Charles Blackman 'The Angelus' seasideThe Angelus is a deeply evocative image. Derived from the 1979 painting, it sees two figures settle in for a meal. The only source of light is a candle, burning like a beating heart at the works centre. Either side are figments of mortality: flowers destined to one day wilt and fruit, to be eaten or rot. Blackman brings out poetic themes in the domestic, creating an almost monastic atmosphere that lingers long after witnessed. One of Australias most
You’d be heartless not to take this Tin Man home
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Luke Cornish is a contemporary Australian artist whose work has rigorously reshaped the Australian and International art world
Her characters play with notions of anthropomorphism and body decoration
these sisters are a treasure
For collectors of Jewish art
light and like Jeffrey Smart before him
In Lewis Carroll’s ‘Alice in Wonderland’
It transports us into a time that never really existed
The naivety of youth collides with sexuality
invite this eternal bouquet home