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BIBLE STORIES - OLD TESTAMENT children book 2009

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BIBLE STORIES - NEW TESTAMENT children book 2009

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DISPOSITION personal work 2006

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DISPOSITION personal work 2006

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NOSE PICKING FOR PLEASYRE personal work 2006

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NOSE PICKING FOR PLEASYRE personal work 2006

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LA PREMIERE FOIS personal work 2009

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LA PREMIERE FOIS personal work 2009

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THE OUTSIDER book cover 2006

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HEIDE MUSEUM brochure 2010

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REPLAY book cover 2005

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“Chicago still glitters hypnotically!” New York Times.

A true New York City institution, CHICAGO has everything that makes Broadway great: a

universal tale of fame, fortune and all that jazz; one show-stopping-song after another; and the

most astonishing dancing you’ve ever seen.

No wonder CHICAGO has been honored with 6 Tony Awards®, 2 Olivier Awards®, a

Grammy® and thousands of standing ovations.

It’s also no surprise that CHICAGO has wowed audiences all around the world, from Mexico City to Moscow, from Sao Paulo to

South Africa.

Whether you’re looking for your first Broadway musical, whether you’ve seen the Academy

Award®-winning film and want to experience the show live on stage or whether you’ve seen

it before and want to recapture the magic, CHICAGO always delivers.

As the OVERTURE ends, we’re introduced to Velma Kelly – a vaudevillian who shot the other half of her sister act when she caught her husband with her sister. Velma invites us to sample ALL THAT JAZZ while showing us the story of chorus girl Roxie Hart’s cold-blooded murder of nightclub regular Fred Casely. Roxie convinces her husband Amos that the victim was a burglar, and he cheerfully takes the rap.

Roxie expresses her appreciation in song (FUNNY HONEY) until the police reveal to Amos that Roxie knew the burglar, shall we say, intimately, and Amos decides to let her swing for herself. Roxie’s first taste of the criminal justice system is the women’s block in Cook County Jail, inhabited by Velma and other merry murderesses (CELL BLOCK TANGO). The women’s jail is presided over by Matron “Mama” Morton whose system of mutual aid (WHEN YOU’RE GOOD TO MOMMA) perfectly suits her clientele. She has helped Velma become the media’s top murderer-of-the-week and is acting as booking agent for Velma’s big return to vaudeville (after her acquittal, naturally).

Velma is not happy to see Roxie, who is stealing not only her limelight but her lawyer, Billy Flynn. Eagerly awaited by his all-girl clientele, Billy sings his anthem, complete with a chorus of fan-dancers to prove that (quote) (ALL I CARE ABOUT IS LOVE).

Billy takes Roxie’s case and re-arranges her story for consumption by sympathetic tabloid columnist Mary Sunshine, who always tries to find A LITTLE BIT OF GOOD in everyone. Roxie’s press conference turns into a ventriloquist act with Billy dictating a new version of the truth (WE BOTH REACHED FOR THE GUN) while Roxie mouths the words. Roxie becomes the new toast of Chicago and Velma’s headlines, trial date and career are left in the dust. Velma tries to talk Roxie into recreating the sister act (I CAN’T DO IT ALONE) but Roxie turns her down, only to find her own headlines replaced by the latest sordid crime of passion. Separately, Roxie and Velma realize there’s no one they can count on but themselves (MY OWN BEST FRIEND), and the ever-resourceful Roxie decides that being pregnant in prison would put her back on the front page.

Back after the ENTR’ACTE, Velma cannot believe Roxie’s continual run of luck (I KNOW A GIRL) despite Roxie’s obvious falsehoods (ME AND MY BABY). A little shy on the arithmetic, Amos proudly claims paternity, and still nobody notices him, MR. CELLOPHANE. Velma desperately tries to show Billy all the tricks she’s got planned for her trial (WHEN VELMA TAKES THE STAND). Billy’s forte may be showmanship (RAZZLE DAZZLE), but when he passes all Velma’s ideas on to Roxie, down to the rhinestone shoe buckles, Mama and Velma lament the demise of CLASS. As promised, Billy gets Roxie her acquittal but, just as the verdict is given, some even more sensational crime pulls the pack of press bloodhounds away, and Roxie’s fleeting celebrity is over.

Left in the dust, she pulls herself up and extols the joys of life NOWADAYS. She teams up with Velma in that sister act (NOWADAYS), in which they dance their little hearts out (HOT HONEY RAG) ‘til they are joined by the entire company for the grand FINALE.

November 14, 1996 CHICAGO opens at the Richard Rodgers Theatre on Broadway.

February 4, 1997 CHICAGO moves to The Shubert Theatre on Broadway.

December 12, 1997 Second National American Touring Company opens at Barbara B. Mann Theatre in Ft. Myers, Florida.

July 4, 1998 Australian Company opens at Her Majesty’s Theatre in Melbourne.

September 23, 1998 First German Language Company opens at Theatre An Der Wien in Vienna, Austria.

February 17, 1999 First Swedish Language Company opens at Eriksberg Hall in Gothenberg, Sweden.

May 9, 1999 First Dutch Language Company opens at The Beatrix Theatre in Utrecht, Holland.

November, 2000 CHICAGO Touring Company plays in Lisbon, Portugal.

January 23, 2001 First Spanish Language Company opens at The Teatro Opera in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

October 17, 2001 Second Spanish Language Company opens at The Centro Cultural Telmex in Mexico City, Mexico.

October 4, 2002 First Russian Language Company opens at The Estrada Theatre in Moscow, Russia.

June 2003 CHICAGO Touring Company plays Tokyo, Japan.

March 3, 2004 Second French Language Company opens at Au Casino de Paris in Paris.

December, 2004 CHICAGO Touring Company plays in Beijing, China.

April 28, 2005 South African Company opens at The Nelson Mandela Theatre in Johannesburg, South Africa.

July 20, 2005 South African Company opens at Artscape Opera House in Cape Town, South Africa.

May 4, 2006 CHICAGO Touring Company plays at Madinat Jumeirah Arena in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

September 14, 2006 CHICAGO surpasses MISS SAIGON to become the 8th longest running show in Broadway history.

November 14, 2006 CHICAGO celebrates its 10th Anniversary with a star-studded benefit performance featuring the original cast members and celebrity alums.

February 8, 2007 CHICAGO Touring Company plays in Tokyo, Japan.

September 14, 2007 First Danish Language Company opens in Denmark.

November 18, 2007 CHICAGO London Company celebrates 10 years in the West End.

March 18, 2008 South African Company reopens in Cape Town, South Africa.

March 2009 Second Australian Company will open in Brisbane.

May 2009 Australian Company will open in Sydney.

Caroline O’Connor as Velma Kelly

Caroline is an internationally acclaimed artist, highly regarded and respected in the entertainment industry. After starring as ‘Velma Kelly’ in the 1998/1999 Australian production, Caroline then made her Broadway début in the musical Chicago, and was invited back to New York and London to take part in the star-studded tenth anniversary Gala performances.

Gina riley as Matron “Mama”

Gina Riley is a woman of many talents, a writer, producer and performer. Gina became known across Australia as a performer in the sketch show Fast Forward. Subsequent series included Big Girl’s Blouse and Something Stupid, for which she was also a producer and writer.

Sharon Millerchip as Roxie Hart

At 17 Sharon began her musical theatre apprenticeship, understudying multiple roles in the mega musical Cats before winning the role of Demeter on the show’s original Australian tour. She was then cast as ballerina Meg Giry in the hugely successful original Australian production of The Phantom of the Opera and received a Mo Award nomination for her performance.

Damien Bermingham as Amos Hart

Damien’s introduction to the world of music theatre began at the relatively late age of 17. Being the youngest child of a very large and musical family there just wasn’t any room in the spotlight until he joined the cast of Les Miserables.

Craig Mclachlan as Billy Flynn

Truly versatile and completely unpredictable, Craig McLachlan is one of Australia’s most talented performers. From the larrikin Henry Ramsay in the television series Neighbours, which won him the top Australian TV accolade, the prestigious Gold Logie Award for Most Popular Australian Television Personality.

D.C Harlock as Mary Sunshine

D.C Harlock’s career in the entertainment industry is emerging as one of diversity. In earlier years Deidre and Robyn Slater were instrumental as singing teachers introducing D.C to choirs, performances and the G.S.O.D.A juniors.

CHICACO souvenir program 2009

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AU DRAND PRIX 2011 poster 2010

WWW. G R A N D P R I X . C O M . A U

ALBERT PARK . MELBOURNE25 . 26 . 27 . 28 MARCH 2010

QANTAS AUSTRALIANGRAND PRIX 2010

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AU DRAND PRIX 2011 website 2010

Fuelled by sportal

QANTAS AUSTRALIANGRAND PRIX 2010

TM

2010 Formula 1 Australian Grand PrixALBERT PARK MELBOURNE | March 25-28

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TICKETS NEWS

RESULTS

MORE NEWS

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GALLERY

YOU’RE ALREADY A FAN ...

