Rupanyup occupies a pivotal place on the Victorian Silo Art Trail, not only geographically but historically. Its silo artwork is among the earliest completed works on the trail and set a benchmark for how silo art could function as both public art and historical record within the Wimmera–Mallee landscape.
Location and context
The silos stand immediately adjacent to the Rupanyup railway line, a reminder of the town’s origins as a grain-handling and transport hub. Like many Wimmera towns, Rupanyup developed around wheat production, rail logistics, and seasonal labour. The silos, once purely utilitarian, now operate as a vertical canvas visible from kilometres away across the flat, open plains.
Artist and completion
The Rupanyup silos were painted in 2017 by Melbourne-based artist SMUG (Sam Bates), one of Australia’s most technically accomplished photorealistic muralists. At the time, large-scale silo murals were still relatively experimental in Victoria. This project helped legitimise silo art as a serious cultural initiative rather than novelty infrastructure decoration.
Subject matter: two figures, one shared history
Unlike many silo artworks that focus solely on agricultural themes, Rupanyup’s silos present two deeply symbolic local figures, each occupying one silo face:
Uncle Badger Bates
One silo depicts Uncle Badger Bates, a respected Wergaia Elder and Law Man. His inclusion foregrounds the long Aboriginal custodianship of the land, extending tens of thousands of years prior to European settlement. The portrait is rendered with solemn dignity: weathered skin, steady gaze, and fine facial detail that conveys authority rather than sentimentality. His presence reframes the silos—from symbols of colonial agriculture into markers of much older cultural continuity.
Sister Ethel May
The adjoining silo portrays Sister Ethel May, a pioneering bush nurse who served the Rupanyup district in the early 20th century. At a time when medical care in rural Victoria was sparse and travel was arduous, bush nurses were often the sole providers of healthcare across vast distances. Her image represents endurance, service, and the quiet heroism of rural women. The juxtaposition with Uncle Badger Bates is deliberate: two lives shaped by the same land, contributing in different but equally foundational ways to the community.
Artistic style and execution
SMUG’s trademark hyperrealism is evident throughout the work. The scale is monumental, yet the detail is intimate—creases around eyes, subtle tonal variations in skin, and carefully controlled light that prevents distortion when viewed from ground level. The neutral, earthy palette harmonises with the surrounding wheat fields and big skies, ensuring the artwork feels embedded in place rather than imposed upon it.
Cultural significance
Rupanyup’s silo art is often described as one of the most socially thoughtful works on the Victorian Silo Art Trail. It avoids nostalgia and avoids abstraction, instead offering a quiet, balanced statement about shared history, recognition, and coexistence. Importantly, it acknowledges Aboriginal presence not as a preface to settlement, but as an ongoing reality.
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Linking Mural Monday

Beautiful work and thank you for the explanation
ReplyDeleteLove history of the region
DeleteWhat beautiful silo mural. I wonder if artist Sam Bates is related to Uncle Badger Bates? My Grandmother's family name was Bates, probably no relation. Thank you for all the information.
ReplyDeleteMaybe. Who knows?
DeleteMuy interesante estos murales sobre viejos silos.
ReplyDeleteIt carries so much history
DeleteSempre és maco veure que l'art pot fer que, la arquitectura d'aquestes formes, cobri més importància i no es quedin com a ruïnes.
ReplyDeleteSalutacions!
These towns are under bushfire threats atm
DeleteThe silo art is such a great idea. And it seems they could not have chosen two better people than these two. The paintings have a quiet dignity without being explicitly showy or exaggerated.
ReplyDeleteSimple and effective
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