Max Dupain's 'The Sunbaker' - arguably the most famous Australian photograph
Max Dupain's ‘The Sunbaker’ - that summery image of a man resting on the beach - is arguably the most famous photograph in Australia. It’s also the focal point of 'Under the Sun', a new exhibition by the Australian Centre for Photography in Sydney that invites 15 artists of diverse backgrounds to offer some modern interpretations of Dupain's most recognised work. Mix reporter Rachel Robinson met with curator Claire Monneraye to see what they came up with. The exhibition is on at the State Library of NSW until April 17.
Australian Center for Photography: 257 Oxford Street, Paddington
Anne Ferran: Shadow Land (Australian Centre for Photography)
We visited Anne Ferran at her studio prior to the opening of Shadow Land, a retrospective of 30-years of work. The conversation looked at several elements of her practice being presented in the exhibtion:
01:00 Books 1–4 from Insula (2003) and Chorus from Box of Birds (2013)
05:35 Lost to Worlds (2008)
08:15 On Returning and Revisiting
11:00 On Repetition
14:35 On Surface and Texture
Anne Ferran: Shadow Land
Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney
08 November 2014 – 18 January 2015
Presented in association with the Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, Perth
TOURING DATES
Newcastle Art Gallery
12 September - 22 November 2015
Western Plains Cultural Centre
23 April - 26 June 2016
Monash Gallery of Art
2016
Interview: Nick Garner
Made for Das Platforms:
© Rococo Productions 2015
Australian Geographic captures 50 years of Australia | Nine News Australia
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Artists' Panel: Under the sun
Reflecting Australia’s multicultural, multi-ethnic and multi-faith nature, Under the sun: Reimagining Max Dupain’s Sunbaker, is an audacious exhibition of new works by fifteen Australian artists who interrogate the social and political implications of Dupain’s iconic image and the complexities at play surrounding our collective and national identity.
On Saturday 18 February 2017, a selected exhibiting artists discussed their experience and process for developing their personal responses to the 'Sunbaker' for this landmark photographic and photomedia exhibition.
Joined by Daniel Boetker-Smith, Managing Editor of Australia’s leading photographic journal Photofile and Director of Asia-Pacific Photobook Archive and Australian Centre for Photography’s Curator, Claire Monneraye, artists Nasim Nasr, Julie Rrap and Sara Oscar, shared their unique approach to Max Dupain's iconic Australian work and the themes embedded within it.
Under the sun: Reimagining Max Dupain’s Sunbaker is a free exhibition presented by the Australian Centre for Photography in partnership with the State Library of NSW in the Mitchell Galleries from February 18 to April 17, 2017.
Video filmed and edited by Hugh Hamilton.
The 10 Best Places To Live In Australia | Study, Job Opportunities
Are you thinking of migrating to Australia and trying to figure out where to live?
Australian cities offer a vibrant array of different lifestyle options with immaculate beaches and natural paradises never too far away.
From the thriving arts scene of Melbourne to the high-flying corporate culture of Sydney, there’s always a place to call home!
Choosing where to live when moving to Australia is a major decision.
It can have a big impact on how comfortable you feel in your new surroundings and on how successful your relocation becomes.
With this in mind, we’ve put together a guide to some of the best places to live in Australia to help you make an informed decision.
Here are the top 10 best places to live in Australia in 2019:
10. Cairns. (cheap place to live)
9. Gold Coast. (best for students)
8. The Australian Capital Territory (safest place, best for families)
7. Hobart. (best for property affordability, and singles)
6. Wollongong. (cheap place to live)
5. Brisbane. (best for retiree).
4. Perth. (best for climate).
3. Adelaide. best for food and drink, most affordable cities
2. Sydney. (best for job opportunities, and students)
1. Melbourne. (best student city).
We know that affordability is especially important to students, so we’ve included the cheapest (and most expensive) places.
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SYDNEY, EXPLORING the fascinating MUSEUM of CONTEMPORARY ART ????️ (AUSTRALIA)
SUBSCRIBE: - Let's visit one of the most wodnerful museums in Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (abbreviated MCA), located in Sydney, Australia and which is a museum solely dedicated to exhibiting, interpreting and collecting contemporary art, both from across Australia and around the world. The museum was opened in 1991 as the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, and from 2010 underwent an A$58 million expansion and re-development, reopening on 29 March 2012 under its current name as the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. The collection contains over 4,000 works by Australian artists that have been acquired since 1989. The collection spans all art forms with strong holdings in painting, photography, sculpture, works on paper and moving image, as well as significant representation of works by Aboriginal artists.
