Participating Artists

Please contact us for artwork sale enquiries.

Megan McNicholl

Drifting

Weather and water shape my rural reality. As a primary producer both impact my livelihood and underpin my sense of wellbeing. I have tried to convey the feeling of awe and wonder felt after the parched creek bed beside my home, was replenished by life giving autumn rain. Providing a sanctuary where the splendour of nature offers the ‘drifter’ a much-needed escape from daily routines. 

To create this image, I have used double exposure, a photographic technique that combines two different images into a single image. 

2024 Exhibition Photography and New Media Art

Helen Druce

Rural realities: Book review

As a fabric artist, I have created this piece to highlight the things I love most about my community. The diversity in nature is part of my rural reality, from, cropping and grazing domesticated animals, to natural woodlands, wetlands, native birds and animals. I have created a bookcase that is filled with books made from fabrics that reflect my rural experience and reality. The ornaments on the shelves extend to include some of my favourite things and offer a point of difference, encouraging the viewer to explore the bookcase and my rural reality further. 

2024 Exhibition 3D
Highly Commended: Photography - digital, and new media art

Daniel Flynn

Sunburn

This photo is of my father’s deceased horse Sunburn. I looked after Sunburn for the majority of his life, and we endured a love-hate relationship, with Sunburn causing me to break my arm when I was 14. As we grew, our relationship matured, and we grew fond of one another. At 35 Sunburn become sick and frail, and to be humane, I needed to put him down. The reality of looking my life-long companion in the eye before his death is indescribable. This photo shows a friend at rest. 

2024 Exhibition Photography and New Media Art

Karen Gaskell

Flood

In our rural community the effects of drought are felt by everyone. As our primary producers struggle to hold on there is a ‘community longing’ for relief. The reality is, though, that good times follow bad, and usually, drought ends with floodings rains. I am happy to live through this reality and was inspired by aerial photos of the channel country in Queensland after flooding rains. I was inspired to use my knowledge of clay and glazes to represent the transformation of the parched, red earth desert to a carpet of green, pink and yellow after flooding rains. 

2024 Exhibition 3D

Shirley Makin

Progress?

My artwork is made from recycled materials which is an important ethos of rural life. Our forebears believed in repurposing and recycling, and this continues to this day in the country. Once upon a time, we only saw trees and bushland dotted along the rural horizon. However, nowadays enormous wind turbines tower above the trees, overshadowing the natural bushland, glinting menacingly in the early morning sunlight while the trees bleed. Is this progress? 

2024 Exhibition 3D

Eileen Parker

Rural living

Living in rural Queensland, a hat is the most used accessory and is a rural reality by itself. A farmer’s hat has its own story to tell. Many are marked with oil or grease, dust, holes etc, showcasing the rawness and beauty of rural living. Each detail of this hat is a tribute to, and representation of, the vast variety of rural realities a farmer faces daily: weather, nature, livestock, fire, produce, crop. The positioning of the details supports equality of women and men who work on the land and are the main providers in our food chain.  

2024 Exhibition 3D
Highly Commended: Painting

Lisa Jayne Stiller

Wheat

I married a farmer 25 years ago & rural life became my reality. Rural life is a juxtaposition of challenge & blessing. The demands of contemporary society have seen an influx of resource industry in our rural areas & has added a new, challenging dimension to our lives, as we struggle to find a sustainable balance between farming & energy production. However, at the end of the day, the production of food must be our priority. Nothing matters more & this is why I chose to paint Wheat – our nation’s most beloved crop. What a beautiful sight – a field of ripe wheat, gently blowing in the breeze. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Katie Robertson

Beauty amongst the struggle

Mesmerised by the vibrant neon hues, I drove down Wild’s Road, Dalby and question how can something so beautiful be so tragic and heartbreaking at the same time? Mother Nature has painted the perfect rural summer sunset after the storm yet nobody’s happy.  

While the glistening reflections of saffron and magenta capture my eye across the flooded field, it illuminates the reality of struggle and despair hidden amongst the beauty. Prayers for rain have been answered yet ignored. The deluge has now relinquished any hope the farmer once had for a successful crop. Mother Nature has a twisted sense of humour. 

