Michelle Nikou announced as the 2024 Guildhouse Fellow

Guildhouse, the Art Gallery of South Australia and the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation are delighted to announce South Australian contemporary artist Michelle Nikou as the 2024 Guildhouse Fellow – a twelve-month fellowship valued at over $50,000.

The Guildhouse Fellowship was inaugurated in 2019 with the generous support of the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation to recognise and elevate South Australian artistic ambition. The annual fellowship offers a transformative opportunity for one mid-career South Australian visual artist, craftsperson or designer, awarding funding to support research and development, travel, the creation of new work, and a presentation outcome at AGSA.

This year’s Guildhouse Fellow, Michelle Nikou, is a South Australian-based sculptor, who experiments with a diverse range of materials and draws on surrealist techniques to transform everyday domestic objects into sculptures of humour, poignancy and marvel.

Using strategies such as chance, psychological metaphor, deadpan wit, and juxtaposition, Nikou inventively blurs and extends the boundaries between fine art and craft. Her work, often formed in lead, bronze, resin, latex, and ceramics, invests unremarkable or overlooked facets of daily existence with new and unexpected significance. Nikou’s work has been featured in exhibitions nationally and internationally and held in private and public collections, including AGSA, the National Gallery of Australia; Museum of Contemporary Art; Artbank; University of South Australia Art Museum; as well as the Clo Fleiss Collection, Paris and Gigi and Josef Fainas Collection, Geneva.

Michelle Nikou says, ‘I am deeply honoured to be awarded the Guildhouse Fellowship, and for the support from the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation and Art Gallery of South Australia. This opportunity represents a pivotal moment in my practice, enabling me to explore new directions, undertake extensive research, and create work that pushes the boundaries of my artistic expression.

This fellowship recognises the importance of consistent creative exploration and the powerful role art plays in our culture. I look forward to sharing my new work at AGSA and contributing to the diversity of South Australia’s visual art landscape.’

The Fellowship’s 2024 selection panel comprised AGSA Acting Director Emma Fey, Guildhouse Board Member, Christian Hall and guest judge Dr Rebecca Coates, Director of the Monash University Museum of Art.

The panellists commended Nikou for her fellowship proposal, which deeply explores the poetic and psychoanalytic dimensions of her practice. In a joint statement, the panel was impressed by Michelle Nikou’s ‘quiet and sustained commitment to practice and the continued rigour of her self-reflective inquiry, coupled with a bold confidence to venture into uncharted territory and fully embrace the opportunities presented by the fellowship.’

James & Diana Ramsay Foundation Executive Director, Kerry de Lorme says, ‘A hearty congratulations to Michelle, we recognise how important and unique opportunities such as this are, particularly with a presentation outcome at AGSA. The Guildhouse Fellowship makes a unique contribution to the development of South Australian artists’ careers and the state’s cultural economy more broadly. It has been inspiring to witness the tangible impact the Fellowship has had on past recipients and the ongoing ripple effects it continues to create for their professional careers.’ 

Merinda Edwards, Guildhouse Interim CEO says ‘The Guildhouse Fellowship is core to enhancing the sustainability and breadth of artistic excellence in South Australia. We are so grateful to the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation and AGSA for their unwavering support, we look forward to working with Michelle Nikou as this time will, undoubtably, lead to new ways to progress studio-making practice. We are thrilled to support Michelle as the 2024 Fellow.’ 

AGSA Acting Director Emma Fey says, ‘The Guildhouse Fellowship plays a critical role in amplifying the careers and practice of South Australian artists. Michelle Nikou’s recognition as the 2024 Guildhouse Fellow offers her a meaningful opportunity to expand her career and we eagerly await the outcomes of her Fellowship that will be presented at AGSA.’

Now in its fifth year, the Guildhouse Fellowship has previously been awarded to Troy-Anthony Baylis (2019), Sera Waters (2020), Liam Fleming (2021) and Tom Philips (2022) who have presented their outcomes in exhibitions at AGSA. In 2025, AGSA will present new work by 2023 Guildhouse Fellow Kyoko Hashimoto, South Australian contemporary jeweller and critical designer.

ARTIST BIOGRAPHY

I was born in 1967 on Kaurna Country, Tarntanya (Adelaide), where I continue to live and work.

Since 1993, I have exhibited regularly, presenting annual solo shows at Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney and Greenaway Art Gallery, Adelaide. My work has featured in exhibitions in major museums and galleries in Australia and overseas, and held in private and public collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney; Artbank, Sydney; University of South Australia Art Museum, Adelaide; Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide; Clo Fleiss Collection, Paris; Gigi Josef Fainas Collection, Geneva; and more.

My longstanding interests in material experimentation, open narratives and expressive content has been evident in past exhibitions including most recently Stupid As, Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne (2024): The National 2021: New Australian Art, Carriageworks, Sydney; This is a Poem, Buxton Contemporary, Melbourne (2021); Safe Space, a touring exhibition (2018-2020); and From Will to Form: TarraWarra Biennale 2018, TarraWarra Museum of Art, Victoria.

My interests as an artist have been supplemented by continued formal education, including a Master of Visual Art (2005); a diploma at Hochschule für Bildende Künste Braunschweig (HBK) under Professor Thomas Rentmeister (2010-2011); and a PhD in Philosophy (2017). Key awards for recognition in academia include being a recipient of a MF & MH Joyner Scholarship in Fine Arts (2003-2005), a Post-Graduate Research Award (2012 -2016) and a Samstag Scholarship (2011).

Academic research and international residencies in Japan (2007) and Paris (2007) have informed an expanded perspective and valued dimension to my practice that fosters an inclusive dialogue in the phenomenal realm of emotion and metaphysics.

Images (L-R): Michelle Nikou, In Vivo, 2022, Installation view, Darren Knight Gallery, image courtesy the artist; Michelle Nikou, photograph Marcin Kobylecki.