Malthouse Theatre to stage Melancholia, Picnic at Hanging Rock and more in 2018
Malthouse Theatre's 2018 program is no picnic; it's bold, has a political edge and will reward theatregoers.
Malthouse Theatre's 2018 program is no picnic; it's bold, has a political edge and will reward theatregoers.
Talented first time director at the helm for Red Stitch's dystopian Australia in The Way Out.
A bucolic scene of rural Victoria by colonial artist Eugene von Guerard almost tops the $2 million mark at a Sydney public auction.
A temporary living installation will feature an artist lifted by 20,000 children's party balloons.
Bodies pile up behind Samuel L. Jackson and Ryan Reynolds in Australian director Patrick Hughes' The Hitman's Bodyguard.
George Gittoes has been to some of the must dangerous places on Earth. Now he returns to the rundown terrace in Potts Point where his life as an artist all began - the Yellow House.
Francis Lee's first feature God's Own Country is a place he knows well.
Paulini Curuenvauli sings with heavyweight punch and power in The Bodyguard.
This is not just timeless fashion, but time-filled: every stitch painstakingly made by hand.
The state government stands accused of excessive secrecy over its decision to move the Powerhouse Museum to Parramatta, with experts claiming the plan could cost $1.5 billion.
Sad but true, the songs of Tex, Don and Charlie stay with you long after they've wandered off to another town.
Entering the NGV's House of Dior exhibition is like walking into a Disney princess wonderland.
New Shoots has commissioned 10 poets to respond to plants and places in the Royal Botanic Gardens for the Melbourne Writers Festival.
Art installations ranging from the commemorative to the interpretive have come together for Rookwood Cemetery's annual Sculpture Walk.
A time of economic and social upheaval in Indonesia has brought about a burst of creativity, writes John McDonald.
Exclusive: Sydney's Carriageworks has announced its most ambitious single-artist commission, and it's dazzling.
There's plenty to see and do in Canberra over the next week.
Architecture enthusiasts are banding together against the wrecker's ball.
A fresh look at a rich though problematic piece.
In the course of founding expressionism the Dutch-born artist Vincent van Gogh drove himself to the brink of insanity and ended the self torture with a shot to the head.
There are no Super Mario Brothers posters at this unusual Collingwood bar.
Imants Tillers and Michael Nelson Jagamara continue to put past grievances aside
'Do whatever you want. Just make sure everybody looks good,' Andy Warhol told David LaChapelle nearly 40 years ago.
In this exhibition, artists tackle a difficult premise with skill and variety.
There is in all Sheffer's ceramics a strong sense of structural design.
Search pagination
Save articles for later.
Subscribe for unlimited access to news. Login to save articles.
Return to the homepage by clicking on the site logo.