Robyn Sweaney Selected as a Finalist in Wynne Prize

Art Gallery of NSW
Four-time Wynne finalist Robyn Sweaney was attracted to this house by its symmetrical facade, which has remained unaltered for decades. Although the lives of those inside have surely changed over this period, she observes, the home itself represents a compelling sense of continuity.
 
A long-time resident of Mullumbimby in northern NSW, Sweaney experienced the 2022 floods that submerged parts of the town and displaced its residents. This painting conveys a soothing measure of domestic order and security, yet Sweaney notes that the shadow of change is nevertheless present: ‘within this fleeting moment of peace and stillness there is that edge suggesting it is merely an illusion – a stage set to an ongoing story’.

 

The tightly-choreographed paintings of Robyn Sweaney respond to the philosophical and ontological currency of the built environment. The artist’s preoccupation with the Australian architectural vernacular – particularly from the post war period – is rooted in an enduring fascination with the physiognomy of cultural identity. Domestic dwellings divulge more than their mere exteriors, functioning as physical incarnations of the aesthetic, ideological and social structures influencing human behaviour. Informed by travel through familiar and unfamiliar rural and suburban places, Sweaney finds that, ‘certain elements of place resonate an unexplainable reaction within me – something ignites deep within memory. The landscape is somehow opened up by the search itself and my response can reach beyond its visual appearance.’

 

Robyn Sweaney lives and works in the Northern Rivers region of NSW. She has exhibited regularly since 1992 and been involved in over ninety group exhibitions. She was the winner of the Wynne Trustees’ Watercolour Prize, AGNSW (2019) and has been the finalist of many major awards including the Wynne Prize (2023, 2019, 2017, 2011), Salon Des Refusés (2018, 2016, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010, 2009, 2008), Jacaranda Acquisitive Drawing Prize (JADA) (2018, 2014, 2010, 2008, 2004), Mosman Art Prize (2015, 2010, 2009), Paddington Art Prize (2015, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009), Moran Prize (2012, 2011), Portia Geach Memorial Award (2013), Fleurieu Art Prize (2013) and the Sulman Prize (2009). Currently, her work is featured in the exhibition 'Lost in Palm Springs' at Home of the Arts (HOTA), QLD. Her work is held in public and private collections throughout Australia including The State Library of New South Wales, Artbank, The Gold Coast City Art Gallery, Tweed Regional Gallery, Stanthorpe and Grafton and Lismore Regional Galleries.

6 May – 3 September 23