A concert by PhD student Halina Leung.
Led by UNSW Galleries Public Engagement Officer, Miranda Samuels, these intimate tours of 'Gemma Smith: Rhythm Sequence' utilise the technique of audio description as an access tool for people who are blind or have low vision, and as a medium for experimenting with ideas of language, abstraction and translation.
Sighted companions and guide dogs are welcome. Open to the general public. For questions please contact Miranda Samuels, m.samuels@unsw.edu.au.
Gemma Smith invites a range of Australian painters to discuss the influence of female abstractionists on the development of their work and the work of artists overlooked in the lineages of abstract painting. Speakers include Christine Dean and Liz Pulie, with more to be announced soon.
Developed in conjunction with 'Gemma Smith: Rhythm Sequence'.
What rights, responsibilities, policies and practices does the higher education sector adopt when engaging with students from refugee backgrounds? How do universities navigate a framework where more power is being conceded to anti-immigration, alt-right conservative governments?
Aoide
Dylan Batty, Space One
Who made your work? Whose labour produced your cultural capital?
We are constantly bombarded with Americanised, romanticised, faux nostalgic and fetishised depictions of adolescence, especially in film and television. These visions of youth are beautiful and yet, mostly unattainable. By drawing on the cinematic aesthetics of the slasher horror genre and coming-of-age films, artist Aidan Maloney explores and deconstructs the specifically Australian adolescent experience.
How might we use low-cost technologies to address healthcare gaps and improve the management of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) in underserved but emerging markets?
Join us on this 2.5 day Hackathon and help us to create global solutions to global problems.
Writing Contemporary Australia: Michelle de Kretser and Roanna Gonsalves in conversation with Suneeta Peres da Costa
Presented by UNSWriting
LOkesh Ghai, artist and designer based in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India will give a presentation on his research into traditional garment construction in the Kutch region of Gujarat in western India, a true example of slow fashion.
Snips and snails and puppy dogs tails, that's what little boys are made of.
Sugar and spice and all things nice, that's what little girls are made of...until a band of women came along and changed everything.
Isabella Loong
Studio One, 6pm