OFFICIALMERCHANDISE

GETTING THERE

form *

CALL 131 931

39General Admission BUYGrandstand Seating BUYCorporate Ticketing BUY

2042010 Petrov proves a point1942010 Frustration for Red Bull1842010 Button claims second win1742010 Vettel wins pole1742010 Webber leads the way

POS TEAM

1 McLaren-Mercedes

2 Ferrari

3 RBR-Renault

4 Mercedes GP

Transport Guide Map

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EVENT GALLERY TICKETS RESULTS FANS NEWS TRANSPORT MEDIA SPONSORS Search

MOBILE FORMULA 1.COM

2010

FAQ Expressions of Interest Employment Privacy : Enquiries Terms and Conditions Copyright Feedback

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FAQ Expressions of Interest Employment Privacy : Enquiries Terms and Conditions Copyright Feedback

QANTAS AUSTRALIANGRAND PRIX 2010

TM

TRANSPORT GUIDECatch Public Transport!

MAP

ALBERT PARK

West Gate Fwy

City

link

Citylink

Dockland Hwy

Albert Rd

St Kilda Rd

SouthMelbourne

SouthMelbourne

PortMelbourne

PortMelbourne

CityCity

St Kilda

South YarraSouth Yarra

TRAMS between the circuit and the city are FREE for Grand Prix ticket holders.

The Grand Prix shuttle trams will be free during the event for Grand Prix ticket holders and passengers on all other services will need to travel with a valid Metcard.

For race goers wanting to enter via Gates 1 to 4, trams will run from outside Southern Cross Station in Spencer Street.

If entering via Gates 8, 9 and 10 a tram from Federation Square, just outside Flinders Street Station or from any tram stop along Swanston Street or St Kilda Road is suitable.

Patrons are advised to pre-purchase Metcard tickets for train and bus services.

Metcards are available from 960 retails outlets across Melbourne including newsagents, milk bars and 7 Eleven stores displaying the Metcard �ag, or from ticket machines at metropolitan train stations.

TRAIN

Metropolitan & Regional Southern Cross Station (Spencer St) & Flinders St Station

THURSDAY & FRIDAYPeak Hours: 7am – 9am , 4pm – 7pm 5-10 minute intervals (most trains)O�-peak: 15 – 30 minute intervals

SATURDAY & SUNDAY20 minute service on most lines (40 minutes frequency on some outer suburban lines) OR walk from South Yarra or Prahran stations for access to Gates 5, 8 or 9

REGIONAL Call 136 196 or visit www.vline.com.au for more information.

TAXI

DROP OFF & PICK UP - Gates 1, 2, 4, 8 & 10

LIMOUSINE

Designated bays are provided for limousines in each of the taxi ranks above except at Gate 1 where a speci�c rank is provided.

BICYCLE

Bicycle parking racks will be available at Gates 1, 2, 3 & 10.

RELATED DOCUMENTS

2009 Circuit Map (1605KB) Bet on the Grand Prix now at www.iasbet.com

TRAM BUS

FREE BETWEEN CITY AND CIRCUIT

NOTE: normal tram fares apply on other tram routes that operate past the Circuit.

LIGHT RAIL GP EXPRESS

SPENCER STREET (Cnr Collins Street) TO GATES 1 & 2

THURSDAY & FRIDAY Peak hours: 2-3 minute intervals.

SATURDAY & SUNDAY Peak hours: 1-2 minute intervals.

CLARENDON STREET GP EXPRESS

SPENCER STREET (Cnr Collins Street) TO GATES 3 & 4

THURSDAY & FRIDAY Peak hours: 5 minute intervals.

SATURDAY & SUNDAY Peak hours: 2-4 minute intervals.

ST KILDA ROAD GP EXPRESS

SWANSTON STREET (outside Federation Square) TO GATES 8, 9, & 10

THURSDAY & FRIDAY Peak hours: 2 minute intervals.

SATURDAY & SUNDAY Peak hours: 1 minute intervals.

METROPOLITAN & COUNTRY

Some bus services will take you to bus stops close to the Circuit, whilst other services will take you to the City, where you can catch the FREE tram service to the Circuit.

CAR

REMEMBER: NO PARKING CLOSE TO THE CIRCUIT.

Grand Prix Patrons (non residents) will NOT be permitted to park close to Albert Park.

Special Permits will be required to enter selected residential areas near the Grand Prix. ILLEGALLY PARKED VEHICLES WILL BE SUBJECT TO HEAVY FINES AND/OR TOWAWAYS.

Access will be maintained to local shops and businesses. There will be LOCAL SHOPPING AS USUAL on all four days of the Event.

The best thing to do is LEAVE THE CAR AT HOME, OR:

Park at one of the 27,500 car spaces at train stations throughout the suburbs and catch a train to the city; OR

Park in one of the 70,000 car spaces in the City and catch the FREE GP EXPRESS TRAM SERVICES to the Circuit.

St Kilda

EVENT GALLERY TICKETS RESULTS FANS NEWS TRANSPORT MEDIA SPONSORS Search

2010

2010 Formula 1 Australian Grand PrixALBERT PARK MELBOURNE | March 25-28

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AU DRAND PRIX 2011 booklet 2010

QANTAS AUSTRALIANGRAND PRIX 2010

TM

GRANDPRIX 2011

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AUSTRALIA GRAND PRIX 2010

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THE AUSTRALIAN GRAND PRIX IS A FORMULA ONE RACE THAT IS PART OF THE ANNUAL FIA FORMULA ONE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP. IT IS HELD AT THE MELBOURNE GRAND PRIX CIRCUIT AT ALBERT PARK IN MELBOURNE.

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AUSTRALIA GRAND PRIX 2010

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04IMPORTANCE

The Australian Grand Prix is the second round of the Championship, having been the first race of each year, excluding 2006 and 2010, since the event moved to Melbourne. During its years in Adelaide, the Australian Grand Prix was the final round of the Championship, replacing the Portuguese Grand Prix in that respect. As the final round of

the season, the Grand Prix hosted a handful of memorable Grand Prix, most notably the 1986 and 1994 event which saw those respective titles decided. Prior to its inclusion in the World Championship it was held annually from 1928 to 1984 at various venues in Australia. It was a centrepiece of the Tasman Series from 1964 to 1969 and again

in 1972 and was a round of the Australian Drivers’ Championship in a number of years from 1957 to 1983. It became part of the Formula One World Championship in 1985 and was held at the Adelaide Street Circuit in Adelaide, South Australia from that year to 1995, before moving to Melbourne in 1996.

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HISTORY

AUSTRALIA GRAND PRIX 2010

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PRE-WARWhile an event called the Australian Grand Prix is believed to have been held in 1927 near Sydney, it is generally held that the Australian Grand Prix began as the 100 Miles Road Race held at the original Phillip Island road circuit in 1928. The original race was won by Arthur Waite in what was effectively an entry supported by the Austin Motor Company driving a modified Austin 7. For eight years races, first called the Australian Grand Prix in 1929, continued on the rectangular dirt road circuit. This was the era of the Australian ‘special’, mechanical concoctions of disparate chassis and engine that were every bit as capable as the Grand Prix machines imported from Europe. For all the ingenuity of the early Australian mechanic-racers Bugattis dominated the results, taking four consecutive wins from 1929-1932.

The last Phillip Island race was in 1935 and the title lapsed for three years. An AGP style event was held on Boxing Day, 1936 at the South Australian town of Victor Harbor for a centennial South Australian Grand Prix before the Australian Grand Prix title was revived in 1938 for the grand opening of what would become one of the world’s most famous race tracks, Mount Panorama just outside of the semi-rural town of Bathurst. Only just completed, with a tar seal for the circuit still a year away, the race was won by Englishman Peter Whitehead racing a new voiturette ERA B-Type that was just too fast for the locally developed machinery. One more race was held at a giant South Australian road circuit near the town of Lobethal in 1939 before the country was plunged into World War II.

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POST-WARIn the immediate post-war era racing was sparse with competitors using pre-war cars with supplies cobbled together around the rationing of fuel and tyres. Mount Panorama held the first post-war Grand Prix in 1947, beginning a rotational system fostered by the newly formed Australian governing body, CAMS. A mixture of stripped-down production sports cars and Australian ‘specials’ were to take victories as the race travelled amongst temporary converted airfield circuits and street circuits like Point Cook, Leyburn, Nuriootpa and Narrogin before, on the races return to Mount Panorama in 1952, the way to the future was pointed by Doug Whiteford racing a newly imported Talbot-Lago Formula One car to victory. Grand Prix machinery had already been filtering through in the shape of older Maserati and OSCAs and smaller Coopers but had yet to prove to be superior to the locally developed cars. The end of the Australian ‘specials’ was coming, but the magnificent Maybach-based series of specials driven exuberantly by Stan Jones would give many hope for the next few years.

FORMULA 5000By the end of the decade European teams were increasingly reluctant to commit to the Tasman Series in the face of longer home seasons, but also having to develop 2.5 litre versions of their 3.0 litre F1 engines. Local Tasman cars were declining as well and after originally opting a 2.0 litre version of Tasman to be the future of the Australia Grand Prix, the overwhelming support for the already well established Formula 5000 saw natural selection force CAMS’ hand.

