Things to do in Sydney today
Need a quick fix? Take inspiration from our guide to what's on right now and never have a dull day. For an extra kick, sweat it out along Sydney's best running routes, find things to do when you're alone in the city and check out the latest restaurant reviews.
RECOMMENDED: Accessible attractions in Sydney.
Free things to do in Sydney today
Art Month Sydney
Art Month in Sydney is about much more than exhibitions – although there are certainly a lot of them; the program extends to talks, tours, open studios, performances, workshops and classes. Perhaps the most popular and well known feature of the annual event is the Art at Night program, which throws fabulous precinct-wide parties combining performance, pop-up food and drink, and extended gallery hours. The idea is that you both party and take yourself on your own tour of the local galleries. It’s the perfect way to introduce yourself to some of our cities established and lesser-known spaces, but if you want to dig a little bit deeper, there are walking tours around precincts and a big program of in-depth talks with artists and artistic leaders. Check out our highlights from Art Month Sydney 2019.
Plants with Bite
Budding horticulturalists who like plants with attitude should head to the Royal Botanical Gardens from October 1 for a free exhibition of carnivorous greenery. The Calyx will be filled with 25,000 of the world’s hungriest, most clever plants. Watch as the venus fly trap lures unsuspecting insects with nectar and snaps them up in its jaws, where they’ll spend their final days being slowly digested. Or meet the drosera, who use their sticky tentacles to attract and snatch their prey before devouring them. Then marvel at the simplicity of the pitcher plant’s hunting technique, which is to lure hapless bugs with honey and let them fall into the pool of digestive enzymes in their pitfall trap. The Plants with Bite display does sound a little like a horror film, but it’s really all bark and no bite (for humans, anyway) and families can expect a very kid-friendly experience. Plus, there will be a range of themed education programs, workshops and a regular feeding display that will intrigue little greenthumbs and their grown-ups.
Artexpress
Artexpress has now been running for 35 years, showing the best works submitted by high school art students for their HSC. And let's face it – it's pretty much every serious HSC art student's dream to make it into this exhibition and have their work shown at our city's biggest gallery. The artworks on display this year include sculpture, drawing, painting, graphic design and photo media. It always comes as a surprise as to just how high the standard is; the extraordinary technical skill of some of the students will make plenty of adults jealous. And while there mightn't always be a fully formed artistic vision, the works that make it into the exhibition are usually appropriately bold. This year, 56 artworks were chosen from the 8,770 submitted for the 2018 HSC.
Connections
This long running, fascinating investigation into museum curation gives visitors insight into how and why historically and culturally significant objects are moved around the globe. It’s sure to tackle some controversial topics related to ownership and heritage of artefacts, but also the value of having access to items which contribute to our understanding of different cultures, social groups and histories. Some particularly intriguing questions may also come up, like how the torso of an Egyptian statue came to reside in Sydney, while its head still calls Cairo home. But what really unveils the truth behind these stories of diaspora and reveals more about the objects, is the connections between museums themselves. The Connections exhibition, divided into connections between identities, structures, assemblages and meanings, will be the last to feature at the Nicholson Museum, before it, the Macleay and Art Gallery collections are moved to the Chau Chak Wing Museum in 2020.
