Laissez Faire + the Witzig Archive
25 Nov 2025 – 13 Dec 2025
Zoe Young’s recent body of work grew from a self-imposed “camera detox.” Determined to paint only from life, she set herself the task of seeing without mediation; of unlearning the instant, image-ready habits rewarded by the capitalist attention economy of the present. What began as an act of discipline became a meditation on perception, temporality and the quiet structures of daily life. The results reveal an artist who approaches her own process with equal parts sincerity and mischief, finding lyricism in the small rituals that anchor daily life.
In her Southern Highlands studio, Young paints what surrounds her: food on the kitchen table, the movement of light across a wall, her son on the brink of adolescence. Working fast between school hours, each session is like a sprint, brief and concentrated, leaving visible traces of their making. The paintings feel alive with movement and thought, their brushwork recording moments of hesitation, adjustment, neurosis and delight.
Ever attuned to contradiction, Young brings a dry wit to her work. The camera detox, for instance, was conceived as an experimental protest against convenience; yet the many handwritten notes and snapshots documenting her progress were emailed to me while preparing this essay — a self-aware nod to the impossibility of total abstinence from the lens. The irony underscores what these works so elegantly perform: technologies today are habit-forming by design, which makes renouncing them through digital platforms a stark paradox.
This balancing act extends to her subject matter. Young’s paintings inhabit the porous boundary between art and life, where domestic scenes become vessels for formal inquiry and contemplation. Her humour pokes at the process, allowing room for spontaneity and accident. The table, the kitchen sink, the unruly garden all becomes fields of perception. In their looseness and speed, these paintings reject perfectionism, embracing the half-finished and the almost-right to affirm what is unambiguously alive.
A parallel thread runs through a dialogue she invited with veteran surf photographer John Witzig, whose 1960s images of Australian beach life captured countercultural ideals of freedom and ease. Young’s response is not nostalgic but gently subversive, a feminist reimagining of that mythology through a domestic lens. Where Witzig’s world is sun-bleached and male, hers is intimate and maternal, inhabited and self-aware. The beach shacks and sun-bleached bodies of Witzig’s photographs are reframed in Young’s paintings as interiors filled with lived reality: kitchens, gardens and the steady rhythm of ordinary days. His pictures are like pages from a surf manifesto, all salt and sunlight. Hers sustains that freedom within the domestic, turning repetition and responsibility into another form of flow. What unites them is a laissez-faire rhythm: one rides the wave; the other tends the shore.
At its core, Young’s practice is a conversation about attention. Painting from life becomes a way to resist distraction and reclaim time. While she chides her own so-called rules, her work insists on a sustained belief in the value of looking slowly and decisively. There is wonder in the everyday, and truth in the imperfect. In a post-truth age of speed and saturation, Young paints a quieter form of clarity, a domestic realism that finds fast freedom in staying still.
Daniel Mudie Cunningham - Director, Wollongong Art Gallery

Zoe YoungStay Gold 2025acrylic on plywood25 x 21 cm●●

Zoe YoungWhilst a symphony played outside, I watched Bergman Island 2025acrylic on plywood25 x 20 cm●●

Zoe YoungThe berry grows under the nettle - Shakespeare 2025acrylic on plywood25 x 20 cm●●

Zoe YoungHoney from a Weed 2025acrylic on plywood25 x 20 cm●●

Zoe YoungColander by the Kitchen Window 2025acrylic on plywood40 x 30 cm●●

Zoe YoungThe people we used to be still sitting around there, laissez faire 2025acrylic on plywood40 x 30 cm●●

Zoe YoungTime for an Omelette and a Glass of Wine 2025acrylic on plywood30 x 40 cm●●

Zoe YoungChez Dupleix: Beetroot Carpaccio 2025acrylic on plywood30 x 40 cm●●

Zoe YoungPetit cœur d'artichaut 2025acrylic on plywood30 x 40 cm●●

Zoe YoungTableau de Hôte: Stravinsky's Lunch (Toujours aujourd'hui) 2025acrylic on plywood30 x 40 cm●●

Zoe YoungBatik House Figs 2025acrylic on plywood31 x 44 cm●●

Zoe YoungThis town had its own Mulholland Drive 2025acrylic on plywood40 x 50 cm●●

Zoe YoungAsparagus and Apricots in the kitchen with buffalo Springfield 'learning to fly' on the radio. Some day in the 60's. 2025acrylic on plywood40 x 60 cm●●

Zoe YoungWitzig Wave I: The Ranch, California 2025acrylic on belgian linen90 x 120 cm●●

Zoe YoungOne's palate is one's own. Elizabeth David 2025acrylic on belgian linen120 x 90 cm●●

Zoe YoungWitzig Wave II: The Ranch, California 2025acrylic on belgian linen90 x 120 cm●●

Zoe YoungThe Madrigals - Non nobis, Domine 2025acrylic on belgian linen120 x 90 cm●●

Zoe YoungDejeuner sur l'herbe 2025acrylic on belgian linen90 x 120 cm●●

Zoe YoungWhite Waratahs in the Witzig Shack near the shops at Whale Beach 2025acrylic on belgian linen120 x 90 cm●●

Zoe YoungCœur d'artichaut 2025acrylic on belgian linen122 x 153 cm●●

Zoe YoungNorweigian Wood, Witzig Interior 2025acrylic on belgian linen122 x 153 cm●●

Zoe YoungSome days ask and some days answer, it's all still life 2025acrylic on belgian linen122 x 153 cm●●

Zoe YoungAprès Witzig, at the Single Fin Classic 2025acrylic on belgian linen122 x 153 cm$20,000.00