For the first half of the 70s, the Tasman Series continued purely as a local series for Formula 5000 racers, but by 1976 the Australian and New Zealand legs fractured apart and the Australian Grand Prix separated from the remnants and became a stand-alone race once more. During this era the former Tasman stars, Matich, Geoghegan and Bartlett would continue on as a new generation of drivers emerged, some like Garrie Cooper (Elfin) and Graham McRae developing their own cars while others like Max Stewart, John McCormack and Alfredo Costanzo using European built cars, mostly Lolas. Matich

Lex Davison, who for several years would experiment with sports car engines in smaller Formula 2 chassis, took his first of four victories in a Jaguar engined Formula 2 HWM in 1954, while the previous year Whiteford won his third and final Grand Prix as for the first time racing cars thundered around the streets surrounding the Albert Park Lake in inner Melbourne. That circuit, which for four brief years gave Australia the strongest taste of the grandeur surrounding European Grand Prix racing, was 40 years later very much modified, used to host the 1996 Australian Grand Prix as the modern Formula One world championship venue.

The Grand Prix returned to Albert Park in 1956, Melbourne’s Olympic Games year to play host to a group of visiting European teams, led by Stirling Moss and the factory Maserati racing team who brought a fleet of 250F Grand Prix cars and 300S sports racing cars. Moss won the Grand Prix from Maserati team mate Jean Behra. That 1956 race would inspire the next great era of the Grand Prix.

won two Grand Prix is his own cars before Stewart and McRae each took a pair of wins. Towards the end of the 70s the race again became a home to returning European based antipodeans like Alan Jones and Larry Perkins with Warwick Brown winning the 1977 race, while the previous year touring car racer John Goss completed a remarkable double, becoming the first and only driver to win the Grand Prix and the Bathurst 1000.

FORMULA ONEAustralia became part of the F1 world championship in 1985 with the last race of the season held on the street circuit in Adelaide. The Adelaide Street Circuit, which held its last Formula One race in 1995, has often been stated as being one of, if not, the greatest street circuits in the world. Whenever the teams came to Adelaide they enjoyed the party atmosphere.

CALDER PARKDeclining economy and the dominance of the local scene by Group C touring cars towards the latter part of the 70s saw Formula 5000 gradually fall out of favour. By 1980 the decision to replace was once again imminent however the form of Alan Jones in Formula One saw entrepreneur Bob Jane seize an opportunity to bring Formula One back as the Grand Prix Formula. Roberto Moreno dominated this era winning three of the four races, ceding only the 1982 race to Alain Prost. Jane’s attempt to bring the World Championship to Calder Park ultimately failed as F1 would be tempted away by a far more attractive option.

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RACES IN MELBOURNEIt took just three corners for the Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park to gain worldwide attention. On the first lap of the first race in 1996, Jordan’s Martin Brundle was launched into the air in an enormous accident. Footage of the crash, and Brundle’s subsequent rush back to the pits to take the spare car for the re-start, ensured the first race in Melbourne gained widespread coverage. The race was won by Williams’ Damon Hill.

The 1997 race saw McLaren, through David Coulthard, break a drought of 50 races without a victory. The next year was a McLaren benefit, with Mika Häkkinen and Coulthard lapping the entire field en route to a dominant 1-2 finish. The result was clouded by controversy when Coulthard pulled over with two laps remaining to allow Häkkinen to win, honouring a pre-race agreement between the pair that whoever made it to the first corner in the lead on lap one would be allowed to win. Ferrari won its first Grand Prix

before the end of the opening lap. Michael Schumacher dominated thereafter to post a third straight Melbourne win, but his achievements were overshadowed by the fifth place of Australian Mark Webber on his Formula One debut. Webber, in an underpowered and underfunded Minardi, had to recover from a botched late pit stop and resist the challenges of Toyota’s Mika Salo in the closing stages, and took to the podium after the race with Australian team owner Paul Stoddart in one of Melbourne’s more memorable Grand Prix moments.

The next year, 2003, saw Coulthard again win for McLaren in a race held in variable conditions. Normal service was resumed in 2004 with the Ferraris of Schumacher and Barrichello running rampant – within two laps of Friday practice, Schumacher had obliterated the Albert Park lap record, and sailed to a crushing win.

in Melbourne in 1999, but it wasn’t with team number one Michael Schumacher. Irishman Eddie Irvine took his maiden victory after the all-conquering McLarens of Häkkinen and Coulthard retired before half-distance. Schumacher broke his Melbourne drought the following year when he headed a dominant Ferrari 1-2 with new teammate Rubens Barrichello.

The 2001 event, won by Michael Schumacher, was marked by tragedy when volunteer marshal Graham Beveridge was killed after a high-speed accident involving Ralf Schumacher and Jacques Villeneuve on lap five. Villeneuve’s B.A.R rode up across the back of Schumacher’s Williams and crashed into the fence, behind which Beveridge was standing.

The start of the 2002 race saw pole-sitter Barrichello and Williams’ Schumacher come together at Turn One in a spectacular accident that saw 11 of the 22 cars eliminated

In 2005, the race was won by Renault’s Giancarlo Fisichella after a storm during Saturday qualifying produced a topsy-turvy grid. Barrichello and Fisichella’s teammate Fernando Alonso came through the field from 11th and 13th on the grid respectively to join pole-sitter Fisichella on the podium. In 2006, Alonso took his first Australian win in an accident-marred race that featured four safety car periods.

In 2007 Kimi Räikkönen in his first race for Ferrari, while Lewis Hamilton became first driver in 11 years to finish on the podium in debut, as he was 3rd behind his team-mate Alonso. Hamilton won the 2008 which had three safety car periods. In 2009 Jenson Button took the victory, driving for Brawn GP, which was having first race after Ross Brawn had bought the team following Honda withdrawal from Formula One.

2010 again saw Jenson Button win

at Melbourne. Starting from fourth, he gambled on an early change to slick tires under drying conditions that let him move up to second place after losing several positions at the start. Sebastian Vettel retired with mechanical issues after qualifying on pole and leading until his retirement, handing Button the victory.

AUSTRALIA GRAND PRIX 2010

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RECENT ATTENDANCE

An area of recent debate regarding the move of the Australian Grand Prix to Melbourne is the dwindling crowd attendances. Crowd numbers have not peaked since the Melbourne record of 401,000 in 1996, and have never reached the level seen in Adelaide in 1995. This has resulted in many questioning whether the event is bringing the economic benefits first promised when it was announced in 1993 that Melbourne would host the race.

A possible reason for the drop in attendance is that since the Grand

Prix has moved to Melbourne, the race organisers have significantly decreased the number of support events at the Grand Prix. Instead of using the event to showcase Australian motor sport, many classes featured in the past have been replaced by celebrity and corporate sponsored events. For instance, while the Grand Prix Corporation has used the presence of Australian driver, Mark Webber, as an advertising draw card for the event, the class in which Mark first started coming to attention, Formula Ford, was dropped from the

2006 programme.

Another factor possibly influencing the crowds in 2007 was the withdrawal of Australia’s most popular domestic racing series, V8 Supercar, a factor disputed by an attendance drop of just 500. Crowd figures have since steadied at just above the 300,000 mark.

In 2009, the global financial crisis, higher unemployment and a snap public transport stirke were cited by Victorian Premier John Brumby as a reason for a slight drop in crowds.

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AUSTRALIA GRAND PRIX 2010

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FUTUREBeyond 2010, the Victorian Government announced that Melbourne would retain the Australian Grand Prix until at least 2015. The race starting time will be moved to 5pm in order to satisfy Bernie Ecclestone’s ultimatum earlier this year, stating to the Sunday Mail that the only way Melbourne would retain the race is a move to a night race in order to increase European television audiences. However the later start will not result in a ‘night race’ as Geoscience Australia has forecast dusk for 29th of March 2009 at 7:45pm It has been reported in recent days that a consortium may plan to construct a purpose-built GP track near Avalon Airport, on the outskirts of Melbourne and Geelong, as a new permanent home to the Australian GP. The move has been gathering momentum and would allow a night race to be staged to maximise TV audiences in Europe and Asia.

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HOLMESGLEN RECRATION BOOK book cover 2009

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HOLMESGLEN RECRATION BOOK inside pages 2009

introduction

FUN FUN FUN! ! ! That is what your time at Holmesglen is all about. This booklet details the huge variety of exciting trips and activities that the Recreation staff has planned for you this year.

You won’t want to miss out on all the FREE on-campus activities during your lunchtime and evening breaks such as free food, performers, entertainers, comedians, musicians, market stalls, action attractions and more.

If you have ever wanted to travel around Melbourne, Victoria or even Interstate, this is the year to do it. We

have hugely discounted day, overnight and extended tours to many amazing places!

Holmesglen is still the only TAFE in Victoria to offer student clubs, so look out for upcoming club activities such as the Social Club Ball, Taekwando classes, multicultural club lunches, Sharks sporting competitions and more.

Details of all upcoming events will be on notice boards, Student Services’ website www.studentservices.holmesglen.vic.edu.au and in Hit Hot Press, so get involved at Holmesglen and enjoy the exciting year ahead.

