Jasmine Mowbray’s imagined landscapes are compositions of her fractured memories and empirical experiences within the natural world. Fascinated by reflections in water and the experience of moving/walking through the natural world, Jasmine examines how these visual experiences create alternate spaces—mirrors that reveal hidden complexities within familiar settings. Mowbray subverts traditional conventions of landscape paintings by altering the compositional ratios, prioritising the foreground as a major element that dominates the artwork’s surface. By suspending gravity and collapsing elements like the sky, water and vegetation into one plane, Mowbray disorients the viewer to create an imagined cosmological experience within a dismantled chronology of time.
Mowbray proposes alternate spaces that reveal hidden complexities within familiar settings. Each artwork serves as a portal that transforms fleeting moments into enduring visual experiences, underscoring her relationship with the shared environment. Integral to Mowbray’s painting process is the practice of restraint and consideration as she applies and removes paint to articulate the positive and negative space. Her paintings often resemble techniques used in drawing and printmaking, by which oil and water-based mediums are used to stain, scrape, repel, and absorb the pigment into the surface, creating an illusion of spatial depth.
Jasmine Mowbray (b.2003) lives and works on Gadigal land in Sydney, Australia. Mowbray graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the National Art School in 2024. She has been a finalist in several significant art prizes, including the 2025 Sir John Sulman Art Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the 2025 Georges River Art Prize, the 2024 Waverley Art Prize, where she received the mayor’s pick and people’s choice awards and won the people’s choice award in the 2024 Macquarie Group Emerging Artist Prize. Her work has been exhibited across Sydney in several public and private art institutions, including at the Art Gallery of NSW, Hurstville Museum and Gallery, Waverley Woollahra Art School, and The Art Space and Gallery Lane Cove. Most recently, she is included in Landscapes Reimagined at CBD Gallery and will present a solo exhibition at Curatorial+Co. in 2026.