In its centenary year, the Trustees of the Art Gallery of New South Wales could not resist the symbolism of awarding the Archibald Prize to Peter Werner’s portrait of the 100 year old Guy Warren.
Dr Judith Nangala Crispin is a poet and visual artist with a background in music. Much of Judith’s writing is centred around the experience of searching for her Bpangerang ancestry, and her long-term friendship with Warlpiri people.
Posted on May 26, 2021 | Views: 225
cwebb2021-05-25T21:02:13-07:00
by Ian Gilligan: What if the need for fabric, not food, in the face of a changing climate is what first tipped humanity towards agriculture?
rchaeologists and other scientists are beginning to unravel the story of our most intimate technology: clothing. They’re learning when and why our ancestors first started to wear clothes, and how their adoption was crucial to the evolutionary success of our ancestors when they faced climate change on a massive scale during the Pleistocene ice ages. These investigations have revealed a new twist to the story, assigning a much more prominent role to clothing than previously imagined. After the last ice age, global warming prompted people in many areas to change their clothes, from animal hides to textiles. This change in clothing material, I suspect, could be what triggered one of the greatest changes in the life of humanity. Not food but clothing led to the agricu
La mémoire historique des camps de concentration préemptée lequotidien-oran.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lequotidien-oran.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Australia s top 10 must-see destinations have been revealed by travel experts - including an untamed Aboriginal landscape so sacred, you need a permit to enter.
To celebrate 30 years on air, Channel Nine s Getaway has named the country s most popular holiday spots, from the red desert of the Northern Territory to the slate grey mountains of Tasmania.
They include iconic attractions such as Uluru, Sydney Harbour and the pristine white beaches of the Whitsundays in Queensland.
Unexpected entrants include remote areas like Mitchell Plateau, WA, and Arnhem Land, Aboriginal Australia s untouched final frontier , as well as places with unique ecosystems such as Lord Howe Island and the Daintree Rainforest in Queensland.