Rrcration & Activities Coordinator Matt

Rrcration Office Julia

Sport & Activities Office Marnie

Rrcration Office Libbi

1

Adventure

Ski Trips

Inter State Holwidays

Student Services

Conditions and Enrolment details

contents

Holmesglen offers eight theme months throughout the year. Each month has an exciting new theme of entertainment and free food for the students on campus. Check out the Student Services website, visit Student Services offices and see noticeboards throughout all campuses for more information.

Take advantage of the extensive trips & tours program offered to all Holmesglen Students. All tours are subsidised, which means they are great value for money. Plus you get to meet some amazing new Holmesglen friends.

Bookings can be made in Student Services at each campus. A 50% deposit and valid student card is required when booking. Book in early, as all bookings have limited numbers and close one week before departure or when sold out.

Please check the back of this book for conditions and enrolment details.

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Holmesglen Trips and Tours

How do I book into a tour?Free Activities

2

ski & snowboarding trips

Falls Creek Ski and Snowboarding Week

This is a great deal for beginners and experienced skiers. Five full days skiing with a lesson every day to learn or improve the art of skiing/snowboarding. You will be staying at the magnificent Chorki Lodge.

Dates: Sunday 20th July – Friday 25th July Cost: $635 GST included (25 student places available) Includes:Transport, all meals and accommodation, Ski hire (snowboard additional cost), resort entry and 5 day lift and lesson pass.

Cross Country Skiing and Snow Play at Lake Mountain

This is an excellent trip for beginners or students who just want to see the snow. Leave at 8am and arrive back at Holmesglen in the early evening.

Date: Saturday 9th August Cost: Only $65 GST included (40 student places available) Includes: Transport, Resort entry, ski instruction and ski hire

Holmesglen offers excellent ‘value for money’ ski and snowboarding trips. We have trips to suit all abilities so if you want to get to the snow this year come with Student Services. Do not leave booking-in until the snow starts falling or you will miss out!

5

Mt. Buller Downhill Ski and Snowboarding Day Trip

Spend the day downhill skiing or snowboarding at Mt. Buller. This trip is suitable for beginners to advanced skiers or snowboarders.

The day starts early at 4.00am, with arrival in Mansfield in time for a cooked breakfast and ski fitting. We are then on the mountain by 9.30am for a ski lesson and a full day of skiing. We depart the mountain at 4.30pm and arrive back in Melbourne at approx. 9.00pm.

Dates: Friday 1st August & Friday 29th August Cost: Only $95 GST included (40 student places available each day) Includes:Resort entry, transport, ski hire, lift ticket, lesson, cooked breakfast and lunch. Inter TAFE Ski

and Snowboard at Mt . Hotham

Staying on the mountain with over 100 other TAFE students, this trip offers 4 days of skiing and social activities. If you have skied or snowboarded before, this is the trip for you.

Dates: Friday 22nd August – Monday 25th August Cost: TBC GST included (20 student places available) Includes: Resort entry, transport & accommodation

6

Interstate Holidays

Tasmania 9 day Tour

Thursday 10th April – Fri 18th April Departing Thursday evening on the Spirit of Tasmania, this tour will offer you the opportunity to witness the beauty of Tasmania’s wilderness. Destinations include a cruise on the Derwent River in Devonport, Salamanca Place – the centre of Hobart’s cultural and café life, the amazing Tasman Blowhole, Tasman Arch, Devils Kitchen and Eaglehawk Neck.

The tour then journeys to discover the old ruins at Port Arthur, and the breathtaking Coles Bay and Cradle Mountain. The cost includes return transport on the Spirit of Tasmania, most meals, cabin accommodation, and local tour guides. Spaces are limited – so hurry in to ensure your place on this amazing tour!

Only $540 GST included (20 student places available) Full itinerary available from Student Services in January

Sydney & Gold Coast 10 day Tour

Mon 30th June – Wed 9th July This trip offers the opportunity to see the amazing sights of both Sydney and Queensland. Time will be spent at Darling Harbour, the Opera House, The Rocks, monorail and a scenic rail journey through the Blue Mountains in Sydney. Travel North to Queensland to enjoy the sun at the beautiful beaches, spend a night at Morton Island, shop at Surfers Paradise and visit the famous Warner Bros. Movie World - Australia’s premier theme park. The full itinerary is available from Student Services during March.

Only $560 GST included (40 student places available)

7 8

Central Australia Safari 12 Day Tour

Sunday 21st September – Thursday 2nd October Come on the trip of a lifetime exploring outback Australia, taking in the sights of Alice Springs, Uluru (Ayres Rock), the Olgas, Kings Canyon and the Opal Mining town of Coober Pedy. This 12-day trip includes transport in a luxury coach, most meals, heaps of attractions and accommodation for 12 days of FUN. Get the full itinerary from Student Services. Bookings open in July – but do not leave it too late, as this is a very popular trip.

Only $585 GST included (80 student places available)

Page 23: San's Design

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TIFFANY ANNUAL REPORT packaging 2009

ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K FOR THE YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 2009NOTICE OF 2009 ANNUAL MEETING AND PROXY STATEMENT

YEAR-END REPORT 2 0 0 8

Page 24: San's Design

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design

TIFFANY ANNUAL REPORT annual report 2009

MICHAEL J. KOWALSKICHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

March 24, 2009

Dear Stockholder:

We invite you to attend the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Tiffany & Co. on Thursday, May 21, 2009 at 9:00 a.m. in the Cosmopolitan Suite of the Four Seasons Hotel, 57 East 57th Street, New York, NY. Pleasenote that we have changed the location and time of the meeting from previous years.

Your participation in the affairs of Tiffany & Co. is important. Therefore, whether or not you plan to attend,please vote your shares as soon as possible by accessing the Internet site to vote electronically, by callingthe indicated telephone number or by completing and returning the enclosed proxy card.

Conforming to the practice of many other companies, we are now providing proxy materials in a “notice andaccess” format by providing this publication on the Internet. This enables us to reduce the costs of paper,printing and postage and, of great importance, to substantially reduce paper usage to benefit our environment. Stockholders desiring a paper report may request one.

The world experienced an economic sea-change in 2008 that profoundly affected Tiffany & Co. and the entire luxury retailing industry. Our sales were diminished across all regions and product categories, and ourearnings did not meet the expectations that we established at the start of the year.

Despite the challenges that the present economic crisis presents, I am confident Tiffany will emerge from this experience competitively stronger, leaner and more efficient, and well-positioned to pursue store expansion in the many markets where the TIFFANY & CO. brand is not yet fully developed.

And because consumers around the world have been shaken by economic events, they are looking for institutions and brands that they can trust, and that they are certain will be there for them in the future. Tiffany is precisely just such a brand. Building upon our core values of excellence in design, materials, craftsmanship and service, we have established a relationship of trust with our customers that has sustained this Company for over 170 years. In these turbulent times, these same lasting values, combined with a much weakened array of competitors, will position us well to further strengthen a brand and a company that is a model of truly long-term, sustainable growth.

We know that beauty enriches life and, in the difficult times ahead, I believe it will be needed and appreciated by our customers more than ever before. There is no jewelry brand in the world that is better able to deliver this to consumers than Tiffany & Co.

Sincerely,

001 | Annual Report 2008 002 | Annual Report 2008

YEAR-END REPORT 2008TABLE OF CONTENT

Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended January 31, 2009

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS 03

NET SALES 04

BUSINESS 05

RISK FACTORS 06

UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS 07

CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES 08

OTHER INFORMATION 09

ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K FOR THE YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 2009NOTICE OF 2009 ANNUAL MEETING AND PROXY STATEMENT

YEAR-END REPORT 2008

003 | Annual Report 2008 004 | Annual Report 2008

NET SALES

Effective with the first quarter of 2008, management has changed segment reporting to reflect operating results for the following regions: the Americas, Asia-Pacific and Europe.

Comparable Store Sales. Reference will be made to comparable store sales below. Comparable store sales include only sales transacted in company-operated stores and boutiques. A store’s sales are included in comparable store sales when the store has been open for more than 12 months. In markets other than Japan, sales for relocated stores are included in comparable store sales if the relocation occurs within the same geographical market. In Japan (included in the Asia- Pacific segment), sales for a new store or boutique are not included if the store or boutique was relocated from one department store to another or from a department store to a free-standing location. In all markets, the results of a store in which the square footage has been expanded or reduced remain in the comparable store base.

The Americas segment includes sales transacted in TIFFANY & CO. stores in the U.S., Canada and Latin/South America, as well as sales of TIFFANY & CO. products in certain of those markets through business-to-business, Internet, catalog and wholesale operations.

