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QAGOMA wants 'The Apocalypse' now

QAGOMA wants 'The Apocalypse' now

Mia Barry | 22 May 2013 The QAG Foundation is launching an initiative to complete the gallery’s holding of Albrecht Dürer's 'The Apocalypse'.
Too good for funding

Too good for funding

Deborah Stone | 22 May 2013 Organisations that succeed with a certain demographic may find they are typecast, preventing them from funding new projects.
T.R.I.P.ping out in Adelaide

T.R.I.P.ping out in Adelaide

Mia Barry | 22 May 2013 You are invited to be an audience of one in the virtual reality theatrical experience of Kulturfiliale’s The Reality In Pieces.
The Sydney Travelling Film Festival

The Sydney Travelling Film Festival

artsHub | 21 May 2013 It’s forty years since David Stratton founded the festival that takes the best on screen on the road to 17 regional locations.
Special Presentations at the State

Special Presentations at the State

artsHub | 21 May 2013 Share cinematic dreams in the dark at the Palace of Dreams for the SFF Special Presentations at the State program of opulent optic
NORPA theatre season rolls into action

NORPA theatre season rolls into action

Melanie Fulton | 20 May 2013 Tickets for Northern Rivers Performing Arts shows now on sale after a rockabilly roller derby launch party of its 2013 program.
AIM to host inaugural TILT forum

AIM to host inaugural TILT forum

artsHub | 17 May 2013 Entertainment industry heavy-weights will tackle issues concerned with technological advancements in Sydney this year.
We have the money!

We have the money!

Ben Eltham | 15 May 2013 No news is good news as the Federal Budget locks in funding for Creative Australia.
Is your work making you sick?

Is your work making you sick?

Emma Waterman | 13 May 2013 The show must go on but a world-first study is asking, at what price to performers' health?
Paper finds a new niche

Paper finds a new niche

Emma Waterman | 14 May 2013 In the internet age, paper is becoming the province of obscure and eclectic niche subjects.
Understanding creative collaboration

Understanding creative collaboration

Karen Pearlman | 19 May 2013 From theatre to multimedia, collaboration is at the core of the creative process. The AFTRS journal Lumina is tackling the question of what it means to be engaged in a collaborative art form.
Getting paid when business goes bust

Getting paid when business goes bust

Sarah Adams | 08 May 2013 Angry creditors who performed at Peats Ridge have joined the queue of artists asking what they can do when they don't get paid.
artsHub launches art of MONEY

artsHub launches art of MONEY

Deborah Stone | 09 May 2013 The Art of Money is your new resource for everything related to making money and funding your work in the arts business.
Victoria’s new grants system

Victoria’s new grants system

Sarah Adams | 14 May 2013 The Victorian Coalition has announced major changes to its funding programs for arts organisations and individual artists.
This week’s appointments

This week’s appointments

artsHub | 10 May 2013 Some pretty inspiring people took out the top jobs this week – could you be next?
Has the internet killed community radio?

Has the internet killed community radio?

Lachlan Bryan | 15 May 2013 Many community stations will be forced to ‘turn-off’ their digital radio services soon, forcing listeners to turn to other sources
Art comes out at night

Art comes out at night

Stephanie Hume | 09 May 2013 A global movement is transforming the way galleries are experienced by the art appreciating public.
Do we export enough Australian art?

Do we export enough Australian art?

Sarah Adams | 17 May 2013 We ship our food and our resources off all around the world, but when it comes to art are we an imports only country?
Atticus Finch, do you do copyright?

Atticus Finch, do you do copyright?

Emma Waterman | 08 May 2013 'To Kill a Mockingbird' author Harper Lee has filed a law suit against the literary agent who duped her out of royalties.
Understanding creative collaboration

Understanding creative collaboration

Karen Pearlman | 19 May 2013 From theatre to multimedia, collaboration is at the core of the creative process. The AFTRS journal Lumina is tackling the question of what it means to be engaged in a collaborative art form.
Six megatrends changing the arts

Six megatrends changing the arts

Deborah Stone | 19 May 2013 Great expectations and a virtual world are among the megatrends changing the role of museums and arts organisations.
We have the money!

