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Reading: Sydney artist Rachael Egan spent 100 hours on this painting. Someone walked off with it in just minutes in a suspected case of mistaken street bounty
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Daily London > World Affairs > Sydney artist Rachael Egan spent 100 hours on this painting. Someone walked off with it in just minutes in a suspected case of mistaken street bounty
World Affairs

Sydney artist Rachael Egan spent 100 hours on this painting. Someone walked off with it in just minutes in a suspected case of mistaken street bounty

Daily London
By Daily London
Published: November 7, 2025
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Daily London

A Sydney artist has faith that the “priceless” painting that took her more than 100 hours to complete will be returned after it was taken by someone in just minutes in a suspected case of mistaken street bounty. 

Rachael Egan was in the process of moving home in Erskineville on Tuesday afternoon when the centrepiece of her upcoming solo exhibition disappeared from the footpath.

In the chaos, the 26-year-old did not realise it was missing until she woke up the next morning and thought: “Where on earth is that painting?”

Rachael Egan spent 100 hours creating the centrepiece for her upcoming solo exhibition in January. (Supplied)

“I moved everything in and out that whole day. We did a lot of rounds from the car, and we would have definitely seen it outside the front,” she told 9news.com.au.

“So I think there was like a five- to 10-minute window when it was outside and someone took it. It wouldn’t have been outside for very long.”

Egan spent 100 hours over several months this year painting the piece and had planned to sell it at her very first solo exhibition in January.

To her, it is priceless. 

”I put a lot of love and labour into that work, and it’s the crux of all the other pieces,” she said.

“It was the first piece that jump-started the exhibit.

“So it’s very important to me, and a very special artwork for me.”

The artwork, titled Bliss – field of infinite potential, was born out of a phrase her yoga teacher had said during a class five years ago.

Egan’s mind immediately went to the famed Windows wallpaper.

She spent the years honing her techniques and waiting until she was ready to paint it.

Rachael Egan is a 26-year-old Sydney-based artist. (Supplied)

Egan felt up to it this year, but an injury to her dominant hand meant she had to wait another six months to get started.

When she was finally able to pick up the paintbrush, it took her months to create her take on the Windows wallpaper.

It inspired the rest of the art in her collection.

“My exhibit is an exploration of fields with infinite potentials, but some literal like that, and then others very abstracted,” she said.

Egan has posted up flyers around the street, spoken to neighbours and shared her art on her social media, @unsoftserve, to help reunite her with her painting. 

She is convinced it will be returned, believing someone had mistaken it for an item destined for council pickup.

“I know it was an innocent mistake, I’m sure someone fully just took it with street bounty, it wasn’t actually intentionally stolen,” she said.

“I just really have faith that whoever took it will see this and will return it to me, and they can come to my exhibit because they obviously liked my artwork.”

Rachael Egan’s artwork titled “Bliss – field of infinite potential”. (Rachael Egan)

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