The right side table presents the Americas and its components as a percentage of worldwide net sales:

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

(in thousands, except per share amounts, percentages and retail locations) 2008 2007

(Decrease) Increase

Net sales $ 2,859,997 $ 2,938,771 (3)%

Worldwide comparable store sales (decrease) increase on a constant-exchange-rate basis * (9)% 7%

Net earnings from continuing operations $ 220,022 $ 351,025 (37)%

As a percentage of net sales 7.7% 11.9%

Net earnings from continuing operations per diluted $ 1.74 $ 2.54 (31)%

Net earnings $ 220,022 $ 323,478 (32)%

As a percentage of net sales 7.7% 11.0%

Net earnings per diluted share $ 1.74 $ 2.34 (26)%

Weighted-average number of diluted common shares 126,410 138,140 (8)%

Return on average assets 7.2% 11.0%

Total debt-to-equity ratio 44.6% 26.4%

Cash flows from operating activities $ 133,224 $ 391,395 (66)%

Cash dividends paid per share $ 0.66 $ 0.52 27%

Company-operated TIFFANY & CO. stores and boutiques 206 184 12%

All references to years relate to the fiscal year that ends on January 31 of the following calendar year. See Item 6. Selected Financial Data for nonrecurring items that affected 2008 and 2007 net earnings. Prior year amounts have been revised to reflect a change in inventory accounting from the LIFO method to the average cost method (see Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data – Note B. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies).

* See Non-GAAP Measures section in Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations for a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures.

$MILLIONS (US)

2,859

2008 2007 2006 2005

2,938

2,560

2,404

51 United States 19 Japan

13 Other Asia-Pacific 13 Others

Page 25: San's Design

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HEIDE MUSEUM brochure 2010EDUCATION EDUCATIONEVENTS EVENTS ABOUT HEIDE

Heide Museum of Modern Art is a unique space – a synthesis of indoor and outdoor environments, a place of modern and contemporary art and design, with a rich and colourful art heritage and social history.

Located just 15 minutes from Melbourne’s CBD, Heide is one of Australia’s leading public art museums and offers a tranquil, surprising and always stimulating place to visit.

The Heide site comprises 16 acres of buildings, gardens and sculpture park presenting a dramatic combination of indoor and outdoor spaces. There’s much to explore including: the recently redeveloped Heide III building featuring the Central Galleries, Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery and Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project Gallery; the iconic McGlashan and Everist designed modernist building Heide II; the heritage-listed, Victorian farmhouse, Heide I; and Heide’s gardens, with the much-loved Kitchen Garden, Sculpture Park, heritage-listed Osage Orange groves and Yarra frontage extending to the famous Heidelberg Artists’ Trail and nearby bicycle paths.

Heide Education is committed to providing a stimulating range of programs for students and educators at all levels to complement Heide’s exhibitions, collection, history and gardens. Programs range from tours and art-making workshops to intensive forums with artists and other arts professionals. Designed to broaden and enrich curriculum requirements, Heide’s programs and online resources aim to inspire a deeper appreciation of art and creative thinking.

Heide Education programs include:• Excursions• Professional Development for Educators• Inside the Museum• School Holiday Activities

IMAGE01 Rings of Saturn Inge King 2005-06

photo by John Gollings 200802 Heide I, photo by San Huang 2010

03 Heide II(interior), photo by John Gollings 200804 Heide III, photo by John Gollings 2008

05 Helmet Tanya Court & Cassandra Chiltonphoto by John Gollings 2008

Café VueCafé Vue at Heide offers a diverse range of delicious and affordable meals. Boasting a menu that comprises dishes suited to a casual lunch with friends through to those ideal for sumptuous picnics in Heide’s iconic Sculpture Park.

Heide is also pleased to present the functions and events offering at the museum Vue de monde Events at Heide.

Reservations are available for the Menu Du Jour only, phone 9852 2346.

GARDEN TOUR Thursday 16 SeptemberSunday 03 October2:00PMA tour of Heide’s beautiful parklands, including the historic Kitchen Gardens and the Heart Garden. Tickets: FREE

EXHIBITION TOURUP CLOSE: CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANGFriday 24 SeptemberWednesday 29 SeptemberFriday 01 OctoberWednesday 06 OctoberFriday 08 OctoberWednesday 13 OctoberFriday 15 OctoberSunday 17 OctoberWednesday 20 OctoberSunday 24 OctoberWednesday 27 OctoberFriday 29 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Central Galleries

EXHIBITION TOURSUNDAY’S KITCHEN: FOOD & LIVING AT HEIDESaturday 25 SeptemberSaturday 02 OctoberSaturday 09 OctoberSaturday 16 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide I

CURATOR’S TALKDRAWINGS: THE HEIDE COLLECTIONSunday 19 September2:00PM Curator Linda ShortTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide II

GARDENERS’S TALKPRUNING AUSTRALIAN NATIVE PLANTSFriday 8 October 201010:30amJoin Heide Gardener Isabella Amouzandeh for a demonstration on how to prune Australian native plants. Participants take home a fact sheet.Tickets: $5, Heide Member/Concession $4Venue: Assemble Tony & Cathie Hancy Sculpture Plaza

EXHIBITION TOURJOY HESTER AND ALBERT TUCKER DRAWINGS 1938-47Tuesday 21 SeptemberCurator Kendrah MorganTuesday 05 OctoberTuesday 12 OctoberTuesday 19 October2:00PMVolunteer GuideTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery

31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide III: Central GalleriesCurator: Natalie King

intimate depictions of people and their surroundings.

Features an extensive display of Jerrems’ photographs, films and items drawn from her archive including newly discovered prints and previously unseen out-takes from Kathy Drayton’s film, Girl in the Mirror (2005). These are complemented by Clark’s images of marginalised youth, including from his Tulsa portfolio; Yang’s celebratory images of Sydney’s gay scene in the 1970s; and Goldin’s iconic The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, a photographic slide work chronicling the lives of her friends, family and lovers, first shown at Frank Zappa’s birthday party in 1979.

IMAGECarol JerremsMark and Flappers 1975Gelatin silver photographNational Gallery of Australia.

Up Close traces the significant legacy of Australian photographer Carol Jerrems (1949–1980), and situates her work alongside that of other photo-based artists from the 1970s and 1980s: Larry Clark and Nan Goldin from New York, and William Yang from Sydney. Sharing an interest in sub-cultural groups and individuals on the margins of society, each artist reveals a remarkable capacity to provide an empathetic glimpse into semi-private worlds through

AFFINITIESTHE HEIDE COLLECTION17 April - 12 September 2010Venue: Heide IICurator: Linda Michael

SHIFTING CONTINUITIESCHRISTOP DAHLHAUSEN AND DAVID THOMAS31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide Museum of Modern ArtCurator: Lesley Harding

SUNDAY’S KITCHENFOOD & LIVING AT HEIDE16 March - 17 October 2010Venue: Heide ICurator: Lesley Harding & Kendrah Morgan

DYLAN MARTORELLMUSIQUE POVERA31 July - 14 November 2010Venue: Heide III Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project GalleryCurator: Sue Cramer

BOOKINGS

Booking essential for some programsT 03 9850 1500

EXHIBITION ADMISSIONAdult $12Senior $10Concession $8Child under 12 FreeHeide Member Free

Free entry into the gardens & sculpture park Ticket prices are subject to change without noticeEvent details are correct at time of printing

ParkingFree parking is available on–site Melway ref: 32 E5

BicycleTake the Main Yarra Trail to Heide, enter via Banksia Park

Public transportTrain ( Herstbridge line ) to Heidelberg Station and bus 903 ( Mordialloc bound ) to Heide, disembark at the Helmet sculpture, corner Bridge St and Manningham Rd

HEIDE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART7 Templestowe Road, Bulleen Victoria 3105

T 03 9850 [email protected]

Open daily 10am–5pm, closed Mondaysheide.com.au

This brochure uses Spicers paper made from elemental chlorine free bleached pulp derived from sustainably managed forests and non-controversial sources. It is made in Australia and from an ISO 14001 certified mill that uses renewable energy.

SIMRYN GILL: GATHERINGProudly supported by

Simryn GillPaper boats 2008 ( detail )

Encyclopaedia Britannica ( 1968 edition )Courtesy of the artist and BREENSPACE, Sydney

IMAGE Inside the museum in the Collection store, photo by John GollingsActivity in the Sidney Myer Education Centre, photo by John Gollings

EXHIBITIONEXHIBITION HeideMuseum of Modern Art

AUGUST - SEPTEMBER 2010

CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANG

Heide Brochure_San.indd 1 11/10/10 1:27 PM

EDUCATIONEDUCATION EVENTSEVENTSABOUT HEIDE

Heide Museum of Modern Art is a unique space – a synthesis of indoor and outdoor environments, a place of modern and contemporary art and design, with a rich and colourful art heritage and social history.

Located just 15 minutes from Melbourne’s CBD, Heide is one of Australia’s leading public art museums and offers a tranquil, surprising and always stimulating place to visit.

The Heide site comprises 16 acres of buildings, gardens and sculpture park presenting a dramatic combination of indoor and outdoor spaces. There’s much to explore including: the recently redeveloped Heide III building featuring the Central Galleries, Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery and Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project Gallery; the iconic McGlashan and Everist designed modernist building Heide II; the heritage-listed, Victorian farmhouse, Heide I; and Heide’s gardens, with the much-loved Kitchen Garden, Sculpture Park, heritage-listed Osage Orange groves and Yarra frontage extending to the famous Heidelberg Artists’ Trail and nearby bicycle paths.

