Augustus Firestone is an Australian artist whose practice centres on Painted Sculptural Relief, exploring the contemporary Australian landscape through material depth, surface, and colour. Working between painting and low-relief sculpture, Firestone reimagines landscape not as a distant view, but as a physical terrain—layered, worked, and shaped by both natural forces and human presence.
His recent work draws from diverse Australian environments, including the volcanic formations and coastal escarpments of northern New South Wales, as well as iconic geological landmarks such as Uluṟu. Rather than depicting landscape as symbolic or spiritual, Firestone approaches place as a visual and material subject—focusing on erosion, scale, horizon, and the way landforms assert themselves through mass and structure.
By building surfaces through carved planes, raised contours, and painted strata, his works blur the distinction between image and object. Light interacts with form, shifting the viewer’s perception as they move, echoing the physical experience of encountering landscape firsthand.
Firestone’s work sits within a contemporary Australian tradition that values material experimentation while engaging with place in a direct, unsentimental way. His Painted Sculptural Reliefs offer a tactile re-reading of landscape—grounded, physical, and firmly situated in the present.