/ 6 min read

A studio in the ballroom

A studio in the ballroom
Partially completed sculptures by Consalvo rest in the living room, watched over by a large red painting by Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori. Photography by Dave Wheeler.
Contributors
Share this post

With a studio in the ballroom and a lifetime of art in every room, Lottie Consalvo and James Drinkwater live, make and collect art in one of the most storied buildings in Newcastle.

Words Kym Elphinstone & Jo Higgins Photography Dave Wheeler 

James Drinkwater was at the pharmacy waiting for a vaccination when he got talking with the person in front of him. “He said, ‘You’re those artists! You should buy my building!”’

The building was Longworth House, originally known as Wood’s Chambers, designed and built by the German architect Frederick Menkens in 1892 for merchant and brewer Joseph Wood. “They say if you throw a stone in Newcastle, you hit a Menkens building.”

Lottie Consalvo and James Drinkwater. Photography by Dave Wheeler.
The couple share the top level of their home for their respective artist studios. Photography by Dave Wheeler.

Drinkwater grew up in Newcastle and recalls the mythology surrounding Longworth House. During its lifetime, which has been punctuated by periods of abandonment and dereliction, it was bought by William Longworth, donated to a mysterious patriots society, and used as a function centre and a legendary punk venue.

And now, following that serendipitous conversation in the pharmacy, it’s home and studio to “those artists”: Lottie Consalvo and James Drinkwater, and their children, Vinnie and Hester.

“We often say we feel like it was actually built for us,” says Consalvo, who shares a studio with Drinkwater in what was once the upstairs ballroom. With major restoration work undertaken long before they bought it, they realise how lucky they are to be its current custodians. “If we took it on with all those burdens, we probably couldn’t have done it,” says Drinkwater. “But it’s so specific to our requirements as a family, and as practitioners it just suits us to a tee.”

The couple lived in Melbourne and Berlin before settling in Newcastle in 2012. They had been making and collecting art all that time, and moving to Longworth House has finally allowed them to unpack everything. “We’ve always lived in pokey little places. I remember that moment when we both realised that we can actually start to see and celebrate these things – give them breath and space,” says Drinkwater.

Framed works on paper in the main bedroom. Photography by Dave Wheeler.

Their art collection is an integral part of their lives as artists and includes much-loved swaps with friends. “Because you know how much it’s going to be adored, there’s this nice feeling of knowing that your work is hanging in a space they love, too,” says Consalvo. Alongside works that have been swapped and acquired, there are also gifts in thanks for their hospitality. Alex Seton’s light pendant and a carved marble axe by Mitch Ferrie, seemingly lobbed into the wall, are legacies of their stay while installing an exhibition at The Lock-Up, a contemporary art space just around the corner. The kitchen ceiling used to feature a painting by Mason Saltarrelli. “He did it the night before he left, up a ladder with a bottle of tequila,” says Drinkwater.

“It gave us this idea of slowly commissioning artists over the next 10 years to paint other sections of the ceiling. Whether or not that happens, all those things are now a possibility.” 

In the living-dining room, three large works form visual anchor points. One is a black-and-white photograph, Sleepless, by long-time friend Sarah Mosca. “We just love that work, it holds the whole collection together for us,” says Drinkwater.

The other two are by Consalvo and her father, Dino Consalvo. “My father has been the biggest influence on my trajectory as an artist and he has pushed us the most to commit to our art,” she says. “ ‘Don’t get scared. Just keep pushing, don’t get distracted, don’t buy into what’s normal’.”

The couple had other ideas for that spot but when Dino’s artwork went up, they realised it was the only place for it. “It’s a shrine to him in a way, but it’s so nice to have that here to show my lineage. Everyone asks about it.”

Other works, including a small Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran sculpture and a swapped Georgia Spain painting, speak to recurring interests in material messiness and works that fall outside an artist’s usual oeuvre. Other works include swaps with Eleanor Louise Butt and Michael Gearin and recent purchases by Anabel Robinson and Dean Beletich.

Art can be found everywhere. Early ceramic works by Drinkwater hang in the kitchen, paintings by everyone from Miranda Skoczek and Chris Horder to Turbo Brown, Brad Snape and Alan Jones are in their children’s rooms – chosen by them – while in the front rooms, Raymond Young’s carved shields keep company with a sprawling salon hang that includes work by Sally Gabori and Tony Tuckson.

“Sometimes you position things in the house so you can visit them at certain times of the day. Often it’s a case of, ‘I can’t have that there because I won’t see it all the time’,” says Consalvo.

The works they don’t look at, even when they’re hanging prominently, are their own. “In this house we’ve been able to put up more of our own work, which we’ve never done before but it’s usually in a spot we’re hoping to fill with another artist’s work. I look at James’s work; I never see mine.” 

Their home is also a workplace. If they aren’t hosting collectors or artists, they’re offering the dining room to Newcastle Art Gallery, Newcastle Writers Festival and The Lock-Up for events and local openings. Their investment in the city’s creative community and the possibilities for Longworth House are intrinsic parts of their understanding of home.

“What I love about living and working in the same space is that there’s no divide between work and life,” says Consalvo. Drinkwater agrees. “Someone asked me how I juggle life and work. For starters, my work is about the theatre of the domestic. The work doesn’t exist without this.”

This story appears in Issue 13 and is an edited extract from Collecting: Living with Art, by Kym Elphinstone with Jo Higgins and Dave Wheeler, Thames & Hudson Australia. 


CTA Image

This is but one of many excellent stories in our next issue of Galah. If you'd like to pre-order Issue 13, please click below. If you do this by 14 October, we will send it to you with free shipping – a good opportunity to stock up your present cupboard ahead of Christmas. Magazines will be posted in early November.

Pre-order Issue 13 for free shipping

ISSUE 13 COVER IMAGE: Emily Kam Kngwarray, Anmatyerr people, Alhalker Country, 1994 © Emily Kam Kngwarray/Copyright Agency, 2025. Private collection, courtesy of Deutscher and Hackett. Image courtesy of National Gallery of Australia.