Heide Education is committed to providing a stimulating range of programs for students and educators at all levels to complement Heide’s exhibitions, collection, history and gardens. Programs range from tours and art-making workshops to intensive forums with artists and other arts professionals. Designed to broaden and enrich curriculum requirements, Heide’s programs and online resources aim to inspire a deeper appreciation of art and creative thinking.

Heide Education programs include:• Excursions• Professional Development for Educators• Inside the Museum• School Holiday Activities

IMAGE01 Rings of Saturn Inge King 2005-06

photo by John Gollings 200802 Heide I, photo by San Huang 2010

03 Heide II(interior), photo by John Gollings 200804 Heide III, photo by John Gollings 2008

05 Helmet Tanya Court & Cassandra Chiltonphoto by John Gollings 2008

Café VueCafé Vue at Heide offers a diverse range of delicious and affordable meals. Boasting a menu that comprises dishes suited to a casual lunch with friends through to those ideal for sumptuous picnics in Heide’s iconic Sculpture Park.

Heide is also pleased to present the functions and events offering at the museum Vue de monde Events at Heide.

Reservations are available for the Menu Du Jour only, phone 9852 2346.

GARDEN TOUR Thursday 16 SeptemberSunday 03 October2:00PMA tour of Heide’s beautiful parklands, including the historic Kitchen Gardens and the Heart Garden. Tickets: FREE

EXHIBITION TOURUP CLOSE: CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANGFriday 24 SeptemberWednesday 29 SeptemberFriday 01 OctoberWednesday 06 OctoberFriday 08 OctoberWednesday 13 OctoberFriday 15 OctoberSunday 17 OctoberWednesday 20 OctoberSunday 24 OctoberWednesday 27 OctoberFriday 29 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Central Galleries

EXHIBITION TOURSUNDAY’S KITCHEN: FOOD & LIVING AT HEIDESaturday 25 SeptemberSaturday 02 OctoberSaturday 09 OctoberSaturday 16 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide I

CURATOR’S TALKDRAWINGS: THE HEIDE COLLECTIONSunday 19 September2:00PM Curator Linda ShortTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide II

GARDENERS’S TALKPRUNING AUSTRALIAN NATIVE PLANTSFriday 8 October 201010:30amJoin Heide Gardener Isabella Amouzandeh for a demonstration on how to prune Australian native plants. Participants take home a fact sheet.Tickets: $5, Heide Member/Concession $4Venue: Assemble Tony & Cathie Hancy Sculpture Plaza

EXHIBITION TOURJOY HESTER AND ALBERT TUCKER DRAWINGS 1938-47Tuesday 21 SeptemberCurator Kendrah MorganTuesday 05 OctoberTuesday 12 OctoberTuesday 19 October2:00PMVolunteer GuideTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery

31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide III: Central GalleriesCurator: Natalie King

intimate depictions of people and their surroundings.

Features an extensive display of Jerrems’ photographs, films and items drawn from her archive including newly discovered prints and previously unseen out-takes from Kathy Drayton’s film, Girl in the Mirror (2005). These are complemented by Clark’s images of marginalised youth, including from his Tulsa portfolio; Yang’s celebratory images of Sydney’s gay scene in the 1970s; and Goldin’s iconic The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, a photographic slide work chronicling the lives of her friends, family and lovers, first shown at Frank Zappa’s birthday party in 1979.

IMAGECarol JerremsMark and Flappers 1975Gelatin silver photographNational Gallery of Australia.

Up Close traces the significant legacy of Australian photographer Carol Jerrems (1949–1980), and situates her work alongside that of other photo-based artists from the 1970s and 1980s: Larry Clark and Nan Goldin from New York, and William Yang from Sydney. Sharing an interest in sub-cultural groups and individuals on the margins of society, each artist reveals a remarkable capacity to provide an empathetic glimpse into semi-private worlds through

AFFINITIESTHE HEIDE COLLECTION17 April - 12 September 2010Venue: Heide IICurator: Linda Michael

SHIFTING CONTINUITIESCHRISTOP DAHLHAUSEN AND DAVID THOMAS31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide Museum of Modern ArtCurator: Lesley Harding

SUNDAY’S KITCHENFOOD & LIVING AT HEIDE16 March - 17 October 2010Venue: Heide ICurator: Lesley Harding & Kendrah Morgan

DYLAN MARTORELLMUSIQUE POVERA31 July - 14 November 2010Venue: Heide III Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project GalleryCurator: Sue Cramer

BOOKINGS

Booking essential for some programsT 03 9850 1500

EXHIBITION ADMISSIONAdult $12Senior $10Concession $8Child under 12 FreeHeide Member Free

Free entry into the gardens & sculpture park Ticket prices are subject to change without noticeEvent details are correct at time of printing

ParkingFree parking is available on–site Melway ref: 32 E5

BicycleTake the Main Yarra Trail to Heide, enter via Banksia Park

Public transportTrain ( Herstbridge line ) to Heidelberg Station and bus 903 ( Mordialloc bound ) to Heide, disembark at the Helmet sculpture, corner Bridge St and Manningham Rd

HEIDE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART7 Templestowe Road, Bulleen Victoria 3105

T 03 9850 [email protected]

Open daily 10am–5pm, closed Mondaysheide.com.au

This brochure uses Spicers paper made from elemental chlorine free bleached pulp derived from sustainably managed forests and non-controversial sources. It is made in Australia and from an ISO 14001 certified mill that uses renewable energy.

SIMRYN GILL: GATHERINGProudly supported by

Simryn GillPaper boats 2008 ( detail )

Encyclopaedia Britannica ( 1968 edition )Courtesy of the artist and BREENSPACE, Sydney

IMAGE Inside the museum in the Collection store, photo by John GollingsActivity in the Sidney Myer Education Centre, photo by John Gollings

EXHIBITION EXHIBITIONHeideMuseum of Modern Art

AUGUST - SEPTEMBER 2010

CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANG

Heide Brochure_San.indd 111/10/10 1:27 PM

EDUCATIONEDUCATION EVENTSEVENTSABOUT HEIDE

Heide Museum of Modern Art is a unique space – a synthesis of indoor and outdoor environments, a place of modern and contemporary art and design, with a rich and colourful art heritage and social history.

Located just 15 minutes from Melbourne’s CBD, Heide is one of Australia’s leading public art museums and offers a tranquil, surprising and always stimulating place to visit.

The Heide site comprises 16 acres of buildings, gardens and sculpture park presenting a dramatic combination of indoor and outdoor spaces. There’s much to explore including: the recently redeveloped Heide III building featuring the Central Galleries, Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery and Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project Gallery; the iconic McGlashan and Everist designed modernist building Heide II; the heritage-listed, Victorian farmhouse, Heide I; and Heide’s gardens, with the much-loved Kitchen Garden, Sculpture Park, heritage-listed Osage Orange groves and Yarra frontage extending to the famous Heidelberg Artists’ Trail and nearby bicycle paths.

Heide Education is committed to providing a stimulating range of programs for students and educators at all levels to complement Heide’s exhibitions, collection, history and gardens. Programs range from tours and art-making workshops to intensive forums with artists and other arts professionals. Designed to broaden and enrich curriculum requirements, Heide’s programs and online resources aim to inspire a deeper appreciation of art and creative thinking.

Heide Education programs include:• Excursions• Professional Development for Educators• Inside the Museum• School Holiday Activities

IMAGE01 Rings of Saturn Inge King 2005-06

photo by John Gollings 200802 Heide I, photo by San Huang 2010

03 Heide II(interior), photo by John Gollings 200804 Heide III, photo by John Gollings 2008

05 Helmet Tanya Court & Cassandra Chiltonphoto by John Gollings 2008

Café VueCafé Vue at Heide offers a diverse range of delicious and affordable meals. Boasting a menu that comprises dishes suited to a casual lunch with friends through to those ideal for sumptuous picnics in Heide’s iconic Sculpture Park.

Heide is also pleased to present the functions and events offering at the museum Vue de monde Events at Heide.

Reservations are available for the Menu Du Jour only, phone 9852 2346.

GARDEN TOUR Thursday 16 SeptemberSunday 03 October2:00PMA tour of Heide’s beautiful parklands, including the historic Kitchen Gardens and the Heart Garden. Tickets: FREE

EXHIBITION TOURUP CLOSE: CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANGFriday 24 SeptemberWednesday 29 SeptemberFriday 01 OctoberWednesday 06 OctoberFriday 08 OctoberWednesday 13 OctoberFriday 15 OctoberSunday 17 OctoberWednesday 20 OctoberSunday 24 OctoberWednesday 27 OctoberFriday 29 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Central Galleries

EXHIBITION TOURSUNDAY’S KITCHEN: FOOD & LIVING AT HEIDESaturday 25 SeptemberSaturday 02 OctoberSaturday 09 OctoberSaturday 16 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide I

CURATOR’S TALKDRAWINGS: THE HEIDE COLLECTIONSunday 19 September2:00PM Curator Linda ShortTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide II

GARDENERS’S TALKPRUNING AUSTRALIAN NATIVE PLANTSFriday 8 October 201010:30amJoin Heide Gardener Isabella Amouzandeh for a demonstration on how to prune Australian native plants. Participants take home a fact sheet.Tickets: $5, Heide Member/Concession $4Venue: Assemble Tony & Cathie Hancy Sculpture Plaza

EXHIBITION TOURJOY HESTER AND ALBERT TUCKER DRAWINGS 1938-47Tuesday 21 SeptemberCurator Kendrah MorganTuesday 05 OctoberTuesday 12 OctoberTuesday 19 October2:00PMVolunteer GuideTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery

31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide III: Central GalleriesCurator: Natalie King

intimate depictions of people and their surroundings.

