FROM THE BOARD
22 February 2012 at The Tea Room Queen Victoria Building Sydney
To book click here
The former Chief Justice of NSW reminisces about Arts Boards he has known and recalls the effort, the contribution and the enrichment which the experience has brought him. He is currently the Chair of the National Library of Australia.
Read Ailsa McPherson on The Empire Actors here
The Empire Actors is reviewed in Popular Entertainment Studies 2.1. 117-121
Katharine Brisbane gave the lecture IN PRAISE OF NEPOTISM
Read it here
The Philip Parsons Lecture was given on 27 November at Belvoir Street Theatre
INDIG-CURIOUS: WHO CAN PLAY ABORIGINAL ROLES? by Jane Harrison
Read more
David Unaipon had a commitment to sharing his stories with non-Aboriginal people. What can we make of this? Did he mean they have the freedom to adopt Aboriginal myths and stories without qualm, without recourse, without responsibility? Or did he merely hope that they would be valued as part of our country’s cultural expression? How, if ever, can Aboriginal themes be 'used' in a way that is acceptable to Aboriginal people? How can non-Aboriginals interpret their work? Neither Homer nor Shakespeare are around to defend their work, but Aboriginal people are alive and outspoken about how they are depicted on the page, stage and on the screen. Muruwari playwright Jane Harrison tackles this intractable issue and finds a way forward.
DEMOCRACY V CREATIVITY IN AUSTRALIAN CLASSICAL MUSIC by Nicole Canham
People working in the classical music sector today, writes Canham, have lost connection with the larger public. We are not facing up to the fundamental question: “Why don’t you, or wouldn’t you, come to our concert? Or if you were to come, what would you like to see/hear?” Today we are in the middle of a creativity revolution, inventing new forms of popular culture in which everyone can be a participant.
Join Nicole's blog
Click here
The new book by Nick Herd
THE REAL STORY OF THE TELEVISION WE HAD TO HAVE.
The conduct of a commercial television service is not to be considered as merely running a business for the sake of profit. Because of the influence they can bring to bear on the community, the business interests of licensees must at all times be subordinated to the overriding principle that possession of a licence is a public trust for the benefit of all members of our society.
PMG Charles Davidson to Parliament on the passing of the Broadcasting and Television Act 1956.

Platform Papers 25
Erin Brannigan has provided an important catalyst with her considered, complex and persuasive study which is a pleasure to ponder on. It should be on the reading list of every dance and creative arts course and disseminated widely through the industry.
Cheryl Stock, choreographer and dance educator
www.currencyhouse.org.au/node/129

Platform Papers 27
Any blogger will know the weird sense of beginning an online ‘conversation’. It's akin to delivering an informal lecture to an empty auditorium. In most cases, you're met with silence. This is no different from a newspaper review, or a novel, or a message scratched into a bus stop seat.
John Bailey, Melbourne arts journalist and bloggist
www.currencyhouse.org.au/node/185
We will send you:

Currency House is an incorporated, voluntary association dedicated to asserting the value of the performing arts in public life by research, debate and publication. We rely on the support of those who share our belief that a society that does not value its own arts is a nation alienated from its own culture.
Donations to Currency House are fully tax deductible under section 30–15 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. We receive support the CAL Cultural Fund, the Sidney Myer Fund of the Myer Foundation and from Friends who have generously contributed to building our website and subscribed to the publication of our books. We welcome help in kind from volunteers and we also have a loyal group of Industry Advisers who in turn pledge annual financial support for a period of three years.
If you would like to join our team in any of these capacities, please contact our administrator, Priscilla Yates at priscilla@currencyhouse.org.au or write to:
The Administrator
Currency House Inc
PO Box 2270
Strawberry Hills
NSW 2012
Australia
Currency House was incorporated on 13 October 2000. We are listed on the Register of Cultural Organisations and are endorsed as a deductible gift recipient (DGR) from 20 June 2001 under item 1 of the table in section 30–15 of the Income Tax assessment Act 1997. We also have endorsement for charity tax concessions including income tax exemption (ITEC) dating from 1 July 2001 under subdivision 50-B of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. And from the NSW Government we hold a fundraising authority under section 10 of the Charitable Fundraising Act 1991, current to 18 August 2012.
Currency House gratefully acknowledges support for the development of this website from:

IAN ENRIGHT
CHRIS AND BEV HOLMES
MARTIN PORTUS
PROFESSOR EMERITA DI YERBURY, AO