

The Park
$300 (sold)
Centennial Park (2025)
Watercolour, 30 x 20 cm
Wealthy Centennial Park began life as a reserve to protect the central ponds and swamps that formed Sydney’s water supply before 1880. When the reserve was rezoned, Patrick White moved here. The suburb is featured in several of his famous novels, lending a literary touch to the park's history.
For full view, click Read More below.

Swim
$200
Mahon Pool (2025)
Watercolour, 30 x 20 cm
This rockpool was constructed between 1935 and 1936 at the initiative of Alderman Patrick Mahon to provide employment for locals during the Great Depression. It was built on the site of a naturally formed seaside rock pool. Often, one can seek relative calmness here amid a raging sea.

Autumn
$250
Canberra in Autumn (2025)
Watercolour, 30 x 28 cm
The name Canberra originates from the local Ngambri clan. British settlers referred to it as Canberry, Kanberri, or Nganbri. When Australia federated in 1900, there was a debate over whether Sydney or Melbourne should be the capital. To compromise, Canberra was conceived as a planned city, completed with its meticulously arranged trees.

Vineyard
$250
Family Vineyard in Canberra (2025)
Watercolour, 42 x 22 cm
The first vines were planted here in the 1840s. Today, the Canberra region boasts 140 vineyards, producing a diverse array of wines, including Sangiovese, Riesling, Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Merlot, and Shiraz. For a full framed view, click Read More below.

Beach
$250 (transferred)
Maroubra Beach in Autumn (2025)
Watercolour, 40 x 28 cm
Maroubra, whose name means “thunder”, speaks through the power of its surf. Yet, come autumn and winter, the sea transforms, whispering the soothing voice of a tranquil lake. For a framed view, click Read More below.

Botany Bay
$150
Botany Bay (2025)
Watercolour, 35 x 26 cm
While Banks was impressed by the extensive botanical specimens he collected here in 1770, Cook thought otherwise. Port Jackson was chosen instead for settlement. Today, Botany Bay thrives as a bustling transport hub for road, rail, air and sea. For a framed view, click Read More below.

Darling Point
$200 (transferred)
Darling Point (2025)
Watercolour, 42 x 30 cm
Not far to the east lies the affluent Darling Point, where Dorothea Mackellar lived almost right at the water’s edge. While she is best known for her poem “My Country” (1904), Mackellar considered her finest work to be “Colour” (1909). In this poem, she vividly describes how different colours would evoke different landscapes. emotions and memories.
For full view, click Read More below.

Vintage Ford
$200
Prince Henry Hospital Ward 1 (2025)
Watercolour, 30 x 24 cm
Prince Henry Hospital was formerly known as the Coast Hospital, which was established in 1881 as NSW’s first hospital for infectious diseases, including smallpox, leprosy, and bubonic plague. It was closed in 2003, and wards were converted into residential apartments, except Ward 1, which is now the Nursing and Medical Museum. A vintage Ford was recently showcased there.
For a framed and full view, click Read More below.

Library
$80 (sold)
Lionel Bowen Library (2025)
Watercolour, 25 x 20 cm
It's amazing to think that this evergreen building will soon be 34 years old! Officially opened by the late Deputy PM Lionel Bowen on 25 August 1991, its modern design has certainly stood the test of time. For framed view, click Read More below.

The Rocks
$200 (transferred)
Argyle Cut, The Rocks (2024)
Watercolour, 41 x 31cm
In 1843, convicts in chains began chiselling out a shortcut between Sydney Cove and Darling Harbour. Before this, carriages had to navigate around a rocky ridge along the water’s edge, and people had to ascend and descend steep, slippery steps. The project was completed using explosives in 1859, opening up Argyle Street

Cable House
$200 (transferred)
La Perouse (2025)
Watercolour, 48 x 33 cm
La Perouse is one of the few Sydney suburbs with a French name, along with Vaucluse and Sans Souci. It was named after Comte de La Pérouse, whose two ships vanished after departing Botany Bay in 1788. In 1825, a column was erected to commemorate him. The wreck of one of his ships, La Boussole, was discovered in the Solomon Islands in 1964. The red building, constructed in 1880 and now a museum, was originally a cable station that connected Australia to the outside world via undersea telegraph cables.




Travel
$250
Kingsford Smith Airport (2025)
Watercolour, 55 × 38cm
Although the airport has been operating since 1911, it was not called by its current name until 1953. Charles Kingsford Smith was born in 1897. His plane vanished above the coast of Burma on 8 November 1935 while attempting to set a speed record from London to Australia. The wreckage was never found. For a framed view, click Read More below.

Hanging Rock
$250 (sold)
Burramoko Ridge (2025)
Watercolour, 42 x 30 cm
Also called Hanging Rock, this spectacular rock ridge is in the Blackheath area of the Blue Mountains National Park. For a framed view, click Read More below.


The Park v.2
$200
Centennial Park on a Rainy Day (2025)
Watercolour, 30 × 20 cm
For a framed view, click Read More below.