SMH ‘My Best Worst’: Ebony Russell

SMH ‘My Best Worst’: Ebony Russell

Feature by Lissa Christopher.

Each week, SMH asks someone to tell them about the upside of a bad experience or rough patch. This week features NAS alumna and staff Ebony Russell.

To practise ceramic art is to court disaster, says Ebony Russell, a practising artist and a lecturer at the National Art School in Sydney.

There are so many opportunities for things to go wrong: collapse during construction, getting knocked before being put into the kiln, melting in the kiln, exploding in the kiln, sustaining damage from someone else’s work exploding in the kiln, being dropped coming out of the kiln …

“Every step along the path is fraught with danger,” she says. “You are constantly aware that you may lose the piece at some point in the process … In my studio, I have to carry work downstairs to a kiln room and I’m sweating bullets every time I do it.

“You become a bit resilient or you may as well not stick with it.”

Ebony can still vividly recall the moment 20 years ago when the head fell off the final piece she had been working on for weeks during her second year at art school. It was a bust with “this huge elaborate headpiece with orchid flowers … Basically, I had made the head too heavy and the neck was very thin and elongated; [it was] a very Modigliani inspired female form. I was working on it and it fell, and I caught it in my hands. It was a sickening feeling, gut-wrenching.”

It also happened in front of her peers. “In ceramics, catastrophes are happening all over the place, that’s part of the learning, but it’s quite humbling when it’s you,” she says.

“I could have just lost [my mind], let it defeat me or given up and started again,” she says, but she decided to push on and attempt a repair, yet another risky step with ceramics that “often comes back to haunt you later”.

In this case, however, the repair was successful and later in the year, it would become the first piece of her own art Ebony sold.

“I will never forget that piece,” she says. “I think the first piece you ever sell really sticks with you. So I was quite pleased with myself but I also learnt a lot about building better.

“It’s funny though … sometimes the discovery has been in the accidents. If you’re too controlled I think you miss out on things, you lose that avenue to discover something new.

“And when you work with porcelain especially, you have to work in the current moment. You have to deal with what the porcelain does, as it does it. You have to let go a bit.

“I always laugh because most of my close girlfriends say I’m really calm in a crisis. I think when a catastrophe happens I just give in to it and think, well, what’s the point of fighting it? With ceramics, at some point, you have to give in to the medium and you get used to being able to accept the way things happen because you can’t change it.”

Image: Ebony Russell in her studio. Photo: Simon Hewson.
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Art Club is our high school student program for 15-17 year olds, designed to enhance and extend students’ technical, conceptual, and intellectual skills, through intensive practical study in the disciplines offered at NAS as well as engaging in an experience of our studios and campus, under the expert direction of experienced artists.

Set your child on a creative path with Art Club. 

Learn more at the link in bio.
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
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