Vale Terry Ingram

One of Australia's most respected and prolific visual arts writers has died.
An older Caucasian man with a white moustached tinged with ginger wears a green shirt and brown jacket. He is looking off to the right and cradling a paper coffee cup.

Hugely influential, while paradoxically being personally little known, the death of Terry Ingram (1942–2024), arts journalist and author should not pass without acknowledging his profound impact on our knowledge of, and the subsequent growth of, the Australian art market.

Terry, for over 43 years, was not only the longest-serving journalist at the Australian Financial Review, but he also wrote the Saleroom column, making him one of the most highly read and influential commentators on Australian art. Nobody, and I mean nobody, had written about Australian art, so persistently, in a national publication from the late 1960s till his full-time retirement in 2012. Having followed in Terry’s footsteps as an art market analyst for The Australian newspaper weekly for a decade, I can uniquely say that it is not that hard to score a byline in a major newspaper either now or back in the day. Easy, once, twice or every day for six months or so. However, it takes real discipline and determination to write a full page or even a column every week for decades. That, ladies and gentlemen, is one gritty achievement.

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Michael Reid is a successful, hard-working, highly focused, of average height, fat, near of sight, follically challenged, dyslexic, meat-eating, art dealer who is ever so lightly brushed by high-functioning low-level autism. He has five art galleries – being two in Sydney, one in Berlin, Germany and others in Murrurundi, the Upper Hunter and in Berrima, the Southern Highlands of NSW. In addition to the physical spaces, there is an online platform Michael Reid CLAY. His galleries established the National Emerging Art Prize in 2020. Michael received an Order of Australia in January 2016 for his services to the art world and is just back from scouting for space to open a gallery, in Los Angeles.