We have the money!

Ben Eltham | 15 May 2013 No news is good news as the Federal Budget locks in funding for Creative Australia.
Paper finds a new niche

Paper finds a new niche

Emma Waterman | 14 May 2013 In the internet age, paper is becoming the province of obscure and eclectic niche subjects.
Mixing techno and tradition

Mixing techno and tradition

Paul Isbel | 13 May 2013 Bangarra resident composer David Page collaborated with electronic ace Paul Mac on the music for the company’s new production Blak.
Is your work making you sick?

Is your work making you sick?

Emma Waterman | 13 May 2013 The show must go on but a world-first study is asking, at what price to performers' health?
Getting paid when business goes bust

Getting paid when business goes bust

Sarah Adams | 08 May 2013 Angry creditors who performed at Peats Ridge have joined the queue of artists asking what they can do when they don't get paid.
Setting up in a new location

Setting up in a new location

Peta Mayer | 06 May 2013 The mobility of an arts career is an advantage but re-establishing yourself can be another full-time job.
How to really change the world

How to really change the world

Deborah Stone | 29 Apr 2013 The arts are a powerful tool for social change but it takes more than good intentions for an arts project to really make a difference.
Art & Adrenalin: Ben Quilty's War

Art & Adrenalin: Ben Quilty's War

Sarah Adams | 23 Apr 2013 Ben Quilty reveals the complex and profound role of a war artist, and tells us how his perceptions shifted after Afghanistan.
From  writing copy to red carpet

From writing copy to red carpet

Matt Millikan | 19 Apr 2013 Award-winning playwright behind Jersey Boys and The Addams Family tells us what writers can learn from advertising, listening, exercise and gin.
$3 million risk on Bolshoi tour

$3 million risk on Bolshoi tour

Richard Watts | 19 Apr 2013 Queensland has had a massive coup securing an exclusive season of the Bolshoi Ballet but the tour is an expensive gamble.
Live TV lives on

Live TV lives on

Jasmeet Sahi | 17 Apr 2013 New research shows that watching live TV is not dead yet. Many of us still catch our favourite TV shows in telecast time.
Handing over the power of the pen

Handing over the power of the pen

Troy Nankervis | 16 Apr 2013 Playwrights are doing less writing and more listening as they rework true-life stories from gay parenting to race riots.
Time to have your say

Time to have your say

Andrew Einspruch | 08 Apr 2013 A city’s culture is its heart and soul. Take away its culture, and you’re left with everything that is boring in life.
G

G

Revelly Robinson | 22 May 2013 As the ominous reverberations of the electrically charged soundtrack bellows over the stage, the intensity is set.
Snitch

Snitch

Sarah Ward | 22 May 2013 ‘The Rock’ has played to his strengths, transferring his showmanship, comedic timing and muscles from the ring to the screen.
Wedlock

Wedlock

Nerida Dickinson | 22 May 2013 A comedic piece of thought-provoking theatre, Wedlock covers all the angles on marriage and the big day in our modern era.
Nixon in China

Nixon in China

Bevan Leviston | 22 May 2013 The opening minutes of Victorian Opera’s production of Nixon in China threw down a number of challenges.
Mozart The Great

Mozart The Great

Suzanne Yanko | 22 May 2013 The Australian Brandenburg Orchestra rounded off its season of Mozart with two well-received concerts in Melbourne.
A brief history of history

A brief history of history

Nerida Dickinson | 22 May 2013 Gordon Southern’s ambitious show tries, with truth and lies, to take all of history ever and make it funny.
Sons of Sin

Sons of Sin

Colleen Edwards | 20 May 2013 The Danger Ensemble’s production Sons of Sin is a complex beast – most of the time it's engaging but sometimes banal.
True Love Travels on a Gravel Road

True Love Travels on a Gravel Road

Liza Dezfouli | 20 May 2013 Jane Miller's latest asks big questions about romance, showing how fantasies of love can create monsters of us all.
2013: When we were idiots

