I've come to know the landscape that surrounds my studio and home not just as scenery or a subject, but as a companion.
This relationship has slowly developed through time — one built on quiet observation, consistency, and respect.
Each day the mountains reveal new stories, asking me to look deeper and listen more carefully.
The places I have painted, I have done so many times, yet they are never the same.
I bring with me questions, and the bush answers.
Rock shelters and creek beds reveal thousands of years of history, showing me who has been.
The soft imprints of animal tracks like lace monitors, wallabies and feral cats tell me who is here.
Cool shadows falling on warm sand, eucalyptus leaves curling in the heat of the sun, smoke and mist rising out of gullies and soft clouds rolling quietly across the sky.
These paintings are an invitation to others, encouraging the viewer to slow down, take notice, and perhaps recall their own moments of connection with the landscapes around them.
I live and work on the lands of the Dharug people. I pay my respect to Elders past, present and emerging, and I acknowledge their continuing connection to country and to culture.
Dan Kyle, 2026