Janet Laurence: After Nature
Sydney-based artist Janet Laurence has made a career as an “environmental artist”, creating installations that respond to and utilise the natural world as key artistic elements – and she's gained a significant following thanks to her unique style. This major survey at the Museum of Contemporary Art features installations, sculpture, photography and video, with key works from across the course of her 30-year career. When you walk into the MCA's first floor gallery, the first thing you'll notice is a giant tree that's been dragged into the museum, lying right in the middle of the floor. It's a tree that's died due to drought, but Laurence has bandaged up its joints in an act of healing. Immediately opposite is a display of live plants in handblown glass vessels – all endangered species from the rainforest, being kept on a kind of life support. This meeting of the natural world with scientific and medicinal imagery is key to Laurence's work. There's also 'Deep breathing: resuscitation for the reef', a work made for the Artists 4 Climate exhibition in Paris 2015, featuring specimens from the Great Barrier Reef on loan from natural history museums. There’s also a newly commissioned work at the centre of the exhibition called ‘Theatre of Trees’, all about the healing powers of plants. It's an otherworldly installation that's taken over the entire first floor northern gallery, with five-metre curtains printed with close-up photography of trees, projections, lighting and three sepa
MCA Collection: Today Tomorrow Yesterday
The MCA's collection hang is where you go to get an overview of Australian contemporary art – and it's less daunting than it sounds. The last time they curated the hang was in 2012 (MCA Collection: Volume One), for the launch of the re-designed building, so there are a whola lotta new eye-candies to wrap your brain around. Although several works in the first room of the exhibition do take 'time' as their theme (including Stuart Ringholt's giant clock) curator Natasha Bullock, who masterminded the new hang, says the theme is more broadly connected to the ways in which the works in the show connected to histories of different kinds. Bullock deliberately messed with the Western linear notion of time in the exhibition's title, and explains that the indigenous concept of time would be better visualised in a circular pattern, in which present, future and past are connected. Artists in Today Tomorrow Yesterday include: Vernon Ah Kee, James Angus, Barbara Cleveland Institute (formerly Brown Council), John Barbour, Gordon Bennett, Daniel Boyd, Pat Brassington, Bob Burruwal, A.D.S Donaldson, Mikala Dwyer, Dale Frank, Marco Fusinato, Matthys Gerber, Kevin Gilbert, Julia Gorman, Fiona Hall, Robert Hunter, Robert MacPherson, Sanné Mestrom, Frank Malkorda, Linda Marrinon, Elizabeth Mipilanggurr, Callum Morton, Barayuwa Munungur, John Nixon, Kerrie Poliness, Stuart Ringholt, Joan Ross, Super Critical Mass, Gareth Sansom, Sally Smart, Ricky Swallow, Kathy Temin, Imants Tillers, Tjanpi D
Just Not Australian
Just one day before it was due to premiere in Melbourne in 2018, Sydney duo Soda_Jerk's latest film lost the support of the philanthropic trust that contributed $100,000 to its development. Soda_Jerk (aka Dan and Dominique Angelero) didn't lose the money they used to produce Terror Nullius, but the Ian Potter Cultural Trust no longer wanted to be associated with the promotion or publicity of a film that they deemed too controversial. So what exactly sent the trust running for cover? The film splices together classic pieces of Australian cinema into a political revenge fable that challenges Australian mythology. Expect to see Pauline Hanson alongside the characters of Mad Max while the voice of John Howard rings out across the desert. Characters from Muriel's Wedding meet Josh Thomas in Please Like Me, Russell Crowe in Romper Stomper, and even the Babadook. Terror Nullius is the centrepiece of this exhibition, which features work from 20 living Australian artists working with satire and alternative narratives, and questioning what it is to be Australian. There's also work from Vincent Namitjira, Tony Albert, Abdul Abdullah, Cigdem Aydemir, Karla Dickens, Joan Ross and more.
