As part of this year's Virgin Australia Melbourne Fashion Festival, Christian and the team at The Rose St. Artists' Markets orchestrated a day of fashion workshops where we could be the designer. Reviewed by Kara Bertoncini.
Continue ReadingMelbourne, Melbourne Fashion Festival Cultural Program 2015
As part of this year's Virgin Australia Melbourne Fashion Festival, Christian and the team at The Rose St. Artists' Markets orchestrated a day of fashion workshops where we could be the designer. Reviewed by Kara Bertoncini.
Continue ReadingMelbourne, Melbourne Fashion Festival Cultural Program 2015
If paintings could talk, what stories would they tell us? Chloe – the model in a painting that has hung in the Young & Jackson bar since 1908, has seen everything from new friends to world wars. Reviewed by Nisha Marie Joseph.
Continue ReadingAdelaide, Adelaide Fringe 2015
The guys from DamnitLeanne certainly have their certificates in smart-arsery; their quick fire responses had the audience laughing throughout Law and Disorder. All seven performers present a great show, filled with puns, jokes and general disorder. Being an impro show, each performance is unique, demonstrating the artists ability to engage the audience without a script. […]
Continue ReadingMelbourne, Melbourne Fashion Festival Cultural Program 2015
How did 1914 and World War I influence modern fashion? Four curators and filmmakers team up to offer their interpretations in four beautiful short films. Review by Bobby Ly.
Continue ReadingAdelaide, Adelaide Fringe 2015
The death of Scott Johnson on Manly’s North Head is the centrepiece and emotional touchstone of Fairly Lucid Productions’ show The Reckoning. Originally put down as a suicide, the truth of this has only recently been questioned, and now it is not thought to be a gay hate crime. The various viewpoints on this story […]
Continue ReadingAdelaide, Adelaide Fringe 2015
Despite its alluring description, A Butterfly Effect was completely disappointing. While it did explore, as promised, the influences of decisions on a wide range of people, it wasn’t engaging. The performance was disorganised and while there was some laughter in the audience, it was sparse and far between. Every night is a different show and […]
Continue ReadingAdelaide, Adelaide Fringe 2015
Kirsty Mac is a tough comedian. She approaches the audience head on, leaving no prisoners, and tries as valiantly as possible to engage with them. Sometimes she is successful, and sometimes she isn’t, but her comedian chops are certainly there and willing to work in spades. That deserves applause of every kind. Feminazi, Kirsty Mac’s show […]
Continue ReadingAdelaide, Adelaide Fringe 2015
In a cellar underneath Hindley Street, two people sit under white sheets and wait. We don’t know anything about them; they could be complete strangers, they could be lovers. They could be mannequins. In dim, menacing red light, the sheets are pulled back and Zygosity begins—in parts terrifying, in others funny, this unassuming play from […]
Continue ReadingAdelaide, Adelaide Fringe 2015
Excavate is a contemplation of place and purpose that allows the audience to form their own meanings. The dance performance set atop the Edments Building off Gawler Place offers a new perspective of urban experience and identity. This work is for anyone willing to engage with the symbolic and conceptual, a welcome respite from more […]
Continue ReadingAdelaide, Adelaide Fringe 2015
Call Mr. Robeson: A Life, with Songs is a theatrical, biographical account of American singer and actor Paul Robeson, a champion of the early civil rights movement. Performed by the award winning Tayo Aluko and supported by pianist Thomas Saunders, the audience travels through Robeson’s life, music, demons, affairs and political presence. The script is […]
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