The CEO of Creative Australia yesterday admitted to an estimates committee that the country's pavilion could be empty in 2026 ...
Artworks depicting Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah and the 9/11 attacks were missed by bureaucrats choosing Khaled Sabsabi for ...
For a corporate animal of decades standing, Creative Australia’s embattled CEO, Adrian Collette, really needs to start ...
Creative Australia admitted just over a year ago, via public statement on their website, to cancelling and maligning another ...
Collette's appearance will not have done much to allay the mounting anger in the cultural sector about the manifest failures of Creative Australia’s governance on display in the Sabsabi implosion.
Khaled Sabsabi and Michael Dagostino were sacked by Creative Australia days after they were appointed. Now they have ...
Last year’s Golden Lion winner Archie Moore and the National Association for the Visual Arts are among those to speak out in ...
CEO Adrian Collette and Board Chair Robert Morgan will not be resigning despite the damage caused by Creative Australia’s ...
The agency has been fending off claims of political interference and censorship since it rescinded the selection of Western Sydney artist Khaled Sabsabi earlier this month.
Creative Australia reversed its decision following backlash over his past artwork, citing concerns about "divisive debate".
Instead of defending the artists — and their own processes — Creative Australia has hung Sabsabi and Dagostino out to dry, folding under pressure. Its actions reveal an institution ill-equipped to ...
What happened? Future historians might puzzle over this seismic shift in sentiment at the top of Australia's foremost public ...