It started with Sculpture by the Sea, expanded into the Mountains with Sculpture at Scenic World, and now carries on with Sculpture at the School.
It's an event on a much smaller scale event but the students at St Canice's Primary School, Katoomba are as keen as any professional.
Principal Mark Geerligs established the exhibition last year and it was a great success, he said. This year the exhibition had a theme - remembrance - in honour of the centenary of the Gallipoli campaign.
The students embraced the challenge and the school's rooms and hallways were full of slouch hats, bugles, medals, barbed wire, even lone pine trees made from a range of materials, including papier mache, wire and clay.
There was also a special display dedicated to the animals who featured in World War One, largely the war horses.
The students have studied the war in their history classes. The exhibition also ties in with their English lessons - every student has to write something about their artwork, explaining its meaning and significance.
St Canice's believes art is an important part of the learning curriculum and can help students with their creative writing efforts.
"It's about connecting the writing with the art," Mr Geerligs said. "They are both about audience and purpose so they marry perfectly."
The exhibition was open for a week and parents were encouraged to visit.
One piece - a wire lone pine tree by Year 5 student Holly Dirs (above) - caught the eye of the secretary of Katoomba RSL, David White, who has bought it to display in the foyer of the club.
And money raised went to St Vincent de Paul.