

HAND-PAINTED CREATIONS
Discover the fluid forms and subtle hues reflected in each piece




I like to capture the essence of a moment in time. It is truly a gift to create something from nothing… “The emotions are sometimes so strong that I work without knowing it. The strokes come like speech”.
Vincent van Gogh

New Arrivals
Check out my latest works.
SOLD - Prints Available “The Bushman’s Clock” The Australian native Laughing Kookaburra. Acrylic on canvas
SOLD - Prints Available “Native Beauties” a pair of Australian native Red-Tailed Black Cockatoos. Acrylic on canvas.
ORIGINAL FOR SALE "Reverie" - a pair of the Australian native Sulphur-Crested Cockatoos. Acrylic on canvas
SOLD - Prints Available "Morning Song", the male Australian native Superb Fairy Wren, calling for his mate. Acrylic on canvas
SOLD - Prints Available “King of the Bush" the native Australian Kookaburra. Acrylic on art board.
SOLD - Prints Available “The Secrets We Keep" Retro Design. Acrylic on art board
SOLD - Prints Available “The Secrets We Keep" mixed media collage on watercolour paper
SOLD - Prints Available “Fly High Dragonfly" - A variation of the native Australian Emperor Dragonfly. Acrylic & texture paste on canvas.
SOLD - Prints Available “Bee my Honey Bee 2" - the native Australian blue-banded bee. Acrylic & texture paste on canvas.
SOLD - Prints Available “King Penguins - Love at world's end" acrylic and pen on canvas
SOLD - Prints Available “Bee my Honey Bee" acrylic on canvas.
SOLD - Prints Available “Hummingbird in Flight”. Acrylic on canvas. 76cm x 51cm (20" x 30")
1. Earthy Greens
Showcasing Australia’s Breathtaking Beauty
My surroundings inspire me - the bush and the ocean - and its spectacular inhabitants and scenery. I am always experimenting, trying out new mediums and methods of applying paint and colour. I delight in the incidental mishaps which I choose to include throughout my work.
Featured Artworks
Joseph Banks gave this animal the name “Kangooroo” from the word “Gangurra”
The word Kookaburra comes from the Wiradjuri word "guuguubarra". The word resembles the famous laughing call of the Kookaburra.
The word Koala actually comes from the Dharug word, gula/coola/koolah which means no water or no drink.
The Aboriginal name for the Lorikeet is "warin" by the Darug Peoples of the Sydney Basin
