Greenwich Village Arts Trail – 1 and 2 November 2025

The popular Greenwich Village Arts Trail will take place on November 1-2, 2025.  They are also celebrating 12 years of the trail (see the history of the Trail below).  This year, there is a record 39 artists, with several new participants in the Trail.

What is the Greenwich Village Arts Trail?

On the Greenwich Village Arts Trail, you will visit award-winning contemporary painters (oil, acrylic and watercolour), illustrators, sculptors, ceramicists, jewellers, photographers and textile artists.

The artists range from well-established professionals who have been exhibited in galleries and won numerous prizes, to highly skilled hobbyists who have worked for decades alongside successful business careers, to talented newcomers presenting their art for the first time.

The Greenwich artists open their studio doors to the public, showcasing and selling their work.

The number of artists living and practising in Greenwich is impressive for such a small community.

The Art Trail takes you around Greenwich and offers a wonderful experience through bush paths and stunning water views back to the coffee shops at the centre of the village.

Visit the Greenwich Village Arts Trail website for more information on each artist.

Greenwich is a suburb within the Lane Cove Council Area, and the main access to Greenwich is via Greenwich Road.  Google Map link here.

The Arts Trail is a fantastic day out for families, with cafes and picnic spots available all around the harbourside suburb as you follow the suggested walk on the map. Or make your own path from studio to studio – they are easy to spot by the orange flags out the front. There is plenty of street parking if you’re in the car, or catch the ferry, train or bus.
A commuter bus leaves Lane Cove, which will take you to the Greenwich Village Arts Trail.

New Artists

This year, there are several new exhibitors, including painters:

  • Christopher Barischoff [Studio 5] is an animation artist who paints on weekends
  • Sabrina This [studio 25] is influenced by pop art and art nouveau
  • Ian Brown [studio 27] is a modern, fresh landscape artist who creates bold abstract artworks
  • Atelier Greenwich [Studio 1] is a collective of three artists who create colourful, vibrant paintings. Their subjects range from abstract to landscape, as well as figurative works.

Also new to the trail are three artists working in the 3-dimensional art space:

  • Chris Warrell [studio 34], whose retirement has exposed a talented woodworker
  • Kathy Hawkins [studio 24], a leather and fabric creative making backpacks and handbags
  • Kim Hewitt [studio 8], a potter who produces beautiful original domestic ware

You will also have the opportunity to visit Simone Piccioni [Studio 7], a renowned, award-winning Italian-Australian figurative artist. He will be exhibiting his evocative figurative oil paintings from his artist-in-residence studio on Greenwich Road, under the auspices of Gallery Lane Cove + Creative Studios.

Simone was recently awarded the Lane Cove Art Prize Hyecorp Property Prize for his work, pictured below—the Dancer.

The Hyecorp Property Prize is only open to Lane Cove Art Society members and/or Lane Cove residents.

Simon Piccioni with The Dancer

Information on Each Artist

To read about each artist, click here and browse the digital brochure, which includes the Map.

From Left to Right
Top to Bottom
Studio 32 Robin Allen
Studio
Studio 29 Dana Dion
Studio 34 Chris Warrell
Studio 13 MaryAnne Parry
Studio 20 Amanda Harrison
Studio 4 Nicola Hart
Studio 22 David Markell

Greenwich Village Arts Trail Map

Where is Greenwich Village?  Greenwich is a suburb within the Lane Cove Council Area and the main access to Greenwich is via Greenwich Road.  Google Map link here.

Click the photo to see the digital brochure and map.

Background

In early 2005, two Greenwich artists, Gulcin Seven and the ex-Lord Mayor John May, remarked on the amazing number of artists active in the suburb and decided to canvas them about putting on a group exhibition. John approached friends while Gulcin broached the subject with customers in her newsagency.

Later that year, ten artists, Lyn Burns, Amanda Harrison, Pamela Irving, Magie Maule, John May, MaryAnne Parry, Susan Rothwell, Gulcin Seven, Kaan Seven and Louella Woodham, lugged their artworks, easels, screens, lights, and plinths up the stairs of the local sailing club to set up the inaugural Greenwich Art Show.

