We acknowledge the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, the traditional custodians of the Country on which the Art Gallery of NSW stands.

Natasha Walsh A liminal space

oil on copper

87 x 80 cm

Natasha Walsh’s painting is a self-portrait. ‘A liminal space is that undefinable threshold, when you have left something behind but have yet to become something else,’ says Walsh.

‘Firstly, the painting itself shifts between the perception of a surface and an impossible “space” within. Secondly, the subject of the painting exists between an interior space with hard wooden floors and an organic one; between a real space and an impossible one, without gravity. We may see a chair at first because we remember what a body being held by one looks like. But it is absent because the work is not only the representation of a tangible body in real space and time, but also its invisible self, manifested to overlay the real.’

‘From this we can see that the invisible self is also on the cusp of different definable states, precariously balanced somewhere between sitting, standing and falling; impossibly still within the many moving forces that surround her. In part this was a response to the shifts occurring within my larger practice. The resulting uncertainty and energy built like a charge within me, an invisible, immutable call to action.’

Born in Sydney in 1994, this is Walsh’s fourth consecutive year in the Archibald Prize.

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