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
Olympia of Rooty Hill, 2025Acrylic and oil on linen152 x 183cm“At the time of writing, tan lines are cool. By the time you read this, they may not be. So it is with fashion. In the nineteenth century, a suntan...“At the time of writing, tan lines are cool. By the time you read this, they may not be. So it is with fashion. In the nineteenth century, a suntan was a mark of low social class, as most labour took place outdoors; untouched porcelain skin was a sign of privilege. Like colonialism and kitsch, the prestige associated with being pasty white was heavily impacted by the industrial revolution. Around the 1920s, the script was flipped—the humble tan came to be a sign of the free and easy leisure of the well-to-do; to be pale an indicator that one must work indoors during daylight hours. A brief sun-smart inversion in the 1990s saw clever people chalky again, only for Gen Z to embrace the twenty-first-century social media trend of cunningly and strategically tanning their white bodies in all manner of shapes and patterns.
Our Olympia of Rooty Hill bears a suntan that reveals her own confusion and internal struggle with the idea of class. She is at once as sunburnt as the wide brown land that she loves, and as white as any Australia Policy since Federation. Her persistent choice of Chesty Bonds singlet, Ruggers footy shorts, and flip-flop thongs has somewhat indelibly marked her, revealing her proclivity for working-class attire even when naked.
When Manet painted his Olympia in 1863, it caused a stir with its frank depiction of female nakedness—not nudity, but nakedness. Her state of being unclothed in a raw, unidealised, and potentially vulnerable way, with slippers on her feet and a choker around her neck, grounds her in the real world and draws attention to the physical reality of her state of undress. By way of contrast, Titian’s Venus of Urbino, from which Manet drew inspiration, presented the reclining female body as an idealised, mythological form—a nude in the classical sense.
Our Olympia of Rooty Hill is naked, wearing nothing but a smile and the mark of her class.”
Exhibitions
Leslie Rice, 'The Tyranny of Kitschness', National Art School, Doctorate Exhibition, November 2025Exhibitions-
Panel 2026
Group Exhibition January 15 - 31, 2026 GALLERY TWORead more -
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
