UNSW Art & Design joins the Sydney Fringe Festival for the official opening celebration that will take over the Oxford Street Hub for one massive precinct party.
Performances at Art & Design by: BEN PANUCCI, A.D.K.O.B., EVAN KLAR, BATTS, BLACK TREE, RAINBOW CHAN
Please join us for the third Utzon Lecture for 2018 and the Annual Donald K Turner Address.
UNSW Built Environment Professor of Practice Rachel Neeson, Director of Neeson Murcutt Architects will present on the topic "The house in the city, the child in the sports hall".
Three performance works by three women touching on feminism, race, identity and the comedy and horror of it all.
Practice-based Honours in Theatre and Performance is a year long intensive creative-research process that allows students to develop their practice and create original, innovative works. Supervised and supported by UNSW staff this process culminates in a final public presentation.
Sophie Strykowski:
Hack
Performance
Jonathan Sobel presents an evening of Jazz Fusion, paying homage to saxophonist Michael Brecker, on whom his Music Honours Thesis is centred around. With classic 80s vibes, alongside ballads and standards, this is a night not to be missed!
Jeremy Sawkins // Guitar
Alister Spence // Keys/Synth
Alex Hewetson // Bass
Nic Cecire // Drums
Jonathan Sobel // Tenor Saxophone
Tickets at the door.
Words are only music in a language you don’t understand. Meaning changes when you don’t know the culture from which a poem comes from. We often hear the phrase “Lost in Translation” because it is easy to fail a poem, its music and meaning in the act of moving it from one language and culture to another. Hence, a good translation is often a re-creation. But what if we took a poem in its original form and let it inspire us? Take us to a place we might otherwise never go?
UNSW Law presents the 2018 Hal Wootten Lecture with Noel Pearson.
The 2nd International 'Living to 100' Conference is hosted by the Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA), UNSW Sydney.
Our internationally acclaimed line up of speakers will deliberate on the latest research on exceptionally long-lived individuals, in particular centenarians and supercentenarians.
Professorial Inaugural Lectures
51 newly promoted and recruited Professors are taking part in the 2018 Meet the New Professor series at UNSW Sydney to mark their achievement and showcase their specialist knowledge. Please join us for the fifth lecture for the 2018 series.
Lecture 1: The endo the road…
Can literature save the world? According to celebrated 12th century Iranian Sufi mystic poet, Attar, it is not the world that needs saving, rather it is we who are in dire need of rescue—from the clutches of our own ego, that “cyclone of calamities.”
Sholeh Wolpé, accompanied by musician Siavash Sadr on the santoor, presents poems and selections from her translation of The Conference of the Birds in an uplifting performance that moves the soul.
Research Week is a celebration of the remarkable depth and breadth of translational health research undertaken across the St Vincent’s Darlinghurst campus and its sister entities.
What’s the value of a hospital? A longer school day? A faster internet? Join us as the leaders of UNSW’s Grand Challenge on Inequality launch a method for measuring the social benefits of government spending.
Professor Richard Holden, Alex Rosenberg, and Professor Rosalind Dixon outline how Social Return Accounting compares the public good gained, or lost, in each policy choice.
01.
Ekaterina Frolov // Voice
02.
Sarah Wang // Flute
There is growing interest in the possibility that the resource base of the Solar System might in future be used to supplement the economic resources of our own planet. As the Earth’s closest celestial neighbour, the Moon is sure to feature prominently in these developments. In this talk I will review what is currently known about economically exploitable resources on the Moon, while also stressing the need for continued lunar exploration.
Bask in the beautiful sounds of one of the country’s leading chamber ensembles, as the Australia Ensemble present a free lunch hour concert.
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART | Flute Quartet in D KV285
Paul STANHOPE | All Air and Shadows
Leonard BERNSTEIN| Clarinet Sonata
Franz SCHUBERT | Sonatensatz
Location: John Niland Scientia Building, UNSW (Building G19) Venue Map
Rapid advances in genetics, robotics and other sciences are challenging our understanding of what it means to be human. Can science resolve key ethical questions? What role does religious thinking play in the age of genomics? And how do scientific and religious ways of knowing relate?
Dr Denis Alexander will seek to discuss and address these questions and more at the 2018 New College Lectures this September.