The opening night on 7 October 2005 was a huge success with friends, relatives and local residents filling the spectacular top floor of the Greenwich Sailing Club – the harbour sparkled from all sides of the room and the artists sparkled inside, enjoying the unique opportunity to showcase their work.

Another two shows, in 2007 and 2010, saw the group grow to fourteen artists, by which time space in the hired room was becoming tight. Combined with onerous logistics and the physical difficulties of manhandling the screens, plinths and lights up two flights of stairs, let alone all the artworks, it was time for a re-think.

At the traditional post-show de-brief, Dana Dion suggested changing the format to an open studio trail, much like similar events in Pittwater and Willoughby council areas. Under this regime, artists would be responsible for their own administration and presentation, without the space and light restrictions, or the need for transporting artworks. There was unanimous and enthusiastic agreement.

So Dana Dion and Amanda Harrison took up the reigns to corral a diverse collection of artists into a show spread across various sites around Greenwich.

Most of the Greenwich Village Art Trail’s (GVAT) guidelines were established at this stage, including for it to be walking friendly, without the need for a car, and this meant a strict adherence to the Greenwich suburb boundary line (plus a council-sponsored bus in later years).

Another of the guiding principles was around art education – that the Trail provide an opportunity for visitors to explore the back room, see where art is made, and learn about the processes behind the creations that artists bring to life in their studios. And strict presentation requirements were set down to ensure the best possible visitor experience, including that the artwork be presented as professionally as possible, with no seconds, and all studios be open for the days and hours specified in the advertising.

On the weekend of 8 & 9 October 2012, fourteen artists tentatively opened their doors at ten different sites – Lyn Burns, Dana Dion, Amanda Harrison, Cathy Jager, Melissa McElhone, John May, Kerin Moorehead, MaryAnne Parry, Sally Rossi-Ford, Susan Rothwell, Gulcin Seven, Petrina Slaytor, Peter Staveley, and Louella Woodham. The Trail attracted over 250 visitors from the local area and proved to be a wonderful community event – and a big success for the artists.

The GVAT has now grown to attract over 900 art-loving visitors from all over Sydney – and beyond. Set as the first weekend of November, the streets of the beautiful harbourside suburb fill with art-lovers who meet with friends, walk in groups, and view art in over 30 sites, speaking with the artists, learning about the creative processes, and purchasing fabulous artworks to take home to enrich their homes and lives.

Amanda Harrison is the initiator of the Greenwich Village Arts Trail. Amanda has always been immersed in the creative arts, whether painting, sculpture, photography, film-making or writing. She first studied sculpture in her final years of high school in Sydney before completing a bachelor of arts in film and scriptwriting at university. After travelling for many years, she settled in London. She reinvigorated her passion for sculpture at the Kensington & Chelsea College, where she learnt traditional sculpting techniques, including armature building, mould-making, casting and carving.

Back in Sydney, and after studying graphic design and running a small graphic design business, Amanda then started to explore ceramics, learning about hand-building and glazes at TAFE, art colleges and private workshops. She was thrilled to successfully combine her love of sculpture and clay and now creates wonderful contemporary artworks in clay and bronze from her art studio in Greenwich Sydney.

 

Dana Dion

Dana Dion’s contemporary landscapes will be on display. You can read about Dana here.  Dana has been involved in promoting the Greenwich Artist Trail from the beginning.

Dana Dion Local Lane Cove artist

 

See You on the Trail

If you love art, you will love the Greenwich Village Arts Trail. Why not grab a group of friends and tour the sites together, then have a cuppa at one of Greenwich’s lovely cafes. You get a real insight into an artist’s working space.

Find Out More Here

Date:  1- 2 November 2025 10 am – 4 pm
Instagram: @greenwich_village_arts_trail/
Facebook: @GreenwichVillageArtsTrail
Website: https://greenwichvillageartstrail.com.au/
Google Map Link: https://goo.gl/maps/zeHG1rDsqZZYiVAP8
Online Brochure and Map:Link Here