ART WORTH $150,000 IS 100% DEDUCTIBLE!

As restrictions ease and offices become populated again, coming back to a productive work space has never been more important. And the best part is that under the small business tax allowance, purchasing art for your business is 100% tax deductible.

Which business can claim the tax deduction?

Any small to medium-sized businesses with an annual turnover of less than $500 million qualifies.

How much can I claim?

Business owners can claim up to $150,000 for paintings or sculptures. And there is no limit to how many pieces of art you can make this claim for.

Here’s the background: Artwork is normally subject to a very low rate of depreciation (because their useful life is assessed as 100 years). This works out to be around 1% per year - which not very enticing. BUT the great news is, being classified as a depreciating asset qualifies art for the instant asset write-off .

Is there any artwork criteria ?

The artwork must be:

  1. Tangible;

  2. Capable of being moved;

  3. Purchased with the dominant purpose of display in a business premise or home office

  4. Not be trading stock

What if you are an employee?

As an employee working from home , you may claim an artwork deduction up to the value of $300 as part of your home office expenditure. Any value greater than $300 must be claimed using the usual decline in value rules.

Other stuff

In the past the criteria required artwork to be displayed in your business premises.

Home-based businesses also qualified, as long the artwork was displayed in the home office. You had to prove you would meet regularly clients at your premises. However, as possibly the only benefit of Covid, these rules were relaxed and artwork no longer needs to be confined to the office area.

For full details, please go the relevant section of the ATO website here

 
 

Judith Nielson Collection

Several works from my series, The Mirror Electric, have been acquired for the permanent museum collection of Australian’s most significant art collector and arts patron, Judith Nielson, founder of White Rabbit Gallery and numerous other arts foundations.

The Mirror Electric is a (skewed) look at the body image dysmorphia/objectification phenomenon happening in social media.

They are oil paintings on mirrored aluminium, so the viewer can see themselves in the artwork. The proportions echo an iPhone. With fluorescent backs and designed to sit out from the wall, the ambient light creates a glowing digital-like halo around these detailed satirical works.

Hanging in the collection alongside such artists as Ai Weiwei and Jørn Utzon, the instructions were that these paintings were; “never to be sold.”

Interview With An Artist Podcast

I’ve been featured on the podcast, Interview with an Artist, hosted by with Wilamina Russo.

Follow the link to get the Podcast

Here are the show notes:

Buckle in. This week's episode is a wide ranging conversation about travel adventures, creativity, and among other things, how the Playboy bunny got its name.

I'm serious! My guest this week is Melbourne based painter Matthew Quick.

What you are going to realise about Matthew is that he loves a good story. Throughout his life of traveling in his earlier years, Matthew has been under gunpoint by local authorities, gone underground mining in South America with explosives tied to him, and found himself in London in a recession.

The multi award winning and finalist listing artist has lived a life and then some. Matthew's paintings look to comment on the absurdity and complexity of times. His 2022 show at Nanda Hobbs titled the Mirror Electric was a fabulous example. Life like statues painting on to reflective aluminium adorned with some kind of filter you mind find on a smartphone. On first glance you might just think it tongue in cheek. And it is, but there is so much more depth to it.

On today's episode of Interview With An Artist, we talk about:

  • How's Matthew's father's financial position growing up impacted his career direction

  • How a lecturer Matthew had in his 20s had a life long impact on him,

  • Some of the amazing travel stories Matthew has,

  • And how he comes up with the many ideas he has for his art.

 
 

Interconnected Exhibition by Beautiful Bizarre

My painting on mirrored aluminium, "All In This Together" is being exhibited at “Interconnected”, an exhibition curated by Beautiful Bizarre Magazine @beautifulbizarremagazine

The work is showing alongside 70 legends in the Australian contemporary art scene (AND the touring Archibald show) at the New England Regional Art Museum @neramuseum

Beautiful Armidale also came to the party with mild autumnal weather for a weekend that encompassed an opening night with over 200 guests, awesome after party, interesting Artists panel the next morning, and afternoon soirée at Danijela's (co-founder and editor of Beautiful Bizarre) of own home, with endless champagne and even better conversation. It somehow stretched out into the evening and wound down with classic vinyl spinning and fireside conversation. Magical.

To receive the Collectors Preview email the Beautiful Bizarre Magazine's Editor-in-Chief Danijela Krha Purssey on danijela@beautifulbizarre.net

'Interconnected' is on from 13 May - 26 June, 2022, at the New England Regional Art Museum.

