Anna Madeleine 

This week only: Blak Night, Vienna in Sydney, St Kilda and Namatjira to Now

St Kilda festival ends with a bang, the Sydney Opera House turns Viennese for a night, and the Institute of Modern Art launch kicks off its 2015 program
  
  

DC Lenie Namatjira
Work by Lenie Namatjira, 2014 at Parliament House. Photograph: Ngurratjuta Many Hands Art Centre/Supplied

Namatjira to now

Marking the end of a multi-layered five year project by BighART, this exhibition, along with an award-winning theatre production, has developed through workshops, storytelling and masterclasses with the Namatjira family and Western Aranda communities. It showcases work that has come out of the Hermannsburg watercolour movement across five generations, including animations from the youngest generation of students at the Ntaria School.

Namatjira to Now: Five generations of watercolours in the Central Desert is showing at Parliament House, Canberra, until 9 February

Festival foreshore

Summer festivals don’t get much better than this: a free, nine day celebration of arts and music held in Melbourne’s vibrant St Kilda foreshore. Don’t miss festival Sunday which ends the show with over 60 bands playing across five stages, along with some more unusual interactive community activities to get involved in such as Discoyoga, African Star dance and drumming workshops and the Dancecity Brazilian carnival.

St Kilda festival is at St Kilda Foreshore, Melbourne, until 8 February

Gulpilil celebrated

Blak Nite Screen shines a light on Indigenous filmmaking. Friday’s program focuses on the career of the Aacta award-winning David Gulpilil, kicking off with a performance by Frank Yamma and a conversation between Gulpilil and director Darlene Johnson, followed by screenings of One Red Blood and Charlie’s Country. Saturday looks at the new blak wave of film and TV with a performance by Ursula Yovich and screenings of The Turning, Gods of Wheat Street and Redfern Now.

Blak Nite Screen at the Treasury Gardens, Melbourne, 6 and 7 of February

Happy forty years

Brisbane’s Institute of Modern Art not only launches its 2015 program this week but the start of its 40th anniversary celebrations. The year kicks off with Berlin-based artist, writer and filmmaker Hito Steyerl’s exhibition Too Much World, along with the launch of a new lecture series asking What Can Art Institutions Do?, with the first talk presented Anne Barlow, director of Art in General, New York City.

Brisbane’s Institute of Modern Art’s 2015 launch takes place on 5 February

Viennese waltz

In a one-night-only event the Sydney Opera House is getting turned inside out, with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra’s greatest hits from Vienna – performed live in the concert hall – projected onto the building’s sails for all to see. The footage of the orchestra will be accompanied by stunning visuals of Viennese scenery and artwork. If you don’t feel like battling the crowds, never fear – you can live-stream it online – from anywhere in the world.

Visions of Vienna will light up the Sydney Opera House on 4 February

 

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