Maiya and Comedian Cassie Workman learn about some of Australia's best Female Artists in the Know My Name Exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia.
Comedian Carlo Ritchie goes head to head with Shantini and Janaki at the National Gallery of Australia. Are two child-sized-heads cleverer than one adult-sized-head? Has Carlo been set-up to fail?
Comedian Demi Lardner and Ruby go on a photography-finding mission to cram as many facts as they can at the National Gallery of Australia. One will snap under pressure and the other will focus on the Know It Alls trophy!
Aylin and Comedian Demi Lardner transport themselves to the ground-breaking world of Modernist Art and delve into colour, shapes and composition. Who will paint their way to success at the National Gallery of Australia?
Set against a backdrop of contemporary Aboriginal music, 88.9 Radio Redfern explores the people, attitudes and philosophies behind the lead up to a different type of celebration of Australia's Bicentennial Year.
Sampa the Great shares how reconnecting with her heritage influenced her latest album. We check out an AFL-inspired "living sculpture" at Rising. Benjamin Law and Vanessa Alexander unpack how to tell real stories on screen.
We head along to Melbourne's Rising festival. Zeina Thiboult shares the art of hair sculpture and Luke Arnold talks about creating change on social media through art. Richard Tognetti explains Bach's classical music mastery.
We meet 11-year-old Luca French, the youngest ever artist to exhibit at Vivid Sydney. Namila Benson talks to author and artist Amani Haydar about art, grief and healing, and we check out a new direct-to-collector art market.
From dirt poor beginnings, actor, writer and director Leah Purcell is now at the top of her game, weaving her troubled past into a powerful reimagining of an Australian classic.
We meet fashion designers Nicol & Ford, artist Dylan Mooney and recorder virtuoso Alicia Crossley. We catch new Tassie dance company Great Southern Dance's debut, before ABC Classic's Dan Golding shares his fave soundtracks.
Namila Benson meets some of Australia's leading authors at Sydney Writers' Festival: Chelsea Watego and Clementine Ford, Eliza Hull and Debra Keenahan, and Tony Birch. We also talk to Nils Frahm ahead of his Australian tour.
We witness the power of art therapy with Lissette Endacott. Artist Katie West shares how she uses weaving techniques and found fabrics in her work.
Co-author of Puberty Blues Kathy Lette has mined her life for stories since her teens. Now post-menopause, she opens up about her life and determination to age disgracefully.
We visit the Venice Biennale to catch up with Marco Fusinato, and Parrtjima in Alice Springs. Artist Deborah Kelly invites us to join her religion, and artist Christopher Zanko shares how he combines woodcarving and painting.
We chat to artists using novel methods and materials: Safa El Samad, who uses embroidery to upcycle clothes; and Jordan Benson, who works with stained glass. We also meet comedian Gabbi Bolt and Bigambul poet Uncle Wes Marne.
Bon Scott was set to become an international rock star with AC/DC when he died suddenly in 1980. Now for the first time, family and friends open up about his vulnerabilities and state of mind leading up to his untimely death.
We head to the National Indigenous Art Triennial in Canberra, this year titled Ceremony. Then we meet artist and film photographer Sammy Hawker, and get the lowdown on the latest in film and TV from critic Keva York.
Hosts Jimmy Rees and JoAnne Bouzianis-Sellick take us for a ride back in time and space, to an event which enthralled and scandalised the people of Adelaide in the late 1800s: The first human flight - via hot air balloon.
We check out Somali Australian art and culture exhibition AQAL and Indigenous drone art event Sky Song. Plus, we learn about award-winning comedian David Quirk's unexpected day job and meet screen composer Caitlin Yeo.
Hosts Jimmy Rees and JoAnne Bouzianis-Sellick take us for a ride back in time and space, to the remote North Western town of Broome in the early 1900s, during the heyday of the pearling era.