
A Night at the Museum
Sydney’s most spirited gala returned to the harbour, where art, couture, and unbridled good humour made the MCA Artists Ball 2025 a night to remember.
During her speech at the Museum of Contemporary Art’s annual Artists Ball, director Suzanne Cotter was in the midst of striking a sober note about the institution’s mission when the horns from a Disney Cruise liner, berthed obnoxiously close at Circular Quay, let out an infernal blast—three times, no less. The crowd dissolved into laughter, and the interruption became a kind of metaphor for the evening itself: a high-minded celebration of art punctured, gloriously, by Sydney’s irrepressible sense of spectacle.
Now in its third edition, the MCA Artists Ball has quietly become the city’s most spirited gala. On this warm October night, the museum’s harbourside forecourt was transformed into a lush, rainforest-inspired fantasia, complete with a smoking ceremony, choreographed performance, and the golden watchfulness of Thomas J Price’s Ancient Feelings statue presiding over the festivities.
The honouree was Daniel Boyd, whose cosmological and subversive works—pirates, patches, and all—were celebrated with a mirrored installation guests passed through to reach the transformed Foundation Hall. There, performances by Thelma Plum and Mo’Ju and a riotous menu by The Big Group (with wines by Pommery and Mount Pleasant) sustained the crowd through a fevered live auction that helped raise a record $1.5 million for the museum’s programs.
Among the 250 guests were MCA Chairman Lorraine Tarabay and Nick Langley, Hayley and James Baillie, Penelope Seidler AM, Luke Sales and Anna Plunkett, Akira Isogawa, and a swirl of artists including Tony Albert, Nell, and Del Kathryn Barton—all taking the “Creative Couture” dress code as licence to upend the notion of black tie.
By the time the last glass was drained, the MCA Ball had once again proven that philanthropy need not be po-faced. Like Cotter’s interrupted speech, the night was serious in purpose, mischievous in delivery—and entirely, unmistakably Sydney.












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Courtesy of Patricks