2013: When we were idiots

Inga Cahill | 20 May 2013 2013: When we were idiots, is interactive theatre at its energetic best.
In the Shadow of the Sun

In the Shadow of the Sun

Sarah Ward | 20 May 2013 'One of the many things I’ve learned is to live life in danger,' a fearful but defiant Josephat Torner opines.
Seven Horrors in a Blue Box

Seven Horrors in a Blue Box

Leon Marvell | 16 May 2013 The stalwarts of the European gothic tradition are returned home and given a revivifying jolt of cinematographic juice.
I, Migrant

I, Migrant

Nerida Dickinson | 16 May 2013 A Pakistani contribution to the Perth International Comedy Festival demonstrates the universal human experience and sense of humou
My Brother the Devil

My Brother the Devil

Sarah Ward | 15 May 2013 My Brother the Devil dissects the constitution of communities that spring up in the shadows of towering apartment blocks.
Legally Blonde

Legally Blonde

Reuben Liversidge | 14 May 2013 Making movies into musicals is all the rage. This oneis a fantastic example of how to successfully translate a film to the stage.
Burlesque Bordello

Burlesque Bordello

Colleen Edwards | 14 May 2013 In a non-descript house perched on the corner of their street live Mr and Mrs Jones; a typical 1950s couple – or are they?
Moron to Moron

Moron to Moron

Travis Englefield | 14 May 2013 Travel book, adventure memoir, epistolary paean to a friendship, every-man’s guide to cross-country cycling.
A Clockwork Orange

A Clockwork Orange

Nerida Dickinson | 14 May 2013 This stage adaptation has its merits, but will disappoint those looking for the strong messages of book or film.
Tabu

Tabu

Sarah Ward | 13 May 2013 Many films are laden with the label of "unique"; few actually earn it. This melancholic yet endearing tale of two parts does.
Overland #210, Autumn 2013

Overland #210, Autumn 2013

Sonia Nair | 13 May 2013 Hailed as Australia’s foremost literary journal on progressive culture, Overland #210 Autumn 2013 exemplifies this epithet again.
The Nightingale and the Rose

The Nightingale and the Rose

Nerissa Rowan | 13 May 2013 This retelling of Oscar Wilde’s short tale of love, knowledge and sacrifice has been created with a great deal of love and care.
No Child…

No Child…

Aleksia Barron | 10 May 2013 Nilaja Sun is simply electrifying in her one-woman show about teaching drama to some of America’s most underprivileged youth.
Death of a Salesman

Death of a Salesman

Nerida Dickinson | 10 May 2013 Black Swan serves up a classic rendition of a dramatic favourite.
Star Trek Into Darkness

Star Trek Into Darkness

Sarah Ward | 10 May 2013 The latest entry to this popular sci-fi franchise, once more directed by JJ Abrams, is palatable but perfunctory and predictable.
Why Wesfarmers invests in the arts

Why Wesfarmers invests in the arts

Helen Carroll | 22 May 2013 The head of one of Australia biggest corporate supporters of the arts explains what’s in it for big business.
Do we export enough Australian art?

Do we export enough Australian art?

Sarah Adams | 17 May 2013 We ship our food and our resources off all around the world, but when it comes to art are we an imports only country?
Has the internet killed community radio?

Has the internet killed community radio?

Lachlan Bryan | 15 May 2013 Many community stations will be forced to ‘turn-off’ their digital radio services soon, forcing listeners to turn to other sources
The talent aggregators

The talent aggregators

Ben Eltham | 13 May 2013 Content aggregators now have the power and access that used to belong to agents and artists' managers.
How should OzCo support experimental arts?

How should OzCo support experimental arts?

