IAC Events

The Institute for Australian and Chinese Arts and Culture (IAC) at Western Sydney University and the Foundation for Australian Studies in China (FASIC) along with the Beijing Foreign Studies University are announcing that for the first time the abovementioned two international conferences will be held back to back from 3 October to 6 October 2024, at Western Sydney University, Australia, with the joint Reception on 3 October and conference dinner on 6 October.
In the current exhibition Individual and Universal: The World We Share at the Institute for Australian and Chinese Arts and Culture (IAC), one of the three featured artists, Nelson Nghe, specially created a new work entitled “I Bet You”, an installation of a house covered in lottery tickets accompanied by flashing lights and a slideshow of photos showing poker machines being smashed in the 1930s. The work invites the viewer to contemplate the lived experience of gambling harm as a family member, whereby houses have been gambled away whilst most of us dream of owning a home as part of the “Australian dream”. The work has attracted a lot of attention and consistently pulled in viewers to the exhibition. Nelson has also created paintings with the title and on-the-painting text “Blow up the Pokies”, inspired by the title of the 1999 hit song by the well-known Australian band The Whitlams. Poker machines, or the pokies as they are called in Australia, nicknamed “one-arm bandits” in the 20th century, are called in Chinese “tiger machines” 老虎机, indicating your money and your life will be devoured by this relentless beast.
In this talk, Dr Pamela See (Xue Mei-Ling) shared how she has been acknowledging the Chinese histories of geographic locations in Australia and inserting them into their associated cultural landscapes. These endeavours were examined across the spheres of gallery exhibitions, participatory art, and public art. She shared the inspiration behind her artworks and the processes she employed to produce them. Her techniques were examined in both historical and contemporary context, ranging from paper effigies to cast bronze. This talk is intended to foster dialogue about the role art can play in historically instating communities. The lecture may be particularly suited to artists aspiring to make public art or produce content for museums.
To hear the shared life-changing and fascinating experiences and stories by three trailblazing Australians who lived and worked in China right after the diplomatic relationship was established, we are very privileged to have invited the China specialist and first Australian Ambassador to China, Professor Stephen FitzGerald, the Sydney Morning Herald China correspondent, Yvonne Preston (1975-1977) and Warren Duncan, the ABC China correspondent (1975-1978).
In Conversation Warren Duncan
IAC is thrilled to partner with Sweatshop - a literacy movement based in Western Sydney which is dedicated to empowering culturally and linguistically diverse communities through reading, writing and critical thinking, in holding this conversation. This event is a part of the ongoing celebration of the exhibition currently showing at IAC, Portraits of Women by Amani Haydar. These three writers Amani Haydar, Shirley Le and Winnie Dunn are all second generation of migrants from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. Their creative writings tell their lived migrant stories in a distinctively Australian multicultural setting and form an integral part of Australian literature today, an emerging force to be reckoned with.
Portraits of Women as Creative Writers

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