Australia is a country and continent surrounded by the Indian and Pacific oceans. Its major cities – Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide – are coastal. Its capital, Canberra, is inland. The country is known for its Sydney Opera House, the Great Barrier Reef, a vast interior desert wilderness called the Outback, and unique animal species like kangaroos and duck-billed platypuses.
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Sydney Supercar Sunday | Eᴘ4: Aᴜsᴛʀᴀʟɪᴀ
I meet up with a load of local supercars for a drive through the Sydney national park. I then head to the Porsche Sydney South Centre for a meet up.
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Sydney and Melbourne Compared
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Mr. Beat compares and contrasts the two biggest cities in Australia, Sydney and Melbourne. #australia #sydneyvsmelbourne #geography
Thanks to Jade from the channel Up and Atom and Toby from the channel Tibees for looking over my script. Check out their channels!
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Sydney and Melbourne
The two largest cities in the country of Australia. And the continent of Australia (Nah, man...it’s called Meganesia) Mega what? (The continent is called Meganesia, man) Oh, ok. So yeah, the two largest cities on that continent...uh, and Oceania for that matter
However, Sydney’s (5.2 million) metropolitan area is slightly bigger than Melbourne’s (5 million)
The two cities are about 878 km or 546 miles from each other...about a 9-hour, fairly boring drive. Sydney is the capital of the state of New South Wales. Melbourne, the capital of the state of Victoria. Both are iconic, cosmopolitan, global cities, but tourists often have a difficult time deciding which one to visit. Well hopefully this video will help them choose.
According to the most recent Global Liveability Index, put out by The Economist each year, Melbourne is the second most liveable city in the world. Woah, good job, Melbourne. But Sydney’s not far behind. It’s the fifth. Hold up, Australia’s got three cities in the top 10? Geez. Maybe one reason why Melbourne is higher up on that list is because it’s cheaper to live there than in Sydney. It’s true. Just about everything is more expensive in Sydney.
As I said earlier, Sydney has a larger population, but Melbourne has been growing at a faster rate. At the current rates IT will be Australia’s largest city in about 20 to 30 years. More than 40% of all of Australia’s population lives in either the Sydney metro area or the Melbourne metro area. Despite being smaller, Melbourne has a much higher population density. Sydney does seem to have a faster pace about it. And it has more traffic.
Sydney is more culturally diverse. 43% of Sydney residents were born in another country, compared with 36% of Melbourne residents.
Biometrics collection at Australian Visa Application Centres
Biometrics collection is part of the offshore visa application process in selected locations.
Service delivery partners operate Australian Visa Application Centres or AVACs. AVACs offer a range of services including visa lodgement, fee payment and in selected locations, biometrics collection.
For more information about Australian Visa Application Centres and whether you are required to provide biometrics, visit the Department of Immigration and Citizenship's website at
Sydney - City Video Guide
Perched on the East Coast of Australia, Sydney, is the vibrant capital of New South Wales.
The Sydney Tower is the perfect way to get acquainted with the city. From Circular Quay it's possible to get almost anywhere else in the city. Nearby is Sydney Harbour Bridge. Just across it is Luna Park, renowned for its vintage fairground rides.
A short ferry ride from Luna Park is Darling Harbour, home to the National Maritime Museum. A few blocks away is the Powerhouse Museum.
Sydney Opera House is Sydney's most iconic sight. Behind it are the Royal Botanic
Gardens and the Sydney Domain, containing Government House, and the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
Across the Pyrmont Bridge is the Sydney Sea Life Aquarium. More creatures can be found at the Wild Life Sydney and Taronga Zoo.
Bondi Beach is famed for its sands. The seaside suburb of Manly provides a quieter beach experience. The coastal paths to North Head offer stunning views of Sydney from afar.
For more travel tips and information visit
SYDNEY AUSTRALIA - Park Life (Part 28)
It's to the point where I'm just placing all of Sydney's iconic buildings and public transport, SWEET!
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SYDNEY AUSTRALIA | MAJESTIC 4K FILM | 2019
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Cabramatta Into The Light
For over a year, Sydney-based photographer Markus Andersen photographed one of Western Sydney most vibrant suburbs, Cabramatta.
Get insight into the making of his latest series of work, as you wander through the bustling streets of the city. Meet the community and contemplate fleeting moments of everyday life in Cabramatta. This colourful and bold photographic series is regarded as a unique reflection of Australian multiculturalism.
Cabramatta. Into the Light
Documentary directed by Maria Tran and assisted by Phillip Kane
2016.
12 minutes
Glimpse: Hijacked 2 - Opening Night
Impressions from the opening night of Hijacked 2, an exhibition presenting diverse and provocative new photography from Australia and Germany. Filmed at the Australian Centre for Photography in Sydney, June 2010. Filmed and edited by Jochen Gutsch for Goethe-Institut Australia. Music by Hinterlandt.