2024 Exhibition Photography and New Media Art

Maree Easton

Division

Thinking about the theme Rural Realities brought memories of our trip to WA when we visited the Myalls Bore. The bore was built in the early 1900’s and would provide much needed water for up to 1000 head. It is said to be one of the longest troughs in the southern hemisphere, being 120 metres long. Living on the land our one concern is water – either to make grass grow or fill up tanks. To me Rural Realities is the struggle on the land relying on rainfall. I decided to make the Myalls Bore the centre piece, being the all-important water supply and have one side dry and other side lush. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Melody Walker

Cloud watcher

We’re all cloud watchers out here. On the land, these fluffy little wonders dictate most of our daily activities. If they haven’t been around in a while it’s feeding cattle, if there have been too many it’s staying in because the creek’s up and we won’t be getting anywhere anytime soon. It’s when to plough, when to plant, when to harvest, rake the hay, turn the hay, bale, move cattle, sell cattle, buy. It’s what are the ants doing over your way? How much did you get? Is the creek up? The reality is they unite us these skies, without them we’d have a whole lot less to talk about. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Meg Noack

Harvest-time: ‘Forces of nature’

Contending with the forces of nature is a daily rural reality. Sun, rain, fire; all descend upon us in unpredictable ways. Too much sunshine and too little rain leaves a parched earth. Too much rain creates black soil quagmires making it impossible to harvest. The risk of a fire creates an ever-present, undercurrent of fear. At harvest time, an additional powerful and destructive force descends from above; a force with feathers, claws and a super-strong beak. 

2024 Exhibition Works on Paper
2nd Place: 3D Works

Hilary Coulter

One eye on the sky

The reality of living in a rural area where livelihoods are affected by rainfall, is that you are always thinking, talking and maybe even dreaming about the weather. Ever hopeful for rain (except for those few times a year when you don’t want it), everyone has their favourite source for the weather forecast – their favourite app or perhaps favourite news service. When you travel you will be asked about the weather at home and if ‘it looks like rain’, and you will most likely check in with those at home to see how accurate the forecast was. Always checking, always hoping: one eye on the sky. 

2024 Exhibition 3D

Jeannie Bowtell

Freedom: Running the horses in for a day's mustering

The horse has been associated with numerous roles throughout the ages. A Rural Reality is that horses are being replaced by motorbikes and helicopters for mustering stock. The benefits of the horse for mustering include connection with nature, physical exercise, emotional bond, low environmental impact, lowering stress levels, stock versatility and horses support you on your journey, reminding you that you have strength and the ability to succeed. The wind in the mane of the galloping horse is a call to take the reins of your life, to move with courage and determination to heal and feel free. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Kay Joyce

Distance

Distance: a reality at the core of all aspects of rural life. All supplies, both personal and property, medical care, social contacts, communication, business, including financial services, education, recreation and leisure are limited or permitted by the distance to facilities or personnel. Opportunities can be lost, relationships can stagnate or dissolve in the kilometres and the time taken to bridge them. No matter the skill of time management, sometimes there is just not enough time. 

2024 Exhibition Works on Paper

Steve Cant

Uluru: Rural soul

This hand carved Uluru from native Gidgee timber captures the essence of rural Australian life and an appreciation of the great monolith at the heart of this country. Just as we are moulded by the harsh environment, isolation and time, Uluru stands as a testimony of Australian rural life with a rugged yet complex beauty. Gidgee is one of the hardest timbers in the world having a hardness similar to that of sandstone and the piece is displayed atop a base similar to the Japanese Suiseki rock appreciation art form. 

2024 Exhibition 3D

Valerie Murray

The power of mother nature

The power of mother nature is the expression of nature that determines when flooding occurs, drought and fire of the land. Each twine of paper of the figurine is how community members connect and support one another during these natural events to build resilience. The dilly bag represents healing of country‘s first nations. The base is part of a tree retrieved from the flooded waterhole of Jandowae 2024 floods. The paper flames are for fire and the blue necklace represents the water of the floods. 

2024 Exhibition 3D
1st Place: Photography - digital, and new media art

Katie Robertson

Don't silence her

As her mum, I snap a candid shot, but she has to hide her face. Her mindset has her over-analyse and undermine her self-confidence. Social media has taught her to hide away her flaws or she won’t conform to the materialistic ideas that are influenced upon her.  

This is the harsh reality faced by many rural teenage girls who constantly compare themselves to the ‘city’ girls. Afraid to be themselves and advocate for who they are, they will simply hideaway. The distance and the location of rural communities is enough. Let’s not silence them either. Teach, support and encourage self-worth. 

2024 Exhibition Photography and New Media Art
Highly Commended - 3D

Brian Hansen

Regional prosperities

My rural reality highlights the major industries that have made our region prosper, this is captured in my artwork of locally sourced and repurposed relics. Crushed coal from a mine site west of Chinchilla has been used to partially fill the timber grain of an old workers cottage fence board to signify how the energy and mining is embedded in our way of life. A locally made plough Tyne forms the handle rest for the hand forged rail clip cleaver, this denotes the symbiotic relationship of the rural and rail operations that are in our region. 

2024 Exhibition 3D

Carly Walker

The long-distance relationship

Once a year you buy the whole family new swimmers, dig your beach toys out from the back of the shed, ask the neighbour to feed the chooks, and do the long drive to your favourite beach holiday spot. The starkly different environment provides a brief reprieve from your rural reality, but just as your farmers socks have started to fade it’s time to take your new shell collection home and add them to the jar on the shelf where they will remind you of that distant paradise… until next year. 

2024 Exhibition Painting
1st Place: 3D Works

Guy Breay

R. M.

This piece is carved in honour of the legendary bushman from the Darling Downs, R. M. Williams AU CMG who became world famous for creating the high-quality riding or workman’s boots known in rural areas simply as RMs. On our property The Stiks at Kumbarilla, the main trunk of a Budgeroo tree was burnt out during bushfires more than 60 years ago. All that remained was a partially burnt tree root protruding from the forest floor. The shape of the remaining root inspired me to create this stylised version of an RM boot. 

2024 Exhibition 3D
1st Place: Works on paper

Michelle Black

Golden harvest, Blacksoil Plains II

Rich, productive and vast black soil plains. The Western Downs is a landscape of repetition and pattern; crops changing with the seasons, paddocks ploughed in parallel, fallow, or sprouting from seed. Golden barley fields in spring are harvested beneath big skies. Here I have used black soil from the earth, rubbed with ink, with hand-printed woodcuts of harvested barley and ploughed fields. 

2024 Exhibition Works on Paper

Mel Andrews

Golden Wattle (Acacia Pycnantha)

My definition of Rural Reality is living in a wonderfully old and character filled Queensland farmhouse, surrounded by stunningly beautiful Australian Native Flora, through every season, flood or drought or in between. Each flower and leaf are so superbly different and so unique in their colour, texture, size and brightness. Being able to capture the absolute vibrancy and individuality of these blooms gives me great joy. Each new bloom is a promise of things to come. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Alyce Mullen

Harrowing hills

Harrowing Hills unveils a landscape of deceptive peace. A vast sky stretches above weathered structures, their worn facades whispering tales of relentless sun and relentless toil. Though a quiet stillness hangs in the air, the wind carries echoes of hardship – a testament to the unseen battles fought by those who call this land home. Here, beneath the beauty, lies a fierce resilience, a tribute to the unsung heroes who coax life from this unforgiving soil. Their hands, gnarled and strong, speak volumes of the unwavering spirit that continues to carve a living from this harsh embrace. 

