The art of John Brack

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

A realist painter of modern urban life, John Brack emerged as an artist during the 1950s and took as his principal subject the people and life of Melbourne.  He became one of Australia’s most challenging and important artists of the 20th century.  

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00

Constantinople and Istanbul: A Tale of Two Cities

Apollo International Hotel 290 Pacific Highway, Charlestown, NSW, Australia

Constantinople and Istanbul, two names for one city. One city straddling Europe and Asia: Byzantine imperial capital for 1000 years then capital city of the Ottoman Turks.

Minarets and domes of Turkish mosques dominate the skyline, the waters of the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus lap its shores, and a stroll through the streets reveals the city's diverse and magnificent heritage.

Byzantine churches with colourful mosaics, Ottoman mosques with beautiful tilework, the luxurious palaces of the sultans, elegant fountains, bathhouses and bustling covered markets make Istanbul one of the most fascinating cities in the world.

There will be two lectures From Constantine to Conquest: The Byzantine City and The Ottoman City with a break for morning tea.

Get Tickets A$50.00 – A$55.00 75 tickets left

Babylon: Art and Legend

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

Babylon: the very name is evocative. Once one of the greatest cities in the ancient world, a vanished metropolis which lay deserted for over 2000 years, its history is bound up with myth and legend but it has never been forgotten. Biblical accounts of the Tower of Babel, Daniel in the Lions’ Den, Belshazzar’s Feast, the Fall of Babylon, the Whore of Babylon, and classical references to the great walls and Hanging Gardens have inspired artists throughout the centuries. This lecture also looks at the real Babylon, beside the River Euphrates, as explored and excavated since the 19th Century.

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00

Mirka and Georges: A Culinary Affair

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

A beloved and central figure in the cultural life of Australia, Mirka Mora long captured the public imagination with her distinctive art and inimitable personality.  Arriving in Melbourne from Paris in 1951, Mirka and her husband Georges contributed significantly to the local art and restaurant scenes and the city’s gradual transformation into a sophisticated metropolis. Their apartment at 9 Collins Street became a hub for the bohemian set, which transferred to Mirka Café in Exhibition Street in 1954 and their two subsequent restaurants, Café Balzac in East Melbourne and Tolarno French Bistro in St Kilda. 

The lecture opens with Mirka and Georges’ early lives and food experiences in France, then tells the stories of their celebrated hospitality in Australia and their intermingling of food, art, love and life. The culinary journey is interspersed with fascinating anecdotes, archival photographs, Mirka’s sensuous and colourful artworks.

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00

About Face: How to Read Portraits

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

The Oxford English Dictionary defines portraiture as “a representation...of a person, especially the face...”. However, this simple explanation belies the complexities of reproducing the face.

Portraits range from the symbolic, where a likeness was not required, to images where concern with identity opens up the areas of character, personality, mood, status, costume, occupation, gender and age. We also need to consider the relationship between sitter and painter.

Portraits are quite distinct from other categories in art in the way they are made, the nature of what they represent and how they work in terms of display.
The lecture opens with Mirka and Georges’ early lives and food experiences in France, then tells the stories of their celebrated hospitality in Australia and their intermingling of food, art, love and life. The culinary journey is interspersed with fascinating anecdotes, archival photographs, Mirka’s sensuous and colourful artworks.

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00

Easton Pearson: An Australian Fashion Tale

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

Brisbane 1989 – fashion designers Pam Easton and Lydia Pearson began to create their range of garments.  The designs were deliberately nostalgic and feminine, with an air of retrospection obtained by engaging with historical and ethnographic sources. 

Within ten years their female clothing line, manufactured in Brisbane but made of textiles garnered from Vietnam and India, Italy and France, was retailing globally. They were sold in Browns, London; Neiman Marcus, USA; and Alta Moda, Kuwait. 

What is the appeal of Easton Pearson and how is their design distinctive? 

This lecture reflects on McNeil’s involvement as writer-researcher in the first exhibition of Easton Pearson, held at QAG/GOMA. This was the first time fashion had been shown on a large scale in a Queensland art museum.

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00

A Carpet Ride to Khiva: A personal story of reviving ancient silk carpet designs

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

Chris Aslan tells his story of working with UNESCO to establish a silk carpet workshop in the desert oasis of Khiva, Uzbekistan - the most homogenous example of Islamic architecture in the world.  His work took him to the bazaars of Afghanistan to purchase natural dyes, and to the great libraries and museums of Europe to track down 15th century manuscripts to revive carpet designs from their illuminations.  He also saw the lives of women transformed and became the largest private employer in town.

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00

Fabergé’s Imperial Easter Eggs (from 1885 to today)

Apollo International Hotel 290 Pacific Highway, Charlestown, NSW, Australia

These lectures delivers a single narrative covering the history of the 50 jewelled Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs from the first egg in 1885 to their current whereabouts.  The eggs illustrate the attitudes that would ultimately lead to the downfall of the Romanovs: their apparent indifference to the poverty that choked their country; their preference for style over substance and their all-consuming concern with the health of the sickly heir – a preoccupation that would propel them toward Rasputin and the doom of the dynasty.  

After the Revolution, the eggs embarked on a journey that included embattled Bolsheviks, acquisitive members of the British royal family, eccentric salesmen, and famous business and society figures.  Now, the interest of Russian oligarchs means that their story is turning full circle, as the eggs begin to return to Russia.  Finally, there is the emergence of new information, as researchers delve into the Kremlin archives, in particular to piece together the designs and possible fates of the seven missing eggs. 

There will be two lectures with a break for morning tea.

Get Tickets A$50.00 – A$55.00 75 tickets left

The Genius of Antonio Stradavari

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

250 years after Antonio Stradivari’s death, his violins and cellos remain the world’s most highly-prized instruments.Loved by great musicians and capable of fetching fabulous sums when sold, their tone and beauty are legendary.Every subsequent violin-maker has tried to match them.Not one has succeeded. How can that be?

This lecture explores that central mystery by following some of Stradivari’s instruments from his workshop to the present day. It is a story that travels from the salons of Vienna to the concert halls of New York, from the breakthroughs of Beethoven’s last quartets to the first phonographic recordings.(The lecture includes musical extracts.)

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The Life and Art of Georgia O’Keeffe

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986) rose to an almost mythical status as the pre-eminent modernist artist in early 20th century America. She did so at a time when painting was still considered an unsuitable occupation for women and despite spending decades in the isolation of Northern New Mexico and away from the artistic hub of New York. The lecture will discuss her iconic landscapes, cityscapes, skull paintings and notorious outsized flower paintings and address the question of the role of photographer, leading gallerist and O'Keeffe's husband, Alfred Stieglitz, in the shaping of her career.

"I have but one desire as a painter – that is to paint what I see, as I see it, in my own way, without regard for the desires or taste of the professional dealer or the professional collector." — Georgia O’Keeffe

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00

Art or Vandalism?

Hunter Theatre Cameron St, Broadmeadow, New South Wales, Australia

‘Street Art’, regarded as one of the largest art movements of modern times, has achieved huge popularity and is still rapidly growing as an art form. It encompasses graffiti, protest art that speaks to political and social issues, and monumental painted murals. This talk explores the history of the medium from prehistoric times to the modern day and discusses how and why this art has ended up as a mainstream art practice exhibited in respected museums the world over.

Get Tickets Free – A$30.00