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14.02.25 New Works


  • China Heights 16-28 Foster Street Surry Hills, NSW, 2010 Australia (map)

China Heights Gallery, in collaboration with Louis Vuitton, presents a new exhibition of works by Australian artists Banjo McLachlan, Rachel Rutt, and Gabriel Cole. Hosted at the Louis Vuitton Brisbane flagship, the show brings together three distinct practices that explore visual culture, memory, and emotional expression.

Banjo McLachlan, Born and raised in Newport on Sydney’s Northern Beaches, was introduced to photography at a young age by his father. His fascination with the craft saw him leave school to pursue photography studies, leading him into a career as a paparazzi photographer, capturing high-profile celebrities visiting Australia.

Relocating to New York, he expanded his focus to documentary photography, shifting from the realm of fame to documenting the rich stories of ordinary people and exploring the essence of urban life. Early exposure to photography fostered an appreciation for scanning, developing, and printing, shaping his artistic foundation. Influenced by music, skateboarding culture, and the aesthetics of 90s and 00s fashion photography, he draws inspiration from the interactions between people and their environments, merging these elements with his perspective and evolving practice.

Rachel Rutt’s (b.1990) work observes humanity’s instinct for the nomadic and migratory, polarised against outcomes of alienation and isolation borne innate to the experience of Diaspora. Assimilation and adaptation, strained by the necessity of refuge, unearth a hunger for existence exceeding mere survival. Can the process of evolution redefine belonging? Does the landscape transform in response? This catalyst is the subject of Rutt’s curiosity. Comprised of woven mediums, whose warp and weft are manipulated to emulate the pathways of physical migration, the interplay of colliding worlds, chance, harmony, and adaptive reaction, Rutt’s work pays homage to both personal and shared experiences of Diaspora through the universal mechanism of weaving. Silken transparencies provoke memories and interpret history, conveying rhythm persistent in spite of chaos.

Gabriel Cole is an artist and designer based in Naarm/Melbourne, originally from Adelaide. His multidisciplinary practice spans sculpture, painting, film, sound, and textiles, adapting fluidly to the conceptual demands of each body of work. Cole’s work is rooted in the exploration of semiotics and motifs, often incorporating signage and branding as visual and emotional entities. His approach combines a meticulous painterly technique with an embrace of organic imperfection, creating layered compositions where refined craftsmanship meets spontaneous abstraction. Materials are torn, folded, and disrupted, allowing for natural deconstruction while maintaining a deliberate sense of balance and form.

McLachlan, Rutt, and Cole challenge us to look deeper. By re-engaging with analog processes, their work masterfully explores the space between reality and illusion, past and present. In doing so, they reveal the profound power of images to shape new narratives and evoke unexpected emotions.

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19 September

19.09.25 Tired Control

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17 October

17.10.25 You Can’t Miss What You’ve Never Had