s most influential and eminent contemporary artists.
The second instalment in Alcaston Gallery’s Counterpoint series, Mind Mapping Colour – All About Artists showcases important work by represented and exhibiting artists Karen ...
Adrian Jurra Tjungurrayi •Yunala Tjukurrpa
Alcaston Gallery is proud to present Adrian Jurra Tjungurrayi’s first ever solo exhibition Yunala Tjukurrpa.
Tjungurrayi is an emerging contemporary Pintupi artist, whose paintings of meandering lines and geometric forms create compositions that oscillate on the canvas with visceral energy.
Betty Kuntiwa Pumani • Titutjara - Ongoing
Alcaston Gallery is honoured to present Titutjara - Ongoing, a solo exhibition of significant paintings by revered artist and respected ngangkari (traditional healer),