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Redfern Art & Ceramic Gallery

Specialists in collectable – but affordable – Australian art and Australian and Japanese ceramics, pottery, glass and lamps from the 1950s – 1980s. The gallery focuses on visual artists that emigrated to Australia after World War II and Australian female artists from this period. The gallery also exhibits and teaches Japanese Ikebana flower arranging.

Our favourite visual artists: Dorothy Atkins, Joan Beck, Judy Cassab, Tony Costa,  Stanley De Teliga, Thomas Gleghorn, Harold Greenhill, Jean Isherwood, Louis James, Ena Joyce, Keith Looby, Jeffrey Makin, Ignacio Marmol, Rodney Milgate, Carl Plate, John Rigby, Joe Rose, Dora Toovey, Phylis Waterhouse and Reinis Zusters.

Our favourite Australian ceramicists, potters and glass blowers: Peter Andersson, Christine Ball, Rick Ball, Lindsay Bedogni, Les Blakebrough, Richard Brooks, Greg Daly, John Dermer, Gillian Dodds, Phyl Dunn, Rudolf Dybka, Ivan and Patricia Englund, Robert Foster, Victor Greenaway, Malcolm Greenwood,  Andrew Halford, Campbell Hegan, Jean Higgs, Brian Hirst, Ian Lamb, Jane Lanyon, Col Levy, Robert Mair, Barbara Mason, Suzie McMeekin, Reg Preston, David and Sue Rivett, Keith Rowe, Peter Rushforth, Bernard Sahm, Joe Sartori, Shigea Shiga,  Mitsuo Shoji, Derek Smith, Ian Sprague, Peter Travis, Jan Twyerould, Robert Wynn and many other lesser known Australian potters.

Gallery directors: Gavin Watkins and Paulina Rosa.

Redfern Art & Ceramic Gallery

80 Redfern Street, Redfern NSW 2016, Australia

0478 473 041

redfernartgallery.com.au

Friday 3pm - 5pm; Saturday 10am - 4pm; or by appointment.

Redfern Art & Ceramic Gallery

Suggested Reading

Book Reviews

‘About Face’ mirrors the alluring world of contemporary portrait painting

About Face is a smart piece of marketing. The new book on portrait painting from Australia and New Zealand has a mission to change buyers’ minds about the field. But as Jane O’Sullivan discovers, any sales pitch wears thin if it’s repeated often enough, and the close attention to how portrait painting is received by the market means that other important conversations fade to the background.

Jane O'Sullivan

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