Piccinini and Hennessey create a magical world in the shadow of Hobart's industrial zone
Tim Stone
Patricia Piccinini makes strange, grotesquely beautiful sculptures that look like works of genetic engineering, but her partner and fellow sculptor Peter Hennessey prefers to work in metal. Together they have created The Shadow Calling, an exhibition that opened as part of this year's Dark Mofo festival in Hobart.
Dark Mofo guests get in touch with their wild side
Carlo Zeccola
Beyond MONA's gravitational pull Tasmanian art is often about landscape. This year Hobart's winter solstice festival, Dark Mofo, was pushed beyond the city as crowds journeyed to Cradle Mountain for two nights of Wild at Heart.
Nude swim: Hundreds brave the cold to skinny dip in Hobart's River Derwent for winter solstice
News Online
Hundreds of people brave the chilly waters of Hobart's River Derwent for the city's annual nude swim to mark the winter solstice.
EYE Yamantaka brings CIRCOM to Dark Mofo
Tim Stone
It's hard to avoid being framed by the media as a wild and unpredictable character if your claim to fame is founding the 'Japanoise' rock band Boredoms. But this has made experimental musician EYE Yamantaka wary of the media, and as a result he is very careful that his words are not misused.
Dark Mofo's Winter Feast: Thousands brave cold and rain as chefs turn up the heat for popular event
By Kieran Jones
Hobart's Winter Feast attracts thousands of tourists and businesses to the city as Dark Mofo organisers hope to rival the hugely popular summer event, the Taste of Tasmania.
Dark Mofo: Art festival draws people onto Hobart's streets to celebrate winter
News Online
Hobart's Dark Mofo festival has taken over the port city with tens of thousands coming out for the celebrations.
Dark Mofo: Put down the development plans Hobart, there's art to look at
Tim Stone
Dark Mofo, Tasmania's premiere winter arts festival, returns for its third year with a program that includes fire breathing organs, earth shaking sounds and disorientating late night events all designed to push audiences outside their comfort zones, writes Tim Stone.
Dark Mofo organisers promise 'brain orgasms' at Blacklist event
Tim Stone
Despite a lack of published information about the Blacklist event, tickets to the opening weekend of Dark Mofo's official after party sold out within days of going on sale.
Dark Mofo 2015: Winter art festival puts a fire in Hobart's belly, right when needed
By Gregor Salmon
Dark Mofo festival is changing the way Australia's southernmost capital is being seen and enjoyed, by locals and tourists alike.
Dark Mofo banishing the mid-winter blues with an edgy celebration of the dark
Books and Arts RN
Now in its third year, Tasmania's Museum of Old and New Art's winter festival Dark Mofo explores and celebrates the darkest part of the year with large scale public art, theatre, music, cinema and feasting.
Dark Mofo festival: The Kettering Incident premiere sets scene for Tasmania's winter festival
By Ryk Goddard and Ros Lehman
The Dark Mofo winter festival gets off to a suitably dark and creepy start with the world premiere of the television series The Kettering Incident.
Ogoh-ogoh monsters searching for more heads to carry through the Dark Mofo streets of Hobart
Damien Peck
Organisers are looking for volunteers to carry massive ogoh-ogoh monsters through the streets of Hobart for Dark Mofo's Winter Feast.
The Macquarie Point story: a changing of the guard for Dark Mofo
Damien Peck
The first public event to be staged at Macquarie Point sees the site refurbished to mix the old with the new for Dark Mofo events next week.
Sydney Festival: the missing intimacy of Kiss and Cry - review
Courtney Collins
While vivid and balletic, Kiss and Cry ultimately fails to deliver on the promise of using humble elements to create something extraordinary, writes Courtney Collins.
Mishaps and mayhem in Hobart - MOFO 2015 reviewed part 2
Kate Hennessy
On Saturday Exxopolis is deflated, MONA market is postponed and the Australian Art Orchestra's collaboration with Arnhem Land's Young Wagilak Group is blown off MONA lawn and into the museum's subterranean bar. Kate Hennessy reports on what happens next.
A spectacle of sound and silence - MOFO 2015 reviewed
Kate Hennessy
From the maelstrom mustered by rock band Swans to the serenity spread by Adam Wojcinski's tea art, MONA FOMA excelled when foraying the fringes of quietness and noise and the space between spectacle and sound. Kate Hennessy brings us the music, sound and silence of MOFO 2015.
How To Dress Well, Tom Krell at Sydney Festival
Barnaby Smith
How To Dress Well, aka Chicago's Tom Krell, is a true innovator when it comes to both recording and performing, even if his music is characterised by profound sadness. Barnaby Smith looks ahead to his Australian shows, including a performance at Sydney Festival.
Tiny Ruins celebrate their small triumphs at Sydney Festival
Barnaby Smith
Music and songwriting is a way to reflect on the small triumphs and failures of everyday living, for Hollie Fullbrook of Tiny Ruins. Ahead of the band's appearance at Sydney Festival, she speaks to Barnaby Smith about the confessions and fragilities that make up her deeply thoughtful second album Brightly Painted One, as well as collaborations with some very important people.
Sydney Festival: Portland singer Alela Diane moves on from her once-in-a-lifetime divorce album
Barnaby Smith
American singer Alela Diane suffered for her art when making latest album About Farewell. As she prepares for her first ever trip to Australia to play at Sydney Festival, the ghosts from her past still play a crucial role in her present as she looks toward a fruitful, renewed musical future, writes Barnaby Smith.
Street artist takes prime position in Sydney Festival's public art program
ABC Arts Online
Sydney Festival's interactive public art program is pulling crowds into the Festival Hub, giving them the perfect selfie moment to mark the start of the 2015 Festival.
Sydney Festival: Chaplin's grandson takes up freedom of expression rally cry - Tabac Rouge reviewed
Courtney Collins
Like Charlie Chaplin with his film The Great Dictator, grandson James Thierr is using art to champion freedom of expression over terror, but as the cries of "Je Suis Charlie" recede on the Tabac Rouge stage Courtney Collins considers whether activism and artistry always make good bedfellows.
Sydney Festival: Media exec provides poetic inspiration for Inside There Falls, Mira Calix's decaying artwork
ABC Arts Online
When UK-based artist Mira Calix shared the concept for her Sydney Festival artwork with the writer who inspired the piece she delighted in the shared connection the two had with paper, or rather the decay of paper.
Melbourne Festival: Complexity of Belonging & Have I No Mouth - review
Alison Croggon
Have I No Mouth, by Dublin-based company Brokentalker, is a fascinating production that reveals the messy complexity of human lives, writes Alison Croggon. While in contrast, German playwright Falk Richter's highly anticipated collaboration with Chunky Move and the Melbourne Theatre Company lacks sophistication and subtlety, never quite shaking the spectre of Eurocentric tourism.
Melbourne Festival: Hello, Goodbye, Happy Birthday & Dance Territories Program 1 - review
Alison Croggon
With Hello, Goodbye, Happy Birthday, former Malthouse Theatre director-in-residence Roslyn Oades has created one of the most charming shows of the year, writes Alison Croggon. While the riveting double bill at Dancehouse continues the Festival's preoccupation with ritual.
Melbourne Festival: Marzo & Cirkopolos - review
Alison Croggon
An exhilarating, fantastic Quebecois circus troupe and Dewey Dell's shamanistic enactment about the unease of contemporary times captures Alison Croggon's attention at Melbourne Festival.