Andy Donovan | 03 May 2013 This weekend the Australia Council for the Arts will bring together 60 of Australia’s leading practitioners and thinkers in experimental practice.
You can make money online

You can make money online

Deborah Stone | 02 May 2013 Think people won’t pay for creative content because so much is available online for free? That’s not what the numbers show.
How an awards judge thinks

How an awards judge thinks

Peter Bridgeman | 26 Apr 2013 Get help writing and don't worry too much about slick. After 10 years of experience, an awards judge reveals how he decides.
Critics: hated but never unread

Critics: hated but never unread

Lawrence Mooney | 26 Apr 2013 The relationship between performer and critic is fuelled with a lust for revenge that would be psychotic anywhere but the entertainment industry.
10 ways the arts is Changing

10 ways the arts is Changing

Sarah Adams | 17 Apr 2013 As online petition site Change.org hits 1 million users, we take a look at the way that the arts are petitioning for change.
Pimping and preening for producers

Pimping and preening for producers

Phillip Adams | 17 Apr 2013 If you are a performing-arts-market-junkie addicted to flogging your arty arse to the global lions-den of presenters, read this.
What we know and what we need to know

What we know and what we need to know

Tamara Winikoff | 17 Apr 2013 The Australia Council ArtFacts reveals important information about visual arts but leaves some major questions unanswered.
Memo Justin Bieber: You owe Anne Frank a song

Memo Justin Bieber: You owe Anne Frank a song

Deborah Stone | 15 Apr 2013 Justin Bieber upset many people with a flippant comment at the Anne Frank House but he was much less offensive than the response of his ignorant fans.
Should we mourn film?

Should we mourn film?

Erika Addis | 15 Apr 2013 Ideas are like photographs – they take time to develop. So what happens when film disappears and we move to the digital instant?
Reviewer versus reviewed

Reviewer versus reviewed

Xavier Toby | 11 Apr 2013 Comedian and some time reviewer Xavier Toby gets a taste of his own medicine when his comedy shows are reviewed by others.
What Is Street Cred anyway?

What Is Street Cred anyway?

Andrew Montell | 10 Apr 2013 Marketing jargon has tried to hijack street cred but artists are fighting back.
Predicting your ticket sales

Predicting your ticket sales

Valentina Maxwell-Tansley | 04 Apr 2013 Some Hollywood companies use geospatial modelling to predict ticket sales but there are simpler techniques for calculating your likely audience.
Dance is missing its essential partner

Dance is missing its essential partner

Jeff Meiners | 03 Apr 2013 Dance has won a place in the arts curriculum but the policy will be a wallflower without the partnership of teacher training.
SFFTV @ Martin Place

SFFTV @ Martin Place

artsHub | 21 May 2013 Trailers, shorts, red-carpet coverage and more from the SFF fill the big screen at Martin Place Amphitheatre every festival day.
Sydney Film Festival and Vivid Sydney

Sydney Film Festival and Vivid Sydney

artsHub | 21 May 2013 Two major Sydney festivals overlap and intersect with shared events featuring film, culture, ideas, projections, storytelling and
William Yang

William Yang

artsHub | 17 May 2013 William Yang is a visual artist whose multidisciplinary work explores personal stories of sadness, heritage, death and life.
Sean Woon, Director

Sean Woon, Director

artsHub | 09 May 2013 Sean Woon has left the banking world and the 9-to-5 slog to invest himself fully into his start up and pipedream, allnewART.com.
Danielle Wilde

Danielle Wilde

artsHub | 02 May 2013 Dr. Danielle Wilde pairs technologies with the body in novel ways, to understand how to poeticise experience and is a 2012 Sidney Myer Creative Fellow
Karoline Rose O’Sullivan

Karoline Rose O’Sullivan

artsHub | 02 May 2013 Ireland's Karoline Rose O’Sullivan speaks with artsHub about her career as a performer and what she's been up to since moving to Sydney last year.
Beau Dean Riley Smith

Beau Dean Riley Smith

Emma Waterman | 30 Apr 2013 The body is the most invaluable resource of self-expression for contemporary dancer with Bangarra Dance Theatre, Beau Dean Riley Smith.
Kaine Sultan-Babij

Kaine Sultan-Babij

Emma Waterman | 30 Apr 2013 A recent graduate from the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts, Kaine Sultan-Babij’s dances share ancient stories with a contemporary audience.
Choose your own adventure

Choose your own adventure

artsHub | 28 Apr 2013 Travel and accommodation packages are designed to create your own escape to Tasmania for as long as you like when you come to see The Red Queen.
LOUIS & BEBE are two souls in three parts

