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Featured

  • Driving With Tony Davis

Mercedes-Benz’s GLC300 is a classy family car. But is it exciting?

The Mercedes-Benz GLC300 is a worthy update of its luxury medium-sized SUV. Here’s why it’s a dependable choice while waiting for the next EV.

  • 40 mins ago
  • Tony Davis
Blanche Violet Maher’s portrait of her two sisters at the river on Collaroy Station.

How the discovery of old photos exposed an ancestor’s hidden talent

A young woman’s record of rural life in Australia in the late 1800s is finally getting its day in the sun after her great-granddaughter found her work in a Sydney attic.

  • Elizabeth Fortescue
Maggie Watson Napangardi’s Mina Mina Dreaming, 1995, sold for $112,500 (including 25 per cent buyer’s premium) at the Menzies estate auction at Cooee Art Leven in Sydney on March 5, 2024.

Menzies Indigenous collection goes for knockdown prices

Paintings from Rodney Menzies’ estate sold at big discounts to previous prices as buyers prove hard to please in early season art sales.

  • Elizabeth Fortescue
Turkish Airlines inaugural flight to Melbourne.

I just flew from Istanbul to Melbourne with Turkish Airlines

Fares from Melbourne to Istanbul come with free nights in five- and four-star hotels.

  • Ayesha de Kretser
Espagnole (Buste) [The Spanish Woman], 1922, by Henri Matisse. Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, gift of Julian and Josie Robertson.

How Auckland Art Gallery suddenly scored 15 modern masterpieces

One of America’s wealthiest investors has left $167m worth of famous artworks to Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki. The question on everyone’s lips: why New Zealand?

  • Elizabeth Fortescue

Lunch with the AFR

Tanya Hosch, the AFL’s general manager of Inclusion and Social Policy, at Peel St Bistro in Adelaide.

AFL inclusion boss says Paul Keating was wrong on the Voice

Eight years into her role, and still recovering from the amputation of her lower right leg last year, Tanya Hosch keeps pushing on in a job where there is no finish line.

  • Simon Evans
Peter Bol at San Telmo in Melbourne CBD.

Peter Bol doesn’t want revenge for false drug test. He wants to win

“I figured out, the angrier that I got, the more destruction it did to me,” Bol says. “So I found I just let it go.”

  • Euan Black

Why CFMEU boss Zach Smith thinks it’s OK to break the law sometimes

The union’s national construction division secretary, Zach Smith, hasn’t been in the role long but is already making a splash in Canberra’s corridors of power.

  • Ronald Mizen
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Yesterday

Sophie Taylor hiking in the mountains outside Queenstown in New Zealand.

Hiking is great for strategising about work, says this founder

Sydney-based ethical clothing brand founder Sophie Taylor loves hiking – in the Blue Mountains, New Zealand or on a high-altitude trek in Peru. But there’s one place on her ultimate wish list.

  • Life & Leisure

2-for-1 tickets to the Emily Kam Kngwarray Exhibition

2-for-1 tickets* to the Emily Kam Kngwarray exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia.

“Bold style is part of my identity,” says Dayes.

This genius drummer puts on a show - with no drum solos

Yussef Dayes is a virtuoso with the sticks, but at this Sydney show he preferred to blend in with the band on his progressive jazz jams.

  • Michael Bailey

This Month

Ozempic is in high demand and short supply.

The battle over the trillion-dollar weight-loss bonanza

Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly are making blockbuster drugs. Can they maintain their lead?

  • The Economist

Returning to live in London after 20 years. Here’s what I learnt

After two decades away, this journalist discovers a city that still has an undeniable buzz – yet in other ways it’s grinding to a halt.

  • Mark Ludlow
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The innovator defying ‘doom and gloom’ in a struggling wine region

Riverland growers are in crisis. But Ashley Ratcliff of Ricca Terra Wines is buoyed by the region’s potential.

  • Max Allen

‘A Mars bar in a yellow skin’: the truth about bananas

Is the popular fruit really such a health saviour? Here are the pros and cons of making bananas one of your five a day.

  • Susanna Galton
Peruvian artist Cristina Flores Pescorán with her woven sculpture at White Bay Power Station.

The Paris powerhouse backing Sydney Biennale’s First Nations artists

The handspun work of Peruvian artist Cristina Flores Pescorán couldn’t be further from the world of high jewellery and watches. But that’s exactly why the Fondation Cartier loves it.

  • Stephen Todd

‘We don’t do curry’: this chef wants to change our idea of Indian food

Is progressive Indian food anything like the stereotype? What actually is Filipino cuisine? All will be revealed at the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival.

  • Necia Wilden
BYD Seal Performance sedan

BYD’s fast new EV sedan is hot on Tesla’s tail

The Chinese makers of the BYD Seal Performance Sedan are so proud of its acceleration they’ve put a badge on the boot boasting of the rate. But this fast EV has other surprises, too.

  • Tony Davis
Adrian Schiller as Henry Lehman in The Lehman Trilogy.

This play about the Lehman Brothers disaster is three hours long. It’s riveting

Masterfully acted and brilliantly staged, The Lehman Trilogy is as much the story of capitalist America as it is of the doomed bank.

  • Michael Bailey
Iris Apfel sits for a portrait during her 100th Birthday Party at Central Park Tower on September 09, 2021 in New York.

Style guru and self-described ‘geriatric starlet’ dies aged 102

Iris Apfel, the interior designer, who has died aged 102, worked for nine US presidents, but was more remarkable for emerging as a fashion icon in her mid-80s.

Pia Curran at home in Sydney.

I have anorexia: this is what it’s like

To have a meaningful conversation about eating disorders, we need to first strip away the myths.

  • Pia Curran
Tanya Hosch, the AFL’s general manager of Inclusion and Social Policy, at Peel St Bistro in Adelaide.

AFL inclusion boss says Paul Keating was wrong on the Voice

Eight years into her role, and still recovering from the amputation of her lower right leg last year, Tanya Hosch keeps pushing on in a job where there is no finish line.

  • Simon Evans
In the quest for a dopamine hit from social media, are a generation of young women setting themselves up for a lifetime of addiction?

Is smartphone addiction dooming a generation of girls?

Parents and grandparents have always fretted about the state of today’s youth. But this time, the research points to good reasons for concern.

  • Julie Hare
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“The Adoration of the Kings,” thought to have been painted around 1628, has at various times in its 400-year life been viewed as a work by Rembrandt.

Want to add $20m to the value of a painting? Say it’s by Rembrandt

When it comes to predicting what an artwork might be worth, attribution trumps aethestics – and the considered opinion of the art connoisseur is all powerful.

  • Colin Moynihan
we

Why death metal is feel-good music

Can some forms of music actually be bad you? That’s what Plato thought in 4th-century BC, and it has been a cause for moral panic ever since.

  • Adriana Barton
In Mani Haghighi’s ’Subtraction”, all the devices of realist cinema are brought to bear on a tale that becomes increasingly disturbing and bizarre.

Hitchcockian Iranian thriller works wonders within strictures

‘Subtraction’ is a thriller, a mystery, a low-level horror movie quite unlike anything else from this nation of talented filmmakers.

  • John McDonald

Think you know this week’s news? Answer these 10 questions

Have you been paying attention this week? Test your knowledge across politics, business and world news.

  • Ingrid Fuary-Wagner and Daniel Arbon

Surrealist arm candy and Lululemon trainers: What to buy this week

Whether it’s fitness, glamour or time out you’re after, we have inspired suggestions for you.

  • Eugenie Kelly