
Double-Vision
What happens when Australia’s most compelling artists turn their gaze on each other? The answer is Artists by Artists, a striking new book from Arts-Matter founders Michelle Grey and Susan Armstrong.
It began, as so many good ideas do, over drinks. Michelle Grey recalls a conversation she and Arts-Matter cofounder Susan Armstrong kept circling back to: what happens when artists, usually tasked with observing the world, switch their attention to each other? “We had been ruminating on this idea for some time, captivated by the creativity and intimacy that can emerge when two artists turn their gaze on one another,” Grey says.
At first, the concept was destined for a few pages in A-M Journal, their annual arts and culture publication. But after a chance meeting with a publisher at a Sydney gallery, it quickly took on new life. “What began as a section in our magazine grew into a book,” Grey recalls. “And now, a year later, it’s about to be released.”

A Portrait of Contemporary Australian Art
That upshot is Artists by Artists, a lush, display-worthy tome from Thames & Hudson, launching this September at Sydney Contemporary. More than a coffee-table flourish, it is a who’s who of Australian art, pairing 50 of the country’s most compelling figures in a series of original portraits and interviews. The marquee encounters read like a cultural hall of mirrors: Archibald Prize luminaries Vincent Namatjira and Ben Quilty trade canvases; provocateur Abdul Abdullah pairs with political heavyweight Richard Bell; national treasure Ken Done squares off against James Drinkwater. Elsewhere, Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran collides with Remy Faint in a riot of clay and colour, while Angela Tiatia and Serwah Attafuah conjure a maximalist world of Pacific iconography and digital reverie.

Kansas Smeaton, Thorns and Roses (Elle), 2024, oil on canvas
The Art of Matchmaking
The alchemy lies in the matchmaking. “Some matches feel inevitable, as though these artists were always meant to encounter one another on the page,” Grey says. “Others were more experimental, bringing together contrasting approaches and perspectives to spark something unexpected. Both dynamics were essential: the serendipity brought warmth and authenticity, while the strategy ensured the book offered a wide-ranging portrait of contemporary Australian art.”
As expected, the results varied wildly—from oils to digital, realism to abstraction. But what surprised Grey most wasn’t the medium; she was piqued by the way each artist viewed their sidekick beyond the veneer of likeness—some tilting into traditional narratives, while others evoked memory, energy or an inner world.
The book also makes a quiet but pointed intervention into questions of representation. “It was a very conscious decision,” Grey notes. “We wanted this book to reflect a broader, more inclusive picture of Australian portraiture—one that acknowledges its traditions while also expanding the frame to include voices and perspectives that have too often been ignored.” First Nations, queer, migrant and female artists are prominently featured, ensuring that Artists by Artists feels like a living document of the country’s creative present.

Tony Albert, Portrait of Dylan, charcoal on canvas, 100 x 100cm.
Intimacy and Exchange
For Grey and Armstrong, the most powerful discoveries came in moments of unexpected intimacy. “The portraits weren’t always straightforward representations of the sitter,” Grey says. “They were combined visions of creator and subject, shaped by the nuances of their relationship. That interplay—between artist and sitter, self and other—is what made each portrait so unique, so intimate, and ultimately so revealing.”

A Time Capsule of Influence and Connection
What the title ultimately captures is not just the faces of its subjects but the connective tissue of Australian art itself. It is a ledger of influence and admiration, of rivalries softened into mutual respect, of friendships committed to paper and canvas. Grey and Armstrong hint at future editions, perhaps even fantasy pairings across continents and generations, but for now this inaugural volume stands as a dazzling time capsule of contemporary Australian portraiture—proof that the truest renderings are as much about bonds as they are about likeness.
Subscribe to the Newsletter
Recommended for you
Meet Björn Frantzén, the World’s Only Chef With 3 Michelin 3-Star Restaurants
The Swedish cook has acclaimed establishments in Stockholm, Dubai, and Singapore—and he’s not done yet.
By Tori Latham
February 18, 2026
Lagavulin’s Excellent New Single Malt Is Both Smoky and Sweet
This peaty 11-year-old single malt was aged entirely in ex-bourbon barrels.
February 9, 2026


















