Aperture Australia Photography Conference 2018 Highlights
The success of Aperture Australia’s inaugural conference has left a significant mark on the country’s photography industry.
Held on the weekend of 28-29 April, 625 amateur and professional photographers from across the country gathered at Sydney International Convention Centre (ICC) in Darling Harbour for the two-day photography conference, hosted by legendary television journalist Ray Martin.
Guests immersed themselves in the enticing war stories of 8 Australian photography heaveweights, namely portrait photographer Gary Heery, Fujifilm X ambassador Megan Lewis, fine art photographer Alexia Sinclaire, landscape photographer Murray Fredericks, Aquabumps’ founder Eugene Tan, adventure sports photographer Krystle Wright, award-winning documentary photographer Jack Picone, and landscape photography pioneer Ken Duncan.
apertureaustralia.com.au
Jobs in Australia------High Salary Jobs
High Paid jobs offered in Australia. How much professors, bankers, doctors, engineers, managers, teachers, can earn in Australia.
Send your CV at
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Currently they have job Openings with good salaries.
Surgeons
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Exposure 04: Photography Abroad with Andrew Quilty
On Thursday 19 January 2017 ACP partnered with UTS to present Nikon-Walkley award-winning photojournalist Andrew Quilty in conversation with journalist Helen Vastikopoulos.
In December 2013, Quilty visited Afghanistan for the first time on a trip that was intended to last ten days. After ten weeks Quilty returned to Australia but was eager to get back to its capital, Kabul, the city he would call home for the next three years.
Since then Quilty has been documenting the war-ravaged country, capturing the rise in extremists groups, the heart-breaking results of conflict and the everyday struggles faced by the Afghan people.
In 2016 Quilty received the Gold Walkley Award for Excellence in Journalism after his coverage of the October 2015 attack by allied forces on the Medicines Sans Frontieres Kunduz Trauma Centre.
In this Exposure event Quilty shares his experiences living and working in Kabul, Afghanistan and offers insights into the current state of affairs, in Afghanistan and the Islamic world.
Presented in partnership with University of Technology, Sydney, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School of Communications, Media Arts and Production.
About Andrew Quilty
After completing his Photography Certificate at Ultimo TAFE in 2004, Quilty undertook work experience with – and was soon employed by – The AFR. But it was the work he did outside his day job that began to attract the attention of the photographic community. His first big editorial break came when his vigorous black and white observations from The Cronulla Riots in December 2005 were published in TIME Magazine.
In 2006 he was promoted to the position of staff photographer for The AFR Magazine. In 2007 he was invited to join Australia's preeminent photographic collective Oculi and a string of accolades soon followed, including, in 2008, a World Press Photo Award and the inaugural Walkley Young Australian Photojournalist of The Year Award.
After turning to a freelance career in Sydney and then New York between 2010 and 2013 Quilty has based himself in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul and has also covered the story surrounding the emergence of the Islamic State in the Middle East extensively.
Since then Quilty's work has been awarded 6 Walkley Awards, including the 2016 Gold Walkley - the highest honour in Australian journalism, a Picture of the Year International award and the George Polk award for photojournalism. A retrospective of his work from Afghanistan was exhibited at the Visa Pour L'image Festival of Photojournalism in Perpignan, France.
Quilty remains based in Kabul.
About Helen Vastikopoulos
Helen Vatsikopoulos is a Walkley Award winning journalist who has worked for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and its international station, the Australia Network, and for the Special Broadcasting Service.
In a career spanning 30 years she has worked on programs such as the ABC News, the Midday Report, the 7.30 report, Dateline, Lateline and Foreign Correspondent. In that time she has specialised in International Reporting and has covered history-changing events like the fall of the Berlin Wall, the collapse of Communism, the Rwandan Genocide, the HIV-Aids crisis in West Papua, the Sri Lankan Civil War, the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, and the Bali Bombings — among many others. Her reporting on the collapse of the USSR won her a coveted Walkley award.
Helen has presented many studio-based television programs including Face the Press, News Extra, Talking Heads and Dateline for SBS; The 7.00 pm News and the Midday Report for ABC1 and Asia-Pacific Focus for the Australia Network. She has also made three documentaries: New World Borders, Getting Gehry and the award-winning Agatha’s Curse.
EXPOSURE sheds light on the full spectrum of photographic practice, presentation and literature by inviting photographers, curators and writers to share their photographic interests with ACP audiences.
