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Artists chronicle our times : gallery ready for Archibald

  Six time Archibald Prize Finalist Angus McDonald with Michael Brand, Director of the Art Gallery of NSW after Angus McDonald wins the 2020 Archibald Prize ANZ People’s Choice award for his portrait of Behrouz Boochani a Kurdish – Iranian writer, poet, filmmaker and journalist at the NSW Art Gallery in Sydney Australia. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Gaye Gerard It says a lot about our region and the acknowledged talent that lives and works where we live, Ms Muddiman said. She said the exhibition they took down to make space for the Archibald was a collection of work from well known Australian artists who happen to live here and those who have painted while on the Tweed.

Behrouz has never entered Australia but left a profound mark

Premium Content Subscriber only A great irony of Behrouz Boochani’s story is the fact his image has become so recognised in a country he has never been allowed to enter. A portrait by Lennox Head artist and filmmaker Angus McDonald depicting Mr Boochani certainly resonated enough with the public to be awarded the People’s Choice in the 2020 Archibald Prize. Mr Boochani, a Kurdish-Iranian journalist and writer, reached Australia by boat in 2013 and was detained on Manus Island until he was able to leave for New Zealand in 2019. There, he was ultimately granted asylum. Mr McDonald’s work, Behrouz Boochani, has been his sixth work to be an Archibald finalist.

North Coast talent on show as Archibald goes regional

ArtAsiaPacific: Looking Ahead Friday News Roundup

by The Editors Exterior view of the National Gallery, London. Image via Facebook. While Covid-19 continues to hold its influence, causing closures and re-closures with new regional spikes in infected cases, many art institutions have released plans for 2021. Here is a roundup of recent announcements and what’s to come. Galleries and Museums in Europe Shutter Amid Another Wave Commercial art galleries are the latest to close in Germany due to stricter lockdown measures, effective from December 16 until at least the second week of January 2021. Museums, theaters, and other cultural venues that were already shuttered remain closed. On the same day, galleries and museums in London closed indefinitely, only two weeks after they reopened, as the British capital moved into its highest tier of Covid-19 restrictions. Museums in the Netherlands shuttered on December 15, and at the moment are expected to reopen on January 19, 2021. Meanwhile, the ongoing lockdown in France has been extend

Government s arrogance in refusing to apologise

Government’s arrogance in refusing to apologise We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Government’s arrogance in refusing to apologise December 18, 2020 — 11.35pm Save Normal text size Credit:Illustration: Andrew Dyson To submit a letter to The Age, email letters@theage.com.au. Please include your home address and telephone number. THE HIGH-RISE LOCKDOWN Government’s arrogance in refusing to apologise Victorian Ombudsman Deborah Glass has found what any right-minded person should have thought at the time – the lockdown of the high-rise towers, which occurred with only 15 minutes’ notice to tenants, breached their human rights (The Age, 18/12). She did not find there should not have been a lockdown, only that the manner in which it was implemented was against the medical advice and breached human rights. When it occurred, I was appalled, both as a lawyer and an ordinary citizen.

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