LOUIS & BEBE are two souls in three parts

artsHub | 28 Apr 2013 Joanna Dudley and Dirk Dresselhaus and Schneider TM take inspiration from electronic music pioneers Louis and Bebe Barron in an experimental new work.
Sound to Light – Crossing Borders

Sound to Light – Crossing Borders

artsHub | 28 Apr 2013 Two senses, two artists in combo, two festivals in synch, two locations, two months to do it all, too much for one mind.
Petra Kalive

Petra Kalive

artsHub | 26 Apr 2013 Since graduating from WAAPA in 2004, Petra Kalive has worked as an actor, dramaturg and director.
Nicole Sabatino

Nicole Sabatino

artsHub | 18 Apr 2013 Nicole Sabatino, will dance in the world premier of Blak. The internationally acclaimed Bangarra Dance Theatre will tour nationally across Australia.
Sally Gawley

Sally Gawley

artsHub | 18 Apr 2013 Sally Gawley, National Music Coordinator with The Australian School of Performing Arts, talks to artsHub about her infectious passion for music.
Bryce Youngman

Bryce Youngman

artsHub | 18 Apr 2013 WAAPA graduate Bryce Youngman speaks with artsHub about his upcoming performance in, Death in Bowengabbie and his involvement in Poetry in Action.
Mitch McDonald of The Love Junkies

Mitch McDonald of The Love Junkies

artsHub | 17 Apr 2013 Mitch McDonald is one third of Perth-based band The Love Junkies, who will be performing at Groovin’ the Moo in Bunbury on 11 May.
Sue Peacock

Sue Peacock

artsHub | 17 Apr 2013 Sue Peacock is preparing to unveil the world premiere of contemporary dance performance Reflect, produced by Performing Lines WA.
>[sdc]< (Simon Currie)

>[sdc]< (Simon Currie)

artsHub | 15 Apr 2013 Contemporary visual artist Simon Currie, also known as >[sdc]< is a Sydney-based painter, photographer and printmaker.
Max and Ivan

Max and Ivan

artsHub | 11 Apr 2013 Max and Ivan are polite British comedians Max Olesker and Ivan Gonzalez.
Brent Hill, actor

Brent Hill, actor

artsHub | 11 Apr 2013 Brent Hill has triumphed in an exciting career of theatre, television and musical theatre.
Jonathan Oxlade

Jonathan Oxlade

artsHub | 11 Apr 2013 For Windmill Theatre, Jonathon has designed Boom Bah!, The Wizard of Oz, Fugitive, School Dance and Pinocchio.
Seth Sentry

Seth Sentry

artsHub | 11 Apr 2013 Seth Sentry is an Australian hip hop artist from Melbourne.
Luke Smiles

Luke Smiles

artsHub | 11 Apr 2013 Luke trained in dance at the Victorian College of the Arts. Over the last fifteen years he has enjoyed many national and international performances.
Matthew Whittet

Matthew Whittet

artsHub | 11 Apr 2013 Matthew has written six full length pieces for theatre including: 12, Warren, Silver, Harbinger, Fugitive and School Dance for Windmill Theatre.

Job of the Week

Resident Faculty – Violin Teacher

Australian National Academy of Music, Melbourne, National

An opportunity exists for a violin performer/pedagogue to join the full time Faculty of the Australian National Academy of Music (ANAM), the country’s elite-level performance training institution.

Hot Jobs

Creative Producer

Melbourne Fringe, Melbourne, VIC

The Melbourne Fringe Creative Producer manages the organisation’s Creative Program and Artist Development Program.

Senior Graphic Designer ( Parental Leave)

The Australian Ballet, Melbourne, Melbourne

The Australian Ballet’s Publications department has an immediate vacancy for an experienced Senior Graphic Designer

Course Administrator

Actors Centre Australia, Surry Hills, Sydney

Actors Centre Australia is looking for an energetic and motivated Course Administrator.

Exhibition Site Manager

Sculpture by the Sea, Sydney, Sydney

Construction, logistics and technical focus Senior appointment Unique and rewarding opportunity

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