Features an extensive display of Jerrems’ photographs, films and items drawn from her archive including newly discovered prints and previously unseen out-takes from Kathy Drayton’s film, Girl in the Mirror (2005). These are complemented by Clark’s images of marginalised youth, including from his Tulsa portfolio; Yang’s celebratory images of Sydney’s gay scene in the 1970s; and Goldin’s iconic The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, a photographic slide work chronicling the lives of her friends, family and lovers, first shown at Frank Zappa’s birthday party in 1979.

IMAGECarol JerremsMark and Flappers 1975Gelatin silver photographNational Gallery of Australia.

Up Close traces the significant legacy of Australian photographer Carol Jerrems (1949–1980), and situates her work alongside that of other photo-based artists from the 1970s and 1980s: Larry Clark and Nan Goldin from New York, and William Yang from Sydney. Sharing an interest in sub-cultural groups and individuals on the margins of society, each artist reveals a remarkable capacity to provide an empathetic glimpse into semi-private worlds through

AFFINITIESTHE HEIDE COLLECTION17 April - 12 September 2010Venue: Heide IICurator: Linda Michael

SHIFTING CONTINUITIESCHRISTOP DAHLHAUSEN AND DAVID THOMAS31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide Museum of Modern ArtCurator: Lesley Harding

SUNDAY’S KITCHENFOOD & LIVING AT HEIDE16 March - 17 October 2010Venue: Heide ICurator: Lesley Harding & Kendrah Morgan

DYLAN MARTORELLMUSIQUE POVERA31 July - 14 November 2010Venue: Heide III Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project GalleryCurator: Sue Cramer

BOOKINGS

Booking essential for some programsT 03 9850 1500

EXHIBITION ADMISSIONAdult $12Senior $10Concession $8Child under 12 FreeHeide Member Free

Free entry into the gardens & sculpture park Ticket prices are subject to change without noticeEvent details are correct at time of printing

ParkingFree parking is available on–site Melway ref: 32 E5

BicycleTake the Main Yarra Trail to Heide, enter via Banksia Park

Public transportTrain ( Herstbridge line ) to Heidelberg Station and bus 903 ( Mordialloc bound ) to Heide, disembark at the Helmet sculpture, corner Bridge St and Manningham Rd

HEIDE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART7 Templestowe Road, Bulleen Victoria 3105

T 03 9850 [email protected]

Open daily 10am–5pm, closed Mondaysheide.com.au

This brochure uses Spicers paper made from elemental chlorine free bleached pulp derived from sustainably managed forests and non-controversial sources. It is made in Australia and from an ISO 14001 certified mill that uses renewable energy.

SIMRYN GILL: GATHERINGProudly supported by

Simryn GillPaper boats 2008 ( detail )

Encyclopaedia Britannica ( 1968 edition )Courtesy of the artist and BREENSPACE, Sydney

IMAGE Inside the museum in the Collection store, photo by John GollingsActivity in the Sidney Myer Education Centre, photo by John Gollings

EXHIBITION EXHIBITIONHeideMuseum of Modern Art

AUGUST - SEPTEMBER 2010

CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANG

Heide Brochure_San.indd 111/10/10 1:27 PM

EDUCATIONEDUCATION EVENTSEVENTSABOUT HEIDE

Heide Museum of Modern Art is a unique space – a synthesis of indoor and outdoor environments, a place of modern and contemporary art and design, with a rich and colourful art heritage and social history.

Located just 15 minutes from Melbourne’s CBD, Heide is one of Australia’s leading public art museums and offers a tranquil, surprising and always stimulating place to visit.

The Heide site comprises 16 acres of buildings, gardens and sculpture park presenting a dramatic combination of indoor and outdoor spaces. There’s much to explore including: the recently redeveloped Heide III building featuring the Central Galleries, Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery and Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project Gallery; the iconic McGlashan and Everist designed modernist building Heide II; the heritage-listed, Victorian farmhouse, Heide I; and Heide’s gardens, with the much-loved Kitchen Garden, Sculpture Park, heritage-listed Osage Orange groves and Yarra frontage extending to the famous Heidelberg Artists’ Trail and nearby bicycle paths.

Heide Education is committed to providing a stimulating range of programs for students and educators at all levels to complement Heide’s exhibitions, collection, history and gardens. Programs range from tours and art-making workshops to intensive forums with artists and other arts professionals. Designed to broaden and enrich curriculum requirements, Heide’s programs and online resources aim to inspire a deeper appreciation of art and creative thinking.

Heide Education programs include:• Excursions• Professional Development for Educators• Inside the Museum• School Holiday Activities

IMAGE01 Rings of Saturn Inge King 2005-06

photo by John Gollings 200802 Heide I, photo by San Huang 2010

03 Heide II(interior), photo by John Gollings 200804 Heide III, photo by John Gollings 2008

05 Helmet Tanya Court & Cassandra Chiltonphoto by John Gollings 2008

Café VueCafé Vue at Heide offers a diverse range of delicious and affordable meals. Boasting a menu that comprises dishes suited to a casual lunch with friends through to those ideal for sumptuous picnics in Heide’s iconic Sculpture Park.

Heide is also pleased to present the functions and events offering at the museum Vue de monde Events at Heide.

Reservations are available for the Menu Du Jour only, phone 9852 2346.

GARDEN TOUR Thursday 16 SeptemberSunday 03 October2:00PMA tour of Heide’s beautiful parklands, including the historic Kitchen Gardens and the Heart Garden. Tickets: FREE

EXHIBITION TOURUP CLOSE: CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANGFriday 24 SeptemberWednesday 29 SeptemberFriday 01 OctoberWednesday 06 OctoberFriday 08 OctoberWednesday 13 OctoberFriday 15 OctoberSunday 17 OctoberWednesday 20 OctoberSunday 24 OctoberWednesday 27 OctoberFriday 29 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Central Galleries

EXHIBITION TOURSUNDAY’S KITCHEN: FOOD & LIVING AT HEIDESaturday 25 SeptemberSaturday 02 OctoberSaturday 09 OctoberSaturday 16 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide I

CURATOR’S TALKDRAWINGS: THE HEIDE COLLECTIONSunday 19 September2:00PM Curator Linda ShortTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide II

GARDENERS’S TALKPRUNING AUSTRALIAN NATIVE PLANTSFriday 8 October 201010:30amJoin Heide Gardener Isabella Amouzandeh for a demonstration on how to prune Australian native plants. Participants take home a fact sheet.Tickets: $5, Heide Member/Concession $4Venue: Assemble Tony & Cathie Hancy Sculpture Plaza

EXHIBITION TOURJOY HESTER AND ALBERT TUCKER DRAWINGS 1938-47Tuesday 21 SeptemberCurator Kendrah MorganTuesday 05 OctoberTuesday 12 OctoberTuesday 19 October2:00PMVolunteer GuideTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery

31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide III: Central GalleriesCurator: Natalie King

intimate depictions of people and their surroundings.

Features an extensive display of Jerrems’ photographs, films and items drawn from her archive including newly discovered prints and previously unseen out-takes from Kathy Drayton’s film, Girl in the Mirror (2005). These are complemented by Clark’s images of marginalised youth, including from his Tulsa portfolio; Yang’s celebratory images of Sydney’s gay scene in the 1970s; and Goldin’s iconic The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, a photographic slide work chronicling the lives of her friends, family and lovers, first shown at Frank Zappa’s birthday party in 1979.

IMAGECarol JerremsMark and Flappers 1975Gelatin silver photographNational Gallery of Australia.

Up Close traces the significant legacy of Australian photographer Carol Jerrems (1949–1980), and situates her work alongside that of other photo-based artists from the 1970s and 1980s: Larry Clark and Nan Goldin from New York, and William Yang from Sydney. Sharing an interest in sub-cultural groups and individuals on the margins of society, each artist reveals a remarkable capacity to provide an empathetic glimpse into semi-private worlds through

AFFINITIESTHE HEIDE COLLECTION17 April - 12 September 2010Venue: Heide IICurator: Linda Michael

SHIFTING CONTINUITIESCHRISTOP DAHLHAUSEN AND DAVID THOMAS31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide Museum of Modern ArtCurator: Lesley Harding

SUNDAY’S KITCHENFOOD & LIVING AT HEIDE16 March - 17 October 2010Venue: Heide ICurator: Lesley Harding & Kendrah Morgan

DYLAN MARTORELLMUSIQUE POVERA31 July - 14 November 2010Venue: Heide III Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project GalleryCurator: Sue Cramer

BOOKINGS

Booking essential for some programsT 03 9850 1500

EXHIBITION ADMISSIONAdult $12Senior $10Concession $8Child under 12 FreeHeide Member Free

Free entry into the gardens & sculpture park Ticket prices are subject to change without noticeEvent details are correct at time of printing

ParkingFree parking is available on–site Melway ref: 32 E5

BicycleTake the Main Yarra Trail to Heide, enter via Banksia Park

Public transportTrain ( Herstbridge line ) to Heidelberg Station and bus 903 ( Mordialloc bound ) to Heide, disembark at the Helmet sculpture, corner Bridge St and Manningham Rd

HEIDE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART7 Templestowe Road, Bulleen Victoria 3105

T 03 9850 [email protected]

Open daily 10am–5pm, closed Mondaysheide.com.au

This brochure uses Spicers paper made from elemental chlorine free bleached pulp derived from sustainably managed forests and non-controversial sources. It is made in Australia and from an ISO 14001 certified mill that uses renewable energy.

