What's On



Moonlight Cinema 2011/ 2012 Until March 2012
Moonlight offers an unrivalled inner city escape, providing outdoor screenings of new release, classic and cult films in Australia’s iconic and most beautiful parks and gardens throughout summer. Nature combines with a magnificent cityscape backdrop to set the scene for an evening of picnic celebrations.

As the shadows grow long, the screen sparkles to life and the stars come out to play.

It just wouldn’t be summer without Moonlight!

 
Yiwarra Kuju: The Canning Stock Route 17th December 2011 to 29th April 2012

Featuring more than 90 vibrant artworks and significant cultural objects, Yiwarra Kuju is a powerful exhibition with a unique Australian story to tell.

Exhibition Co-curator, John Carty, says it is a story that, until now, has been told primarily from a non-Indigenous perspective.

“The Canning Stock Route was used throughout the first half of the 20th Century for droving cattle through 1850km of desert from the Kimberley to the southern goldfields of Western Australia,” he said.

“That one road (‘yiwarra kuju’) has become a frontier narrative about the making of Australia but absent from this history are the voices of those who it impacted the most.”

“For the Aboriginal people of the desert region, the stock route cut through a land already full of story and rich in culture and history,” he said.

“This is the story told in the exhibition, Yiwarra Kuju.”

The exhibition was developed by the National Museum of Australia in partnership with the arts group FORM, which initiated the four-year Canning Stock Route Project that involved artists, traditional custodians and emerging
Aboriginal curators and filmmakers from across Western Australia.

Mr Carty says this pioneering collaboration has brought into focus a story of far greater national importance than the stock route itself.

“The exhibition reveals not only an extraordinary perspective on Aboriginal history, and therefore Australian history, but an internationally significant art history as well” he said.

The exhibition also showcases ongoing dynamism and innovations of the next generation of Aboriginal artists through films and pioneering touch-screen technology.

Australian Museum Assistant Director, Steven Alderton, said this important exhibition offers visitors the chance to experience some truly moving stories while engaging with giant, colourful artworks that will enthral all ages.

Yiwarra Kuju: The Canning Stock Route is on display at the Australian Museum from 17 December – 29 April 2012.

 
Sydney Cellar Door February 25th and 26th 2012

 

2012 Sydney Cellar Door is held on Saturday 25 & Sunday 26 February in Hyde Park South from 11am – 6pm each day.

One of the country’s largest wine and food tasting events is now bigger than ever with a new layout in Sydney’s Hyde Park. This bigger area in one of the city’s most stunning alfresco (and convenient) settings will give visitors more room to meet around 100 talented NSW winemakers who will be bringing their favourite drops to the city from NSW’s 14 diverse wine regions.There will be even more shaded seating areas in which to enjoy a vast array of exciting new wine styles and delicious dishes from Sydney’s leading restaurants, accompanied by all-day live music and cool entertainment, creating a world-class festival atmosphere.

The event is FREE to enter, with wine tasting packages starting at just $25.
Tasting packages will be available for advance purchase via www.nswwinefestival.com.au

The Sydney Morning Herald 2012 NSW Wine Festival is brought to you by Citibank.

 
Culture Jammers February 11th to June 10th 2012
 

In Culture Jammers, photographer Dean Sewell captured the activities of a small group of culture jammers in Sydney between 2003 and 2007. The group – which comprised three to six people calling themselves ‘The Lonely Station’ after a line from a Midnight Oil song – were perhaps the city’s most audacious culture jammers. They scaled silos, highway billboards and buildings to rework images and draw public attention to social justice and environmental issues, including the Iraq War, woodchipping and the plight of refugees.

The opening forum on the 12th Feb presents an impressive line-up of guest speakers who will discuss the intentions, tactics, incidents, aesthetics and recent history of culture jamming in Sydney.

Guest speakers include photographer Dean Sewell; criminal lawyer and co-founder of activist group The Lonely Station, Neal Funnell; Dave Burgess, who with colleague Dr Will Saunders painted the words ‘No War’ on the sails of the Sydney Opera House in 2003; former activist and participant in the Billboard Utilising Graffitists against Unhealthy Promotions (BUGA UP) anti-tobacco advertising campaign, Peter Vogel; and Museum of Sydney curator, Inara Walden.

Exhibition on 11 Feb – 10 June 2012
Opening Forum on 12 Feb 2012

 
City Conversations 2012 Headland Park - Barangaroo Tuesday February 21st 2012

At the first City Conversation for 2012, Peter Walker, internationally renowned landscape architect, will talk about the designs for Barangaroo’s Headland Park.

Peter has designed hundreds of major projects during a five-decade career, including the redevelopment of Millennium Park for the Sydney Olympics and the World Trade Centre Memorial in New York City.

Following the talk, which is being held in conjunction with Barangaroo Delivery Authority, a panel of experts will discuss the new Headland Park and its significance for the city’s workers, visitors and residents.

MC Jenny Brockie

WELCOME Clover Moore MP, Lord Mayor of Sydney

KEYNOTE Peter Walker, PWP Landscape Architecture

PANEL DISCUSSION
Terry Moran AO, Chairman, Barangaroo Delivery Authority
Graham Jahn AM, City of Sydney
Prof Catherin Bull AM, University of Melbourne

Tickets are FREE and ESSENTIAL and available from City’s Angel Place Box Office on 02 8256 2222 or www.cityrecitalhall.com

Visit www.sydney2030.com.au for information on our sustainability projects.

Presented by the City of Sydney and The Sydney Morning Herald. Supported by the Barangaroo Delivery Authority.