Full immersion: Margaret Olley Drawing Week 2019, the 20th anniversary of a NAS tradition 

Full immersion: Margaret Olley Drawing Week 2019, the 20th anniversary of a NAS tradition 

In the last week of February, three hundred and fifty students will return from the Summer break to commence the next stage of their studies at the National Art School. They will be hungry for the stimulation and rigour of the BFA program, but before they divide off for their timetabled classes they will participate in Margaret Olley Drawing Week. In this special week, just before Week One of the academic year, there are no AM and PM sessions and no shifts between subjects: just full immersion in drawing, a discipline that is at the core of all study at the School.

The tradition of Drawing Week began in 1999, when Noel Thurgate and Michael Downs were newly-appointed heads of the NAS Drawing Department. Their application for the job had included a simple idea, inspired by the New York Studio School’s Drawing Marathons. By enabling students to develop their drawings over a longer, more continuous spell of time than regular classes allowed for, they could be encouraged to make, unmake and remake their work. This would improve the quality of their drawings and perhaps more significantly, students would experience a new depth in their own potential as makers.

With only half of January and a sliver of February to turn this proposal into reality, Thurgate and Downs marshalled their colleagues and were ready on the 15th February to commence the inaugural Drawing Week, across two locations: the teaching studios of NAS’s Darlinghurst campus, and a vast, disused customs shed at Darling Harbour. The event was a huge success, both educationally and for the culture of the School. As the report on the first Drawing Week noted: “an ad hoc lunchtime forum developed where all the staff sat in a semi-circle with the participating students and talked about anything from Aristotle to discount art materials.”

This success aside, nobody could have foreseen that over the next two decades, thousands of National Art School students would participate in Drawing Week. Through a period when the tertiary sector has been subjected to one cutback after another, Drawing Week has thrived, with the generous support of the Margaret Olley Trust in recent years. Still, economy of means is paramount, and Drawing Week has often occupied urban sites in transition, from an abandoned theme park (Sega World at Darling Harbour, 2001) to a decommissioned power station (White Bay, 2005) and a gutted skyscraper in the Sydney CBD (60 Margaret Street, 2016). As an extra-curricular activity it can incorporate areas of study that sit on the fringe of the core Drawing program, with specialist artist-lecturers brought in to offer their experience in a particular area of drawing, or its intersection with other forms such as performance art, animation or photography.

In 2019, fifteen different workshops have been offered to students. They will head to locations including the State Library of New South Wales, the Hill End historical precinct and Cronulla Sewerage Treatment Plant. Befitting the anniversary Noel Thurgate will be back, leading a group who have elected to make drawings of the industrial harbour environment at Cockatoo Island. As he and Downs wrote in 1999, students can expect “a flying start to their work, in whatever area they are enrolled.”

– Joe Frost, Drawing Lecturer, National Art School 

Arthur Boyd: Landscape of the Soul Installation View at NAS Gallery. Photo: Peter Morgan.

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Thank you to everyone who attended the opening night of the 24th Dobell Drawing Prize and congratulations again to the prize winner NAS alumna Rosemary Lee.

The 24th Dobell Drawing Prize is now open until Saturday 21 June 2025
11am – 5pm Monday to Saturday 
NAS Gallery 
Free admission, all welcome

Learn more about the exhibition at the link in bio.
We are delighted to announce NAS alumna Rosemary Lee as the winner of the 24th Dobell Drawing Prize, Australia’s leading prize for drawing, worth $30,000.

Selected from 56 nationwide finalists, and 965 entries, Rosemary’s work will become part of the National Art School’s significant collection, built over the past 120 years. Rosemary, in her winning work 24-1 (2024), observes tonal and compositional profundity in everyday life.

The judging panel comprising acclaimed First Nations artist Vernon Ah Kee, Paula Latos-Valier AM, Trustee and Art Director of the Sir William Dobell Art Foundation, and Dr Yolunda Hickman, Head of Postgraduate Studies, National Art School, commented of Rosemary’s work: “The decision to award the 24th Dobell Drawing Prize to Rosemary Lee for the work ‘24-1’ was unanimous. We were most impressed by the level of visual intensity the artist has achieved in this work both through its vibrant colour and in the extraordinary detail of the composition. The artwork’s exploration of the urban landscape and gentrification of the Sydney suburbs of Ashfield and Summer Hill, has produced an image capturing a broader sense of transience and the omnipresence of construction sites in our cities today. It questions the cultural and historical value of place, through the lens of the artist’s personal connection.” 

See Lee’s work alongside the work of the other finalists in the 24th Dobell Drawing Prize, 11 April – 21 June 2025, NAS Gallery
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Left to right: NAS Director and CEO, Dr Kristen Sharp with artist Rosemary Lee, featuring winning artwork 24–1, 2024, pencil on paper, image courtesy the artist and National Art School Gallery © the artist, photograph: Peter Morgan
Introducing the National Art School Short Courses Program from July–December 2025

Whether you’re a beginner, rediscovering a past passion, refining your skills, or considering our Fine Arts degree, the short courses offer a stimulating and rewarding experience for all levels.

Our 2025 program begins in July with Winter School, followed by Term Three, Spring Weekend Workshops in September, and Term Four in October.

Learn more and enrol at the link in bio.
Making Sound is a performance event featuring four artists who make devices that make sound, including Gary Warner, Pia van Gelder, Ben Denham and Sean O’Connell, presented following Facture: Drawing Symposium 2025, Saturday 12 April 5-6pm. 

Gary Warner creates an improvised soundfield with his ‘aleatoric ensemble’ autonomous sound machines, a collection of modified turntables that spin ad-hoc bric-a-brac assemblages.

Pia van Gelder (pictured) amplifies an electronic circuit as it is built in real-time. Under the moniker of “PvG sans PCB,” in these performances, van Gelder works on a breadboard with electronic components and additional found objects to demonstrate the electronic variabilities produced in the material world.

Ben Denham and Sean O’Connell perform together with handmade synthesizer systems that sense and sonify barometric pressure and the flow of electrons through matter.

Purchase your tickets to the symposium at the link in bio.
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Pia van Gelder, 'sans PCB', 2021, performance, Collings Creative, image courtesy and © the artist
Passionate about collections and the arts? Join us as a Digitisation Volunteer!

The National Art School Archive and Collection team is looking for enthusiastic Digitisation Volunteers to help bring our art collection to life! Your work will play a key role in making art and history more accessible—by photographing and recording our collections, enhancing our museum database, and digitising our extensive archive of photographs. Through your efforts, every stored object and artwork in our collection will have a high-quality, searchable digital record for generations to come.

Apply at the link in bio.
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