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art.







 A JILL OF MANY TRADES
 Sam Matthews Moo defies simple definition - gardener, builder,


 ceramicist, community artist, creative dynamo, she’s entirely original.
 Sam Matthews Moo’s Mosaics:  Or, as she puts it, a “Jill of many trades.”

 The Art  She  rolled  into  Port  Douglas  in  the  1980s  like  a  character  from  a
 great Australian movie: on a Harley Davidson with her cattle dog,
 Aussie, perched on a leather cushion strapped to the fuel tank. She
 came to work on the Sheraton Mirage, when the town was on the cusp
 of transformation. What was meant to be a short stay turned into a
 of Building   She founded the Secret Garden Nursery with her friend Karina Eagle
 lifelong chapter, as it has for many Port Douglas locals.

 and was one of the few women gardeners in town, bringing colour and

 Community  creativity to Port Douglas’s tropical greenery. Her flair soon extended
 to the Pink Flamingo Resort and later her quirky guesthouse, The

 Moo Bay Muse. She also exhibited with Port Douglas Artists Inc and
 mentored others through Douglas Arts Studio (DAB).
 Her nickname? A nod to West Australian humour. “I built a place in
 Cow Bay in the Daintree,” she explains. “And being from WA, where
 we nickname everything, Cow Bay became Moo Bay.” Guests at her
 WORDS by Maura Mancini  guesthouse assumed she was the muse herself and began calling her
 Moo. “I never corrected them,” she grins. “It just stuck.” And Moo she
 remains —  how she’s known, and how she signs her work.
 If you’ve wandered through Rex Smeal
 Park in Port Douglas or strolled along   ART WITH DIRT UNDER FINGERNAILS: FROM SOIL TO CLAY
 Before clay, there was soil. Moo’s deep connection to nature
 Front Street in Mossman, you might   and community made her gardens and guesthouses feel like art
 have noticed something peeking out   installations. But her mosaics, especially those created with the
 community, have become her most visible and celebrated work.
 from the everyday: bursts of colour, clay   Locals helped create small pieces: seeds, beetles, ladybirds, bees that   plays with opposites: fragments and wholeness, beauty and disruption,
 creatures, glinting tiles, and stories told   Over the past few years, Moo, alongside creatives like Leanne   were fired, cut and arranged like a giant, one-of-a-kind puzzle. “Nothing   stillness and movement. She still loves old Holdens, cattle dogs, warm

 Emmitt, Ellen Terrell and Liz Showniruk, has helped deliver several

 through mosaics. These are not just   community-led mosaic projects in the Douglas Shire.  is uniform,” Moo says. “That’s the point.” Creating the mosaic took   compost and watching ants go about their day. “I like making beautiful
                                                                    things that might make people think about uncomfortable subjects.”
             months, workshops, material prep, installation. It’s a slow, detailed
 pretty walls. They’re public artworks   These colourful, collaborative works highlight the natural world and   process. “Mosaic is  incredibly labour-intensive,”  she says. “It takes   Her life is a mosaic in itself: vibrant, handmade, and always evolving.

 crafted by many hands and guided by   the ecosystems we share, aiming to spark wonder, connection, and   patience  and  problem-solving,  especially  on  this  scale  with  so  many   THE BIGGER PICTURE
             people involved.” Moo steers the vision but welcomes variation. Once
 one creative spirit: Sam Matthews, also   awareness about the fragile beauty around us.  the panels were finished, they were mounted, installed, and grouted.   To Moo, community art is more than decoration: it’s a tool for




 known as Moo.  Moo’s  first  major  project,  Life  Among  the  Trees,  transformed  the   The result? Layered, living public art reflecting the textures of local life.  connection. “Strong, interesting communities don’t just happen.
 Rex Smeal Park amenities block with rainforest creatures made in   People build them,” she says. “And art helps us do that.”
 community workshops held at Douglas Arts Base and Mossman   Between May 2024 and April 2025, Moo and
 Community Centre. When a wheelchair-accessible toilet was added   Leanne Emmitt ran 52 workshops with around   She keeps the process open, accessible and
 in 2019, they extended the mural with Part Two, supported by a   13 participants in each. Sixty-nine ceramic   delightfully imperfect. “It doesn’t have to be

 Douglas Shire Council community grant.  decorators crafted more than 700 tiles and 46   perfect,” she says. “It just has to be real.”

             mosaic artists assembled 115 panels. There were
 “We live on the edge of reef and rainforest, full of wildlife, there’s   11 Kuku Yalanji language contributors, 24 haiku   So next time you’re in Mossman or Port Douglas

 endless inspiration,” she says.  poets, five ceramicists, and seven installation   and you bump into one of these mosaics, look
             helpers. All pitched in, donating thousands of                         closer. You’ll see frogs, birds, insects, poetry,

 Participants created birds, butterflies, frogs and insects using outlines   hours, all voluntarily. The result is a true mosaic   and laughter. You’ll see fragments pieced



 traced on mesh and tiny pieces of ceramic, glass, and pottery tiles.   ecosystem: butterflies flitting, bees swarming,   together by many hands. Somewhere in the

 These were installed among hundreds of colourful, hand-painted   ants on the march, with interesting insect information and haiku poems   shimmer of tile and grout, you might just find a little bit of Moo

 leaves, then tied together during a few weeks’ installation process.  hidden among the tiles.   and sense the quiet magic that happens when a community builds
                                                                    something extraordinary together.
 A MOSAIC ECOSYSTEM  Locals speak of it with pride. Tourists stop for photos. And Moo
 Commissioned by Douglas Shire Council and supported by the   continues planting seeds—literal and metaphorical for a more connected   See Moo’s latest personal works in the group exhibition Escape Artists:

 Queensland Government’s Regional Arts Development Fund, Making   and colourful world. These projects remain deeply grassroots. “No   Contemporaries in FNQ. On show from 18 September to 4 October,
 Mosaics for Mossman is even more ambitious: a 51-metre artwork   contractors, no corporate teams — just locals, making magic,” she says.  10 am–4 pm daily at Port Douglas Community Hall.

 winding along Front Street. It’s alive with butterflies, ants, bees, a giant

 cane toad and vines, crafted by many, for many. The process blends   A LIFE UNEXPECTED  portdouglasartists.com.au

 art and community. “When people help make something, they care   “I’m inspired by solitude and the natural world,” Moo explains. “I like
 more,” Moo says. “It creates a real connection.”  working with my hands and watching things grow.” Her artistic practice
 Sam and her dog. Aussie
 26   Port Douglas Magazine & Travel Planner
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