106 - 114 Kentucky Street, Armidale NSW 2350. Australia

A commission and a Golden (Fibonacci) Spiral

I recently completed this large commission.

While I did not set out to exactly follow the ratios of the Golden Spiral, I certainly was aware the proportions and visual appeal adhered to the basic principals. ⁠

⁠Now with the picture is finished and delivered, just to see for myself, I tried overlaying the Golden Spiral: the only surprise really was how perfectly the two aligned.

The Moon Shot

I am going to the moon.

It's just amazing to have my artwork included as part of the Peregrine Mission One. This is the first commercial Moon landing and included in the payloads is a time capsule carrying "The Peregrine Collection," to be placed on the lunar surface in perpetuity.

The launch is scheduled for 2021 from Cape Canaveral via a United Launch Alliance Vulcan Centaur rocket. The lander will touch down in the Lacus Mortis region of the Moon.

Upping the ante is the incredible company I shall be amongst; many of the best contemporary artists working around the world right now. Some of them I am lucky to call friends.

Thank you Dr. Samuel Peralta and Didi Menendez for making this happen.

I'm over the moon.

Check out the whole story here: artistsonthemoon.com

Plastik

Article and interview in the always amazing Plastik magazine

https://www.plastikmagazine.com/insta-art/matthew-quick?rq=Matthew+Q&fbclid=IwAR3_HdGorfYrzH0PEw8FKe7Mf46uwtBc4_2RnBFsfGeVZ4yIwxdBZ5q-P9s

 
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Commission completed

Pure Compassion⁠
Oil on Italian Linen 2020. ⁠

Currently on a truck somewhere on its way to the new owner, this new commission was bundled onto the last truck out of Melbourne before the pandemic lockdown. ⁠Please turn off the lights on the way out. Kinda ironic, given the subject matter.

 
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A Fine Romance - Gippsland Regional Gallery

 
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I am absolutely thrilled to be a part of this new museum exhibition. Quality conceptual realism has been something of a phenomenon in Australia, remarkable for a number of reasons: firstly the quality of the paintings by all the artists have been extraordinary, and the fact that thought-provoking painting has re-emerged again after years of being “unfashionable” with curators.

While recognised by the commercial galleries, this is the first museum show what moves towards recognising this phenomenon. A Fine Romance' is an exhibition about beauty and deceit. Featuring hyper-real paintings and sculptures by a range of contemporary artists, it is as seductive as it is awe-inspiring.

Drawing on the Gallery’s collection, together with dazzling artworks sourced from behind the closed doors of private collectors, A Fine Romance is an experience not to be missed!

The line-up represents a who’s-who of Australian realism, including Natasha Bieniek, Robin Eley, Louise Feneley, Juan Ford, Sam Jinks, Sam Leach, Matt Martin, Shannon Smiley, Heidi Yardley, and Michael Zavros.

Exhibition is on st the Gippsland Art Gallery, 70 Foster Street, Sale 2850
And it opens 8 December 2018 and ends 17 February 2019

 

Fisher's Ghost Art Prize

 
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The painting The Rules Of Engagement has been selected as a finalist for Fisher’s Ghost Art Prize.

Past winners include some of Australia’s most respected Contemporary artists including Elisabeth Cummings, Khaled Sabsabi, Justene Williams, David Bromley, Marion Borgelt, Raquel Ormella and Philip Wolfhagen.

Its on at the Campbelltown Arts Centre, 1 Art Gallery Rd, Campbelltown, NSW 2560
And is showing daily Saturday 3 November – Thursday 13 December 2018

 

EMSLA

 
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The painting The Bare Necessities has been selected as a finalist for this year’s Eutick memorial Still Life Award.
EMSLA celebrates excellence in still life painting and welcomes the influences of impressionism, abstraction, realism and hyperrealism (indeed all the isms) in all their permutations

Exhibition is on at Project Contemporary Art Space, 255 Keira St, Wollongong NSW 2500 and runs from Friday 9th November to December 1st 2018 at

 

Mosman Art Prize

 
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The painting Utmost Respect has been selected as a finalist for this year’s Mosman Art Prize.
It will be on display at the Mosman Art gallery From the 26 September to 18 November.

 

The Kennedy Art Prize

 
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The painting Acceptance and Hope has been selected by the jurors as a finalist submitted work has been selected as a finalist for the 2018 Kennedy Prize.

The exhibition is at the Royal South Australian Society of Arts
Level One, corner North Terrace & Kintore Avenue, Adelaide SA
and it runs from Friday, 7 September to Saturday, 23 September