This article reflects on the theoretical nodes behind the organisation of the exhibition Italiani di Sydney, Museum of Sydney, 30 August- 7 December 2003. It argues that exhibitions are produced through situated knowledges and it analyses the particular situatedness of the curator. Notions of imagined communities, the poetics of the carnivalesque, the everyday, the importance of objects, cultural heritage in the making, heterogeneity and heteroglossia, gaps between official narratives and lived actualities, hybrid spaces, and hyperlinked narratives, are interwoven in the text with a review of the exhibition
The Sydney Opera House attracts over four million visitors each year to experience its architecture,...
In this article, I reflect on the aesthetics and cultural politics of Oceanic collec- tions in sever...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.It is the intention of t...
Background I was commissioned to curate this exhibition by Museum of Sydney, a highly regarded insti...
When it first opened in 1995, the Museum of Sydney (MoS) received praise from some quarters for its ...
© 2002 Dr. Kylie Rachel MessageThis thesis maps a recent emergence or shift in museological discours...
© 2019 Sarah WerkmeisterThe aim of this research is to examine the impact of the Biennale of Sydney ...
This article uses the current exhibition at the Museum of Sydney Painting the Rocks: The loss of old...
In this article, I describe two exhibitions that were developed and shared in order to recognize and...
This beautifully designed publication is richly illustrated throughout, featuring over 100 large-sca...
The article opens with a short presentation of the Architecture Biennale 2018 in Venice, followed by...
This essay explores presentation of identity and debates about curatorial practice in a recent tour...
There has already been much scholarly work produced about the Sydney Opera House, discussing the pro...
To celebrate an unconventional dialogue between Italy and New Zealand, on the 15th of July 2021, the...
This article examines the ways in which a globalised and post-modern society has led to the fragment...
The Sydney Opera House attracts over four million visitors each year to experience its architecture,...
In this article, I reflect on the aesthetics and cultural politics of Oceanic collec- tions in sever...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.It is the intention of t...
Background I was commissioned to curate this exhibition by Museum of Sydney, a highly regarded insti...
When it first opened in 1995, the Museum of Sydney (MoS) received praise from some quarters for its ...
© 2002 Dr. Kylie Rachel MessageThis thesis maps a recent emergence or shift in museological discours...
© 2019 Sarah WerkmeisterThe aim of this research is to examine the impact of the Biennale of Sydney ...
This article uses the current exhibition at the Museum of Sydney Painting the Rocks: The loss of old...
In this article, I describe two exhibitions that were developed and shared in order to recognize and...
This beautifully designed publication is richly illustrated throughout, featuring over 100 large-sca...
The article opens with a short presentation of the Architecture Biennale 2018 in Venice, followed by...
This essay explores presentation of identity and debates about curatorial practice in a recent tour...
There has already been much scholarly work produced about the Sydney Opera House, discussing the pro...
To celebrate an unconventional dialogue between Italy and New Zealand, on the 15th of July 2021, the...
This article examines the ways in which a globalised and post-modern society has led to the fragment...
The Sydney Opera House attracts over four million visitors each year to experience its architecture,...
In this article, I reflect on the aesthetics and cultural politics of Oceanic collec- tions in sever...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.It is the intention of t...