Critics' picks
Salome review
The story of Salome – the princess who demands the head of prophet John the Baptist on a silver platter in return for performing a dance – is a biblical one, referred to in the books of Mark and Matthew. But this young woman, who may have altered the course of history through the power of her dance, is never named in the text. It really wasn’t until Oscar Wilde’s controversial 1891 play, Salome, that her story became widely known and studied. The play, which forms the basis for Richard Strauss’s 1905 opera, places Salome at the centre of the action as she comes under the lustful gaze of her stepfather, Herod. In biblical versions, Salome’s mother, Herodias, is insulted by the prophet’s criticism of her second marriage, and encourages her daughter to demand his execution. In Wilde and Strauss’s versions, Salome is her own woman with her own reasons for doing so. Gale Edwards’ production of the opera premiered in 2012, and explores how male artists have constructed images of femininity over the centuries. It’s most obvious in her approach to the infamous ‘Dance of the Seven Veils’ – her version features a series of dancing women embodying male fantasies of female sexuality: innocent child with teddy, French maid, dominatrix pole dancer, Marilyn Monroe with her billowing white skirt, mother Mary as a saucy go-go dancer – but the male gaze and battles for power are unpacked in every scene. If anything, Edwards’ approach rings with even more clarity in 2019 – it constantly thro
Jess and Joe Forever review
What’s sweeter than childhood? According to Jess and Joe Forever, a gentle but full-bodied play by UK writer Zoe Cooper, a lot of things. Childhood friendship, on the other hand, and the first blushes of young love? You can’t beat it. Enter Jess and Joe. Jess (Julia Robertson) and Joe (Nyx Calder) meet on the Norfolk coast when they are children. Joe is smaller than the other boys; Jess is teased for the way she looks in her summer dresses. Joe is working class and Jess’s lifestyle is worlds apart (ask her about her family’s ‘real’ holidays in Italy; ask Joe about digging holes for wooden fence posts). But they are two lonely souls, and they forge on ahead into a friendship. They bridle at each other occasionally, but they’re intensely fond of each other with the sudden but unshakeable conviction of children. It’s very charming. Of course, life doesn’t run on charm alone, and as Cooper’s clear-eyed, beautifully constructed script unfolds, with Jess and Joe sharing narrating duties (occasionally bickering about what to include), life – in all its thorny, shaded complexity – seeps in. Jess’s cavalier demeanour masks her anguish over family struggles – it all becomes harder to manage as she gets older – and Joe’s everyday caution proves well-founded when members of the community seek to tease the two friends and keep them apart. You get the sense that Joe is often held apart from the rest of the town. But Jess isn’t the rest of town, and even when the friends fall out, yo
Every Brilliant Thing review
There’s a key moment in the middle of Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahue’s wildly successful, consistently funny and surprisingly uplifting solo play about a child grappling with their mother’s suicide attempts. The performer who plays the role of the child and narrates their story – in Belvoir’s production it’s Kate Mulvany – offers one piece of advice for anybody contemplating suicide: “Don’t do it.” Why? Because things get better. They mightn’t always get brilliant, but they will get better. It’s not the most profound piece of advice, and it’s unlikely to actually bring somebody back from the brink, but any piece of theatre that tries to provide a solution to life’s toughest challenges is doomed to fail. Every Brilliant Thing is more concerned with bringing together a group of people to hear one person’s experiences and deal with the social complexities of mental health with empathy and good humour. The play was originally performed by Donahue, but at Belvoir the character has been gender-swapped for Mulvany’s unique talents. When this character was seven years old, her mother made her first suicide attempt, or, as her father informed her, she did “something stupid”. The child’s response? She started to write a list of all the brilliant things in the world, starting with ice cream, water fights and staying up past your bedtime to watch TV. Of course, simply being reminded of the brilliant things in the world will never be enough to save somebody from suicide or allevi
The Choir of Man review