2024 Exhibition Painting
Highly Commended - Works on Paper

Kristen Flynn

Botticelli eye with poppies, expressionist skull and thoughts, and cockatoo feather

This multi-plate print work is a self-portrait and memento mori. It explores the entanglement of my rural environment, my identity, everyday reality, and unknown paralleling dimensions. As I create and view my work I feel the brevity of life, and I contemplate how paralleling dimensions might operate. I have used a cockatoo feather I found in my garden to pay tribute to my beautiful rural surroundings, as it is a constant source of inspiration, and energy for my art practice. I have created this work in my rural Chinchilla studio by merging old and new printmaking methods. 

2024 Exhibition Works on Paper
2nd Place: Works on paper

Meg Noack

Glimpses of a hidden rural reality

At the Bunya Mountains, we stand in awe of majestic vistas and giant trees in a million shades of green. The reality is that none of this would be possible without the hidden mycological universe right beneath our feet; an invisible labyrinth that creates a network between trees and other plants; providing nutrients and messages. At times we glimpse this parallel universe. After continuous rain, these mycological networks send ‘flowers’ bursting from the earth and rotting trees. We commonly call these flowersmushrooms’. 

2024 Exhibition Works on Paper

Mel Andrews

Red flowering gum (Corymbia Ficifolia)

My definition of Rural Reality is living in a wonderfully old and character filled Queensland farmhouse, surrounded by stunningly beautiful Australian Native Flora, through every season, flood or drought or in between. Each flower and leaf are so superbly different and so unique in their colour, texture, size and brightness. Being able to capture the absolute vibrancy and individuality of these blooms gives me great joy. Each new bloom is a promise of things to come. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Photography and New Media

Self-portrait butterfly eye

Self-portrait butterfly eye perpetuates the beauty that can be found on the edge of life. Living on a farm I encounter the passing and carcasses of many animals including cattle, horses, dogs, cats, kangaroos, turtles, birds, and insects, which act as a constant reminder of my own mortality. My reality is paralleled by a feeling of brevity that in turn brings beauty to my lived experience. My self-portrait plays on this beauty as it depicts an injured orchard swallowtail butterfly fluttering over the surface of my eye, and although it is near death, it seems curiously beautiful. 

2024 Exhibition Photography and New Media Art

Sarah Davis

The big sister

As a storm rolled in, Mum would gather the clothes off the line. Gum leaves swept up in gusts of wind would hurl around us as we ran in circles. Throwing ourselves to the ground pretending ‘Mum’s tree’ had fallen on us. ‘It’s us vs the world.’ I grew up under a gum tree in Miles, a ‘townie’. I grew up making homes for lady beetles with my sister in the yard while our parents argued inside. I grew up throwing house paint at furniture while my sister flipped and kicked on the trampoline. The reality of my rural upbringing is that I wouldn’t have wanted it any other way. I was a big sister. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Mel Andrews

Bottlebrush (Callistemom)

My definition of Rural Reality is living in a wonderfully old and character filled Queensland farmhouse, surrounded by stunningly beautiful Australian Native Flora, through every season, flood or drought or in between. Each flower and leaf are so superbly different and so unique in their colour, texture, size and brightness. Being able to capture the absolute vibrancy and individuality of these blooms gives me great joy. Each new bloom is a promise of things to come. 

2024 Exhibition Painting
Highly Commended: Painting

Lucy Herd

A waiting glory

“The rain will come eventually – just wait,” Mum says. To which Dad replies, “You’re only saying that because it always has.”  

In the waiting, we yearn for life to return, wondering if it ever will. We watch the slow decay of green livingness with an anxious grief. Yet, there is something strangely captivating in a withering leaf. It is here, in the crisping edges and goldening hue of death that we see the exquisite yearning for life that all things hold.  

A groaning sort of glory, awaiting new life. 

2024 Exhibition Painting

Angelique Delport

Iron Bark

Bark is the outer layer of a tree and without it the tree will die. Unlike other eucalyptus trees, the ironbark does not shed its outer layer of bark, creating deep crevices and interesting landscapes on the tree trunk and branches. Bark is both within and encircling a tree, and thus symbolically provides balance and strength. The rural reality is that without the bark of rural people, this land will be stripped of its protective layer, it’s balance and strength. 

2024 Exhibition Painting