News

Local government representatives walk out during National Party MP Anne Webster's conference speech, calling her comments about Aboriginal cultural heritage "appalling" and "insensitive".
This is a transformation you won't expect—an Australian Red Mallee burl, simple in its raw form, turns into an extraordinary woodturning masterpiece. The wood, carefully sanded to an unbelievable 7000 ...
A juried exhibition of contemporary Maine artists who find their inspiration in nature is on view through July 27 at the Maine Art Gallery in Wiscasset. This show, “Maine Observed,” runs ...
In a turn of events, Field Operations has replaced SWA as landscape architect for the forthcoming Dallas Museum of Art (DMA). The news comes two years after Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos, a Madrid ...
Art World A Para-Pastoral Movement Is Taking Root in Art. It’s Anything but Idyllic Why contemporary artists are co-opting the romantic language of pastoral painting and bringing it to an ...
West Australian Premier Roger Cook has hailed UNESCO’s decision to inscribe Murujuga and its prized rock art on the World Heritage List as proof that industry and protected cultural sites can co ...
If you are an Australian Survivor fan and haven’t heard the news, my condolences because the rumours are true: Jonathan LaPaglia is officially out after Australia v The World. Channel 10 ...
A community hub, seed bank, art gallery, cafe and retail space combine to make an Australian first between Pomonal and Halls Gap in regional Victoria.
Why Glastonbury was fast fashion, not art From Australia to the UK, cultural gatekeepers who usually have a hair-trigger trained on bigotry are remarkably laissez-faire on matters that involve Jews.
Hadley’s Art prize is an annual acquisitive prize for Australian landscape art that is believed to be the richest in the world. Selected from 30 finalists, Yankunytjatjara artist Vicki Yatjiki ...
What is happening to the art world’s most famous auction houses? It’s troubled times for the four grand auction houses as the art market gets a reality check.
Scattered across WA's Burrup Peninsula, these rock engravings are at the centre of a debate over development, climate change and politics. But what do they actually mean?