We all know that Sydney has lost plenty of bars, clubs and late-night venues in recent years, but we’re not totally alone in that struggle. If you look to the UK, the neighbourhood pub is under threat; across England, Scotland and Wales, pubs are folding at a rate of one every 12 hours. The number of small pubs – the ones with fewer than ten employees, and the kind that tends to prop up a community – has almost halved between 2001 and 2018. The Choir of Man, a breakthrough hit of the 2017 Edinburgh Fringe that falls somewhere between pub gig, cabaret, choral performance and scrappy musical, is an ode to pub culture and the communities that exist within them. There’s not much going on in terms of narrative, but there are nine men from England and Ireland onstage leading the audience through a night at their local. George Bray is the narrator; Sean Keany is the angel-voiced tenor known as the “Casanova”; Christopher Norton is the deceptively gentle “beast”; Richard Lock is the “pub bore”, who dresses like a character from an Agatha Christie novel. Each has their moment to shine and all are superb singers – Lock delivers an impressive rendition of ‘The Impossible Dream’ while attempting to make a house out of coasters, Keany belts the bejesus out of Adele’s ‘Hello’, and Bray performs a touching version of Luther Vandross’s ‘Dance with My Father’. But it’s when they perform together that the roof really starts lifting; there are quiet, introspective, acapella versions of Sia’s
West Side Story on Sydney Harbour review
It’s taken eight years of Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour (HOSH), but it finally happened: a downpour on opening night. Of course, there’ve been some performances that have taken place in the rain or were called off, but openings have always happened under clear skies. You’d think that West Side Story, the first musical to be performed on the harbour-side stage, mightn’t fare too well in wet conditions given the athleticism required in Jerome Robbins’ choreography. But it turns out not much can stop the committed ensemble of performers, who gave their absolute all performing under a downpour that lasted most of the first act. Yes, the women swapped their regular heels for safer plain black sneakers (of course their safety comes first, and these are the backup shoes for wet weather), but the dancing was still spectacularly realised. And in a number like ‘America’, which is all high kicks and swishing skirts? The rain actually adds a little something, as the dancers joyfully kick water high up into the air. It’s enough to make you forget just how soggy you’re getting under your poncho. (A word of advice: if it looks at all like it might rain, pick up a $5 poncho from a merchandise stand before the show starts.) The opening night conditions make it a little hard for us to accurately judge the quality of dance – and dance is a key narrative element in the first act of West Side Story – but it’s clear that Robbins’ choreography, with its exuberant jazz-meets-ballet-meets-Latin
More events on right now
West Side Story on Sydney Harbour review
It’s taken eight years of Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour (HOSH), but it finally happened: a downpour on opening night. Of course, there’ve been some performances that have taken place in the rain or were called off, but openings have always happened under clear skies. You’d think that West Side Story, the first musical to be performed on the harbour-side stage, mightn’t fare too well in wet conditions given the athleticism required in Jerome Robbins’ choreography. But it turns out not much can stop the committed ensemble of performers, who gave their absolute all performing under a downpour that lasted most of the first act. Yes, the women swapped their regular heels for safer plain black sneakers (of course their safety comes first, and these are the backup shoes for wet weather), but the dancing was still spectacularly realised. And in a number like ‘America’, which is all high kicks and swishing skirts? The rain actually adds a little something, as the dancers joyfully kick water high up into the air. It’s enough to make you forget just how soggy you’re getting under your poncho. (A word of advice: if it looks at all like it might rain, pick up a $5 poncho from a merchandise stand before the show starts.) The opening night conditions make it a little hard for us to accurately judge the quality of dance – and dance is a key narrative element in the first act of West Side Story – but it’s clear that Robbins’ choreography, with its exuberant jazz-meets-ballet-meets-Latin
The Choir of Man review
We all know that Sydney has lost plenty of bars, clubs and late-night venues in recent years, but we’re not totally alone in that struggle. If you look to the UK, the neighbourhood pub is under threat; across England, Scotland and Wales, pubs are folding at a rate of one every 12 hours. The number of small pubs – the ones with fewer than ten employees, and the kind that tends to prop up a community – has almost halved between 2001 and 2018. The Choir of Man, a breakthrough hit of the 2017 Edinburgh Fringe that falls somewhere between pub gig, cabaret, choral performance and scrappy musical, is an ode to pub culture and the communities that exist within them. There’s not much going on in terms of narrative, but there are nine men from England and Ireland onstage leading the audience through a night at their local. George Bray is the narrator; Sean Keany is the angel-voiced tenor known as the “Casanova”; Christopher Norton is the deceptively gentle “beast”; Richard Lock is the “pub bore”, who dresses like a character from an Agatha Christie novel. Each has their moment to shine and all are superb singers – Lock delivers an impressive rendition of ‘The Impossible Dream’ while attempting to make a house out of coasters, Keany belts the bejesus out of Adele’s ‘Hello’, and Bray performs a touching version of Luther Vandross’s ‘Dance with My Father’. But it’s when they perform together that the roof really starts lifting; there are quiet, introspective, acapella versions of Sia’s
