Search Results
![The Eternity Playhouse has been home to Darlinghurst Theatre Company, now in voluntary administration.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/Eternity_Playhouse_Darlinghurst-1.jpg?w=310)
Darlinghurst Theatre Company placed into voluntary administration
The company made the surprise announcement online.
![Hong Kong Dance Company's 'Convergence' touring to Sydney. Photo: Supplied. Two dancers engaged in martial arts movements on a stage. The stage floor seems to be a digital screen with black and white swirls.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/Convergence_06-e1718672329888.jpg?w=310)
Driving cultural ambition with touring performances and global partnerships
Hong Kong is driving its arts and cultural strategy with touring performances to Australia and a global partnership with Art…
![Two white men dressed in Victorian era garb sit on a stage, either side of a large theatrical costumes/props basket with a decanter on the top of it. One man is draped in a blanket and clutches a glass looking worriedly at the older grey haired man, who also looks concerned but off downstage right, clasping his hands in his lap.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/05/Daniel-MacPherson-and-John-Waters-in-THE-WOMAN-IN-BLACK-c-Justin-Nicholas1-1-e1714952925917.jpg?w=310)
Theatre review: The Woman in Black, QPAC
A powerful production of this acclaimed British thriller has commenced its Australian nationwide tour.Â
![Death in the Pantheon. On a dark stage two actors are bathed in green light. One can only be seen from the neck down and is holding an ornate drinking contraption, with a red glass case, the other is bending below it to drink.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/20240612181215_IMGL97391.jpg?w=310)
Theatre review: Death in the Pantheon, Flight Path Theatre
The latest production from Sydney’s Upper Crass Theatre Company is somewhat flawed – but not without its charms.Â
![A town hall event will audience and colourful lighting in room. City of Sydney.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/CityTalksJune2024-PhotosbyKatherineGriffiths-013.jpg?w=310)
What a $20 million lifeline for Sydney’s cultural life buys
‘Our creative workforce increasingly can’t afford to live or work here,’ Clover Moore, Lord Mayor. ArtsHub look at the City…
![Three men and a woman are standing on treadmills. They have their arms in the air.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/Burnout_Paradise_Darren_Gill-32121.jpg?w=310)
Performance review: Burnout Paradise, Pony Cam Collective, RISING Festival, Malthouse
A frenzy of tasks performed on treadmills – but to what end?
![Suhani Shah. A woman with a short bob haircut wearing a sparkling maroon pantsuit is standing on stage in front of heavy curtains. She has her left arm raised and fingers pointed to the sky.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/GiannaRizzo_SuhaniShah_HR-71.jpg?w=310)
Performance review: Suhani Shah, Spellbound, RISING Festival, The Capitol
A magic mentalist show from a star Indian performer.
![Close up of four women sitting in a car at night; they are lit from inside the car.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/Trilogia-Cadela-Forca-Capitulo-I-BLACKYVA-FERNANDA-LIBMAN-JOANA-FERRAZ-LARISSA-B.-MARINA-M.-Christophe-Raynaud1.jpg?w=310)
Performance review: The Cadela Força Trilogy – Chapter 1, RISING Festival, Malthouse
A graphic and disturbing look at violence against women.
![A silhouette of a figure in black on a stage holding a guitar. Behind them there is an orange haze.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/Yves_Tumor-10_Andrew-Faram1.jpg?w=310)
Music review: Yves Tumor, RISING Festival, The Forum
An enigmatic performer-singer, Yves Tumor wowed the audience with experimental sonic expression.
![A robot uses its mechanical fingers to play the keyboard.](https://www.artshub.com.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/possessed-photography-U3sOwViXhkY-unsplash.jpg?w=310)
AI doesn’t mean human-made music is doomed. Here’s why
Human music-making isn’t going anywhere, argues the University of Melbourne's Alexander Crooke.