Winners Announced For The 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize

Woollahra Gallery at Redleaf has announced the winners of the 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize, Australia’s most prestigious award for small-scale sculpture.
Founded by Woollahra Council and now in its 24th year, the Prize continues to celebrate dynamic and innovative approaches to contemporary sculpture, with this year’s winners highlighting the transformative potential of materials and form. The announcement coincides with the opening of the exhibition of finalist works, now on display until 16 November 2025.
Prize Winners
Woollahra Small
Sculpture Prize 2025, $25,000
Awarded to
Auckland-based artist Virginia Leonard for
Glad that you are not here all the time — an urn for
unwanted limbs and other things, crafted from clay, pure
gold and resin. An internationally recognised ceramicist
represented by leading galleries in Aotearoa, Australia, the
USA and Switzerland, Leonard’s work is held in major
public and private collections worldwide. Her winning
sculpture channels personal frustrations into a layered
form, combining glazed ceramics with resin casting to
explore the tensions between opacity and
transparency.
On winning the Prize, Virginia Leonard said, “I am super grateful and honoured to win the Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize, and to be showing alongside some incredible works. It is such a massive feeling to be acknowledged with this new body of work, as I pour and cast resin in my garage late into the night hoping that what I see and feel, other people will as well.”
Special Commendation Award,
$2,000
Awarded to Paddington-based artist
Thomas Mason for Torque, an
assemblage of stoneware, glaze, construction adhesive, epoxy
putty and cornice cement. A Sydney ceramic artist with a
Master of Fine Art (Research) from UNSW, Mason has exhibited
widely across Australia including solo shows at KUDOS
Gallery and GAFFA Gallery. His prize-winning work draws on
the physics of wave motion and the embodied mechanics of
making, with twisted forms reflecting the energy and
resistance of clay in process.
Mayor’s
Choice Award, $1,000
Selected by Mayor of
Woollahra Sarah Dixson, the award went to
emerging ceramic artist Alicia Cox for
Rack. Through casts of her own body, Cox’s work
explores the intersections of domesticity, gender and the
body as a vessel. Using mould-making techniques, she
reconfigures herself into tableware to examine ideas of
function, decoration and objectification. Cox is an emerging
artist working and living on unceded Ngambri and Ngunnawal
land. She recently graduated with First Class Honours from
the Australian National University School of Art &
Design.
Mayor of Woollahra Sarah Dixson said, “Rack shows objectification in a very real, practical way and makes a comment on the role of women in the home. It's both familiar and challenging, and also quite fun. It's a great example of why the Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize is so fantastic — it gives emerging artists like Alicia Cox the chance to be in the same room as better-known names in the art scene, and her work absolutely holds its own.”
The 2025 judging panel comprised Sanné Mestrom, Artist and Academic and winner of the 2017 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize; Justin Paton, Head Curator of International Art at the Art Gallery of New South Wales; and Megan Monte, inaugural Director of Ngununggula, Southern Highlands Regional Gallery.
Gallery Director, Sep Pourbozorgi, said, “These works are powerful examples of the Prize’s focus - how small scale can hold immense conceptual weight. Virginia’s work is both raw and refined, deeply personal yet universally relatable, while Thomas’s piece captures the physical energy of making in an extraordinary sculptural language.”
Exhibition Now Open
The 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize exhibition, featuring works by all 54 finalists, is on display at Woollahra Gallery at Redleaf from 26 September to 16 November 2025. Visitors are invited to explore the remarkable breadth of small-scale sculpture, from ceramic, glass, resin and neon to matchboxes, paper pulp and photographic paper.
Public Programs
Across the exhibition period, the Gallery will present a vibrant and inclusive program designed to engage families, art lovers, artists, and audiences with diverse access needs. Highlights include hands-on sculpture and creative workshops with exhibiting artists, tailored for both children and adults, as well as regular guided tours - led by Gallery staff, curators, and finalists - offering unique insights into the works on display. Dedicated programs will cater to neurodivergent audiences, while industry-focused sessions explore pathways from small-scale practice to public art. Offsite events and artist talks will further extend the exhibition’s reach into the community.
EVENT DETAILS
- What: 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize Exhibition
- Where: Woollahra Gallery at Redleaf, 548 New South Head Road, Double Bay
- When: 26 September to 16 November
The Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize is supported by the following sponsors:
Platinum Sponsor: Sandersons Rushcutters Bay Gold Sponsors: UAP, Wentworth Courier, Zart
Silver Sponsors: J Farren Price, D'Leanne Lewis, Crawford's Casting, Catalina, FELLR
For more information about the exhibition and the Prize, please visit woollahragallery.com.au.
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