Sydney, Australia - August 2015
Sydney is the state capital of New South Wales and the most populous city in Australia and Oceania. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds the world's largest natural harbour, and sprawls towards the Blue Mountains to the west. To read more about Sydney, click here: .
This detailed film features extensive views around the city of Sydney, including the Central Business Districts, suburbs, waterways and beaches. It highlights the city's architecture, infrastructure, buildings, art, culture, transport, visitor attractions and natural features.
Within the film, the following locations and features are identified: Bondi beach, View towards Sydney CBD on the train from Bondi Junction, Sydney Central Station, George Street, Lee Street, Railway Square Bus Stands, Quay Street, Hay Street, Paddy’s Markets, Harbour Street, Chinese Garden of Friendship, Darling Harbour, HMAS Vampire, HMAS Onslow, Christ Church St. Lawrence, St. Andrew’s Cathedral, Town Hall, Queen Victoria Building, Sydney Tower and views from the tower, ANZAC Bridge, Parramatta River, Gladesville Bridge, North Sydney, Sydney Harbour Bridge, Sydney Harbour, Manly, Manly Corso, Manly Beach, Manly Harbour Beach, Garden Island Naval Base, train to Bondi Junction, Sydney Football Stadium, Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport, Oxford Street, ANZAC Memorial, Elizabeth Street, Hyde Park, Yininmadyemi by Tony Albert, Park Street, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Archibald Memorial Fountain, Domain Crescent Precinct, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Woolloomooloo, Woolloomooloo Finger Wharf, Reclining Figure by Henry Moore, Cahill Expressway, Royal Botanic Garden, Farm Cove, Manly Ferry, Sydney Opera House, Fort Denison, Opera Bar, Circular Quay, Custom’s House, First Fleet Park, Cumberland Street, Views from the Manly Ferry, Victoria Road, Darling Street, Rozelle, Balmain, Balmain Fire Station, Balmain Post Office / Court / Police Station Building, Balmain East Wharf, Views from the F4 Ferry, Lunar Park, Watson’s Bay, Doyle’s Restaurant, F7 Fast Ferry, Circular Quay Railway Station, Train ride North across Sydney Harbour Bridge, Milson’s Point Railway Station, Train ride South across Sydney Harbour Bridge, and the views at dusk from the roof of the Rendezvous Hotel, Sydney Central (corner of George & Quay Streets).
To see a film of views from Sydney Tower, click here:
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To see a review of the Rendezvous Sydney Central Hotel, click here: .
To see a film taken around Sydney Harbour of the views from Circular Quay to Watson's Bay on the F7 HarbourCat, click here: .
To see a film taken at night on the journey from Rydalmere to Circular Quay on the Parramatta RiverCat, click here: .
To see views of Sydney Harbour from the Manly Ferry, click here: .
To see views from Darling Harbour to Circular Quay via Balmain East on the F4 Ferry, click here: .
To see night-time views of Sydney CBD and Opera House from a Manly ferry approaching Circular Quay, click here: .
To see a film taken from the F4 Ferry from Balmain East to Circular Quay, click here: .
To see views from Balmain East to Circular Quay via Milsons Point on the F4 Ferry, click here: .
To see a film taken around the Sydney suburb of Parramatta, click here: .
To see footage of Sydney Trains at various locations around the city, click here: .
To see footage of Sydney Central Station, click here: .
To see a film taken around the suburbs of Rozelle and Balmain, click here: .
To see a film taken around Bondi Beach, click here: .
To see a film taken around Manly, click here: .
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Under the sun: Reimagining Max Dupain's Sunbaker
For this large scale exhibition, 'Under the Sun: Reimagining Max Dupain’s Sunbaker', ACP has invited 15 artists to create new works in response to the iconic Sunbaker by revered Australian photographer Max Dupain.
The exhibition features new works by Peta Clancy, Christopher Day, Destiny Deacon, Michaela Gleave, Nasim Nasr, Sara Oscar, Julie Rrap, Khaled Sabsabi, Yhonnie Scarce, Christian Thompson, Angela Tiatia, Kawita Vatanajyankur, Daniel Von Sturmer, Justene Williams and William Yang.
EXHIBITION DETAILS:
18 February – 17 April 2017
State Library of NSW, Sydney
Opening Hours:
Monday, Tuesday, Friday: 9am – 5pm
Wednesday: 9am – 9pm
Thursday: 9am – 8pm
Weekends: 10am – 5pm
6 May – 6 August 2017
Monash Gallery of Art, Wheelers Hill, Melbourne
Opening Hours:
Tuesday to Friday: 10am – 5pm
Saturday & Sunday: 12pm – 5pm
This project has been assisted by the Australian government through the Department of Communication and the Arts' Catalyst–Australian Arts and Culture Fund.