SIMRYN GILL: GATHERINGProudly supported by

Simryn GillPaper boats 2008 ( detail )

Encyclopaedia Britannica ( 1968 edition )Courtesy of the artist and BREENSPACE, Sydney

IMAGE Inside the museum in the Collection store, photo by John GollingsActivity in the Sidney Myer Education Centre, photo by John Gollings

EXHIBITION EXHIBITIONHeideMuseum of Modern Art

AUGUST - SEPTEMBER 2010

CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANG

Heide Brochure_San.indd 111/10/10 1:27 PM

EDUCATION EDUCATIONEVENTS EVENTS ABOUT HEIDE

Heide Museum of Modern Art is a unique space – a synthesis of indoor and outdoor environments, a place of modern and contemporary art and design, with a rich and colourful art heritage and social history.

Located just 15 minutes from Melbourne’s CBD, Heide is one of Australia’s leading public art museums and offers a tranquil, surprising and always stimulating place to visit.

The Heide site comprises 16 acres of buildings, gardens and sculpture park presenting a dramatic combination of indoor and outdoor spaces. There’s much to explore including: the recently redeveloped Heide III building featuring the Central Galleries, Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery and Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project Gallery; the iconic McGlashan and Everist designed modernist building Heide II; the heritage-listed, Victorian farmhouse, Heide I; and Heide’s gardens, with the much-loved Kitchen Garden, Sculpture Park, heritage-listed Osage Orange groves and Yarra frontage extending to the famous Heidelberg Artists’ Trail and nearby bicycle paths.

Heide Education is committed to providing a stimulating range of programs for students and educators at all levels to complement Heide’s exhibitions, collection, history and gardens. Programs range from tours and art-making workshops to intensive forums with artists and other arts professionals. Designed to broaden and enrich curriculum requirements, Heide’s programs and online resources aim to inspire a deeper appreciation of art and creative thinking.

Heide Education programs include:• Excursions• Professional Development for Educators• Inside the Museum• School Holiday Activities

IMAGE01 Rings of Saturn Inge King 2005-06

photo by John Gollings 200802 Heide I, photo by San Huang 2010

03 Heide II(interior), photo by John Gollings 200804 Heide III, photo by John Gollings 2008

05 Helmet Tanya Court & Cassandra Chiltonphoto by John Gollings 2008

Café VueCafé Vue at Heide offers a diverse range of delicious and affordable meals. Boasting a menu that comprises dishes suited to a casual lunch with friends through to those ideal for sumptuous picnics in Heide’s iconic Sculpture Park.

Heide is also pleased to present the functions and events offering at the museum Vue de monde Events at Heide.

Reservations are available for the Menu Du Jour only, phone 9852 2346.

GARDEN TOUR Thursday 16 SeptemberSunday 03 October2:00PMA tour of Heide’s beautiful parklands, including the historic Kitchen Gardens and the Heart Garden. Tickets: FREE

EXHIBITION TOURUP CLOSE: CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANGFriday 24 SeptemberWednesday 29 SeptemberFriday 01 OctoberWednesday 06 OctoberFriday 08 OctoberWednesday 13 OctoberFriday 15 OctoberSunday 17 OctoberWednesday 20 OctoberSunday 24 OctoberWednesday 27 OctoberFriday 29 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Central Galleries

EXHIBITION TOURSUNDAY’S KITCHEN: FOOD & LIVING AT HEIDESaturday 25 SeptemberSaturday 02 OctoberSaturday 09 OctoberSaturday 16 October2:00PMTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide I

CURATOR’S TALKDRAWINGS: THE HEIDE COLLECTIONSunday 19 September2:00PM Curator Linda ShortTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide II

GARDENERS’S TALKPRUNING AUSTRALIAN NATIVE PLANTSFriday 8 October 201010:30amJoin Heide Gardener Isabella Amouzandeh for a demonstration on how to prune Australian native plants. Participants take home a fact sheet.Tickets: $5, Heide Member/Concession $4Venue: Assemble Tony & Cathie Hancy Sculpture Plaza

EXHIBITION TOURJOY HESTER AND ALBERT TUCKER DRAWINGS 1938-47Tuesday 21 SeptemberCurator Kendrah MorganTuesday 05 OctoberTuesday 12 OctoberTuesday 19 October2:00PMVolunteer GuideTickets: FREE (with admission)Venue: Heide III: Albert & Barbara Tucker Gallery

31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide III: Central GalleriesCurator: Natalie King

intimate depictions of people and their surroundings.

Features an extensive display of Jerrems’ photographs, films and items drawn from her archive including newly discovered prints and previously unseen out-takes from Kathy Drayton’s film, Girl in the Mirror (2005). These are complemented by Clark’s images of marginalised youth, including from his Tulsa portfolio; Yang’s celebratory images of Sydney’s gay scene in the 1970s; and Goldin’s iconic The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, a photographic slide work chronicling the lives of her friends, family and lovers, first shown at Frank Zappa’s birthday party in 1979.

IMAGECarol JerremsMark and Flappers 1975Gelatin silver photographNational Gallery of Australia.

Up Close traces the significant legacy of Australian photographer Carol Jerrems (1949–1980), and situates her work alongside that of other photo-based artists from the 1970s and 1980s: Larry Clark and Nan Goldin from New York, and William Yang from Sydney. Sharing an interest in sub-cultural groups and individuals on the margins of society, each artist reveals a remarkable capacity to provide an empathetic glimpse into semi-private worlds through

AFFINITIESTHE HEIDE COLLECTION17 April - 12 September 2010Venue: Heide IICurator: Linda Michael

SHIFTING CONTINUITIESCHRISTOP DAHLHAUSEN AND DAVID THOMAS31 July - 31 October 2010Venue: Heide Museum of Modern ArtCurator: Lesley Harding

SUNDAY’S KITCHENFOOD & LIVING AT HEIDE16 March - 17 October 2010Venue: Heide ICurator: Lesley Harding & Kendrah Morgan

DYLAN MARTORELLMUSIQUE POVERA31 July - 14 November 2010Venue: Heide III Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project GalleryCurator: Sue Cramer

BOOKINGS

Booking essential for some programsT 03 9850 1500

EXHIBITION ADMISSIONAdult $12Senior $10Concession $8Child under 12 FreeHeide Member Free

Free entry into the gardens & sculpture park Ticket prices are subject to change without noticeEvent details are correct at time of printing

ParkingFree parking is available on–site Melway ref: 32 E5

BicycleTake the Main Yarra Trail to Heide, enter via Banksia Park

Public transportTrain ( Herstbridge line ) to Heidelberg Station and bus 903 ( Mordialloc bound ) to Heide, disembark at the Helmet sculpture, corner Bridge St and Manningham Rd

HEIDE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART7 Templestowe Road, Bulleen Victoria 3105

T 03 9850 [email protected]

Open daily 10am–5pm, closed Mondaysheide.com.au

This brochure uses Spicers paper made from elemental chlorine free bleached pulp derived from sustainably managed forests and non-controversial sources. It is made in Australia and from an ISO 14001 certified mill that uses renewable energy.

SIMRYN GILL: GATHERINGProudly supported by

Simryn GillPaper boats 2008 ( detail )

Encyclopaedia Britannica ( 1968 edition )Courtesy of the artist and BREENSPACE, Sydney

IMAGE Inside the museum in the Collection store, photo by John GollingsActivity in the Sidney Myer Education Centre, photo by John Gollings

EXHIBITIONEXHIBITION HeideMuseum of Modern Art

AUGUST - SEPTEMBER 2010

CAROL JERREMS WITH LARRY CLARK, NAN GOLDIN AND WILLIAM YANG

Heide Brochure_San.indd 1 11/10/10 1:27 PM

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SAN’S MENU catalogue 2009

dinner service

choicesmainpetitedessert

your summer menu 2010

20in petite

Our new range of low carb or low fat meals are the perfect size for people with a smaller appetite or for those people who are trying to lose or maintain their weight.

601

603

604

601 prawn sushi $12.5 sushi rice, prawns, cucumber, rice wine 312kj / 15g fat / 19g protein / 5g carb per 100g

602 lemongrass crab triangles $10.5 green papaya, