Leslie Rice Australia
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"I was a professional tattooer for more than 10 years before attending Art school and realising everything I loved was awful." - Leslie Rice
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Biography
Lives and works in SYDNEY, NSW, Australia
Completing his BFA with Honours at the national Art School in 2006, Leslie Rice began to make paintings that exploited, mocked and critically examined his own questionable taste. Winning the Doug Moran National Portrait prize in 2007 (and again in 2012), he was featured in a smattering of group shows, prizes and solo shows over the next ten years. As an actor, Rice has appeared in several feature films and nationally syndicated television programs and has contributed regularly as a presenter on ABC’s arts program, The Mix. Rice has taught students studying across all levels at the National Art School since 2008. He is currently a member of the NAS Academic board and is currently studying his Doctorate.
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Works
Leslie Rice
By a Billabong, 2025Acrylic and oil on linen152 x 183cm“I had desired it with an ardour that far exceeded moderation; but now that I had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled...“I had desired it with an ardour that far exceeded moderation;
but now that I had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished,
and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart."
- From Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley
"For years, I had the above quote from Mary Shelley’s Gothic classic Frankenstein in vinyl letters pressed to the wall of my painting studio. The words are the inner monologue of the titular character—the doctor, that is, not his creation who, like so many Modernist works, remained Untitled—as, upon finishing his project and seeing the result, he is less than satisfied with its corporeality. I kept these words as a reminder of the Aristotelean fact that the act of painting, as a collaboration with the material reality of paint itself—and of paints own subjugation to inexactitude and chance—will invariably produce results not aligned with one’s hope, one’s vision, or some Platonic ideal. So it is, I believe, with Metamodern failure. An unrealistic expectation of success goes beyond mere acceptance of the inevitability of failure but becomes a welcome embrace. We are all, as the well-meaning doctor, creating disappointing monsters.
The Australian Gothic employs European Gothic tropes to explore themes unique to Australia: the terrifying vastness of the natural landscape, the violence and trauma of colonisation, the harsh realities of the convict and frontier experience, and the deep unease about national identity. It uses the hostility of the environment and unsettling narratives of isolation, disappearance, and displacement to critique colonial optimism and explore the dark psychological and cultural underpinnings of all we now call “Australia”. The bunyip that lurks in the billabong is another return to myth, but not the christian mythology that was imposed upon Australian. This is myth of the truly home grown variety.
In The Gothic, David Punter and Glennis Byron point out that the Gothic genre flourishes during times of social upheaval, allowing us to explore our fears, subvert norms, and unearth those things in our history and culture that we may prefer to keep buried.”
Exhibitions
Leslie Rice, 'The Tyranny of Kitschness', National Art School, Doctorate Exhibition, November 2025Exhibitions-
New Romantics
Group Exhibition September 4 - 20, 2025 GALLERY ONE, GALLERY TWORead more -
Once Upon a Midnight Dreary
Group Exhibition July 13 - 20, 2024 GALLERY TWORead more -
Sydney Contemporary 2022
Nanda\Hobbs Booth September 7 - 11, 2022 ART FAIRRead more -
Disco / Inferno
Leslie Rice June 22 - July 10, 2021 GALLERY TWORead more
