Ellen Randell Dreams of Wattle Small Edition Ed. 1 of 12

Verified Artist Signed Certificate of Authenticity

Framing Options

A$1,100
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Artwork Details

Medium Photograph, Paper (Requires Framing)
Dimensions 70cm (W) x 52.5cm (H) x 0.4cm (D)
Review Stars 21,257 Customer Reviews
Original Artwork
This artwork is one of a kind!
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Estimated Delivery Time from VIC

The artist will be back on 15 June

Estimated Delivery:

Saturday, Jun 20 - Monday, Jun 22

Artwork Description

This piece was a finalist in the Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize 2023

Part of the 'Luminaries, Women of the Goldfields' series
I think of Ellen every time the wattle blooms. She was 20 and on her way home from Maryborough with her fiancé when she stopped to pick wattle from the side of the road. It’s the last thing she’d ever see. Her fiancé shot her in the back of the head and then shot himself. He was deep in gambling debt and had planned to take his own life, and had written a suicide letter to Ellen. I can only guess as to why he changed his mind and killed her too. Not wanting her to have a life without him? What a disgusting human. Ellen is a 19th century victim of domestic violence, but she’s so much more. A young girl in a new land with her whole life ahead and a love of yellow flowers. I want people to remember her name.

Photographed in Regional Victoria

Printed by a Master Printer, available in the following Limited Editions:

XL :140x105cm
Edition of 6 +1AP
$3400

L: 120x90cm
Edition of 6 +1AP (AP SOLD)
$2300

M: 90cmx67.5cm
Edition of 12+2AP
$1600

S: 70x52.5
Edition of 12+2AP
$1100

Artist Bio

Lauren Starr is an Australian photo-media artist creating narrative works at the intersection of myth, history, and land. Her practice centres on women’s lived and inherited experiences, drawing on fairytales, colonial histories, and personal ancestry to reimagine familiar stories through a contemporary lens.

Working with staged photography and digital compositing, Starr constructs painterly tableaux that sit between reality and myth. Her images often incorporate photographed fragments of her own paintings and textures, creating layered works that feel both symbolic and embodied.

Recent works explore themes of re-wilding, instinct, and the quiet reclamation of power, particularly through reimagined female archetypes and narratives from the Victorian goldfields.

Starr is a finalist in the 2026 Waterhouse Natural Science Art Prize and has been recognised through the Olive Cotton Award and Head On Photo Awards. She is the recipient of the Bluethumb Art Prize (Photography + Grand Prize, 2022), and her work is held in public collections including Parliament House Melbourne and Bendigo Art Gallery.

Commissions

Lauren's studio is in Bendigo VIC