Jess and Joe Forever review
What’s sweeter than childhood? According to Jess and Joe Forever, a gentle but full-bodied play by UK writer Zoe Cooper, a lot of things. Childhood friendship, on the other hand, and the first blushes of young love? You can’t beat it. Enter Jess and Joe. Jess (Julia Robertson) and Joe (Nyx Calder) meet on the Norfolk coast when they are children. Joe is smaller than the other boys; Jess is teased for the way she looks in her summer dresses. Joe is working class and Jess’s lifestyle is worlds apart (ask her about her family’s ‘real’ holidays in Italy; ask Joe about digging holes for wooden fence posts). But they are two lonely souls, and they forge on ahead into a friendship. They bridle at each other occasionally, but they’re intensely fond of each other with the sudden but unshakeable conviction of children. It’s very charming. Of course, life doesn’t run on charm alone, and as Cooper’s clear-eyed, beautifully constructed script unfolds, with Jess and Joe sharing narrating duties (occasionally bickering about what to include), life – in all its thorny, shaded complexity – seeps in. Jess’s cavalier demeanour masks her anguish over family struggles – it all becomes harder to manage as she gets older – and Joe’s everyday caution proves well-founded when members of the community seek to tease the two friends and keep them apart. You get the sense that Joe is often held apart from the rest of the town. But Jess isn’t the rest of town, and even when the friends fall out, yo
Every Brilliant Thing review
There’s a key moment in the middle of Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahue’s wildly successful, consistently funny and surprisingly uplifting solo play about a child grappling with their mother’s suicide attempts. The performer who plays the role of the child and narrates their story – in Belvoir’s production it’s Kate Mulvany – offers one piece of advice for anybody contemplating suicide: “Don’t do it.” Why? Because things get better. They mightn’t always get brilliant, but they will get better. It’s not the most profound piece of advice, and it’s unlikely to actually bring somebody back from the brink, but any piece of theatre that tries to provide a solution to life’s toughest challenges is doomed to fail. Every Brilliant Thing is more concerned with bringing together a group of people to hear one person’s experiences and deal with the social complexities of mental health with empathy and good humour. The play was originally performed by Donahue, but at Belvoir the character has been gender-swapped for Mulvany’s unique talents. When this character was seven years old, her mother made her first suicide attempt, or, as her father informed her, she did “something stupid”. The child’s response? She started to write a list of all the brilliant things in the world, starting with ice cream, water fights and staying up past your bedtime to watch TV. Of course, simply being reminded of the brilliant things in the world will never be enough to save somebody from suicide or allevi
Russian Transport review
In the immortal (and very Russian) words of Tolstoy, every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. Darlinghurst Theatre Company’s production of Erika Sheffer’s 2012 play Russian Transport focuses our gaze onto one particular Russian-Jewish migrant family living in Brooklyn as each character chases their own version – or perversion – of the elusive American Dream. Uncle Boris (Nathan Sapsford) has come to stay. He waltzes into stern matriarch Diana’s (Rebecca Rocheford Davies) home, charmingly innocent to American colloquialisms and brandishing a babushka doll filled with vodka. Boris is charismatic and suave, and quickly establishes himself at the centre of the family’s life. Anna Gardiner’s two-level dolls house set fits all the action compactly within it, easily moving our attention from domestic dramas about Chinese takeout to jaunts driving around Flatbush. It works to reflect the split between the younger and older family members, with interloper Boris going between them: as both the bridge, and later, the division between the two generations. Fourteen-year-old Mira (Hayley Sullivan) and older brother Alex (played by the excellent Ryan Carter) are both quickly drawn into Boris’s underworld hijinks. Mira’s ongoing battle with her mother about travelling for the summer has the markings of a typical adolescent push-and-pull, but leads to the revelation of some pretty unsavoury family secrets. Alex lets his ambitions take him in way over his head. Comedy is at the he
Walk it off
The best walks in Sydney
Coastal walks, bush walks, historical walks and inner city ambles: there are many routes where you can see Sydney from a new angle. See our list of ten favourite places to wander.