Two men and a woman standing in an art gallery looking at a colourful and satirical portrait depicting Gina Rinehart in a swimsuit on a floating kangaroo with Australian Olympic swimmers in the background underneath the Eiffel Tower.
ENTRIES UNVEILED:  Museum of the Riverina Manager Luke Grealy (right) with Canberra residents John Griffiths and Becky Crafter at the 2025 Bald Archy Prize exhibition launch at the Watson Arts Centre in Canberra.

Arts & Culture

Get ready to laugh with the launch of the 2025 Bald Archy Prize exhibition

Published: 07 Feb 2025 11:43am

Returning for its 29th year, Australia’s premier satirical art prize has attracted one of its largest field of entries, with 48 portraits vying for the 2025 Bald Archy Prize.

The 2025 exhibition was launched at the Watson Art Centre in Canberra today, Friday 7 February.

The Bald Archy Prize was created by the late Peter Batey OAM. Following his death in 2019, administration of the Bald Archy Prize was handed over to the Museum of the Riverina.

The prize provides artists of all styles and standards with an opportunity to create portrait paintings of humour, dark satire, light comedy, or caricature.

Two portraits hung on a gallery wall, one featuring Panthers half-back Nathan Cleary holding the NRL Premiership trophy and the other with Hugh Jackman as Wolverine with a pile of US dollars jammed on his claw.
📷 ‘It’s a Chin-Win Situation!’ by James Brennan and ‘Bloody Marvelous’ by Simon Schneider.

Museum Manager Luke Grealy is thrilled with the strong entry numbers for the 2025 Bald Archy Prize.

“Interest in the prize has been gaining momentum since it was relaunched in 2023 after a three-year hiatus,” Mr Grealy said.

“We received 48 entries this year, up from 40 in 2024 and more than double the number we received in 2023.

“The standard of entries is really high, and the artists have clearly embraced the concept of celebrating the lighter side of art and the irreverent, larrikin Australian spirit.

“There are plenty of famous Australians, politicians, and 2024 celebrities who get a brush with the art of parody and satire, such as Raygun, Hugh Jackman, Panthers half back Nathan Cleary, Peter Dutton, Senator Lidia Thorpe, and Costa Georgiadis from Gardening Australia.

Two portraits hung on a gallery wall, one featuring a laughing blonde woman, Beccy Cole, wearing an oversized cowboy hat and strumming a guitar, and the other with Peter Dutton sitting in at an oversized chessboard, moving pieces that look like nuclear power plant cooling towers.
📷 Poster Girl’ by Judy Badin ‘Despicable Ploy’ by Phil Meatchem.

“And as a South Sydney fan, I’m not sure about a rather sinister painting of returning Rabbitohs coach Wayne Bennet holding a rabbit featuring the head of super star Latrell Mitchell!”

It is not just the artworks that are quirky when it comes to the Bald Archy Prize; the long-running judge is a sulphur-crested cockatoo.

In keeping with tradition, Professor Maude Cockatoo will review the portraits and select the finalists for the $10,000 prize, which will be announced on Friday 21 March 2025.

The 2025 Bald Archy Prize exhibition will be on show at the Watson Arts Centre from 7 February to 23 March, before embarking on a tour across NSW and Victoria.

“It will follow a similar path to our 2024 exhibition, which travelled to 10 venues, from Mansfield in Victoria to Brewarrina in north-west NSW,” Mr Grealy said.

“Our audiences have a well-developed sense of satire, and the humour of the Bald Archy Prize helps them process the major events and people of the year.

“Maude says, in these testing times people need a smile or laugh more than ever.”

Two portraits hung on a gallery wall, one featuring a smiling First Nations activist Vincent Lingiari, with the Aboriginal Flag in the background, holding a portrait of Pauline Hanson, and the other of Costa Georgiadis from Gardening Australia, wearing a garland of flowers and a headpiece made of flowers.
📷 ‘Vincent’s Polly’ by John Skillington and ‘Garden God’ by Alice Beasley.

The year-long tour will take in Griffith, Mansfield, Brewarrina, Broken Hill, Corowa, Holbrook, Deniliquin, and Temora, before wrapping up in Wagga Wagga in December 2025.