Want to know what happens in ACMI’s playful new show? It’s up to you

Want to know what happens in ACMI’s playful new show? It’s up to you

Visitors need only keep moving to experience their own animated world inside ACMI’s Beings exhibition.

  • byStephanie Bunbury

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Why I won’t go to the NGV’s perplexing and problematic Pharaoh blockbuster
Opinion
Arts

Why I won’t go to the NGV’s perplexing and problematic Pharaoh blockbuster

When Indigenous artefacts are being returned,and there is global recognition of the sanctity of the dead. Why do we make an exception for Egyptian rulers?

  • byAlan Attwood
From Donald Trump to MONA’s David Walsh:Our soaring anxiety about status

From Donald Trump to MONA’s David Walsh:Our soaring anxiety about status

Widening inequality,shifting fortunes and social media neediness are lifting our anxiety about status to new heights.

  • byLuke Slattery
Regional base and engagement with history make Art Dubai special

Regional base and engagement with history make Art Dubai special

Dubai owes everything to trade and finance,yet its art fair is less nakedly mercantile than any fair of comparable size.

  • byJohn McDonald
This show swims against the tide and deserves to be seen more widely

This show swims against the tide and deserves to be seen more widely

MONA’s first-ever exhibition of exclusively “old” art,radiates inventiveness and spiritual conviction.

  • byJohn McDonald
Truth (and grandfathers) get lost in this award-winning artist’s work

Truth (and grandfathers) get lost in this award-winning artist’s work

Laure Prouvost plays with rubbish,nature,words and stories. The game is now on at ACCA.

  • byRichard Jinman
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When did zombies and cardboard houses become serious art?

When did zombies and cardboard houses become serious art?

Fifty years ago,Melbourne’s most lively creative space was born. It changed our ideas about contemporary art.

  • byTiarney Miekus
‘So much grief’:Ukrainian-born artist tackles the loop of war

‘So much grief’:Ukrainian-born artist tackles the loop of war

The horrors in her homeland left Stanislava Pinchuk unable to even read a book. Then she found a way to express her sorrow.

  • byGabriella Coslovich
Emily had to go all the way to Paris. You’ll only need a two-hour drive

Emily had to go all the way to Paris. You’ll only need a two-hour drive

Binge-watching Emily in Paris is not the only way to get your Gallic fix,as Bendigo morphs into the city of love.

  • byRichard Jinman
This artist made Archibald history. Her secret? A trusty sewing machine

This artist made Archibald history. Her secret? A trusty sewing machine

Julia Gutman’s embroidered portraits are busting art’s traditional barriers.

  • byLenny Ann Low
Not just a pretty place:What garden exhibitions really teach us

Not just a pretty place:What garden exhibitions really teach us

Gardeners and artists are putting plants in galleries and expanding our notions of what horticulture can be.

  • byMegan Backhouse