Topic | Art reviews | The Sydney Morning Herald

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At Australia’s richest landscape prize, art conquered politics

At Australia’s richest landscape prize, art conquered politics

This year’s $100,000 Hadley’s Art Prize offered a range of ways of seeing our wildest terrain.

  • by John McDonald

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Fish, family and friends: Young Archie winners on show

Fish, family and friends: Young Archie winners on show

This year’s winners, including Anh Do’s 14-year-old son Leon, painted siblings, parents and best friends.

Arthur Boyd’s renowned landscape paintings shown together for the first time

Arthur Boyd’s renowned landscape paintings shown together for the first time

The artist’s suite of large-scale landscape paintings will be shown in the place they were made.

  • by John McDonald
A critic’s pick of the best and worst of the Archibald Prize portraits
Opinion
Spectrum

A critic’s pick of the best and worst of the Archibald Prize portraits

A handful of works stand out from a selection that seems to have been made for variety rather than quality.

  • by John McDonald
When was the last time a soap ad gave you spiritual pleasure?
Opinion
Visual art

When was the last time a soap ad gave you spiritual pleasure?

Alphonse Mucha made the bold claim that his posters turned the street in “open-air art exhibitions”.

  • by John McDonald
Master or monster: The artist equally loathed and revered
Opinion
Spectrum

Master or monster: The artist equally loathed and revered

Call it charisma, presence or personal magnetism. Paul Gauguin had it in abundance.

  • by John McDonald
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Do we care about the Archibald Prize too much?
Opinion
Opinion

Do we care about the Archibald Prize too much?

The best interpretation one may put upon this phenomenon is that it’s a bit of fun, but it is a worrisome trend because the prize becomes the public standard by which art is judged.

  • by John McDonald
This is a monumental exhibition worthy of its monumental subject

This is a monumental exhibition worthy of its monumental subject

Pharaoh – the British Museum’s largest-ever loan exhibition – is quite exceptional. A monumental subject has brought forth a monumental feat of exhibition design.

  • by John McDonald
Archibald winner’s style perfectly matched to subject Tim Winton

Archibald winner’s style perfectly matched to subject Tim Winton

The win signifies a return to the quaint, old-fashioned notion that a portrait should be a good likeness.

  • by John McDonald
Two of Australia’s great artists lead exhibition full of echoes

Two of Australia’s great artists lead exhibition full of echoes

Cutting Through Time explores affinities between Cressida Campbell, Margaret Preston, and Japanese printmakers.

  • by John McDonald
It’s a gas! Laughs and gasps fill the Regal for this smart update of a classic play

It’s a gas! Laughs and gasps fill the Regal for this smart update of a classic play

A clever and subtle reworking of Patrick Hamilton’s 1938 psychological thriller that gave us the term gaslighting makes for an entertaining night of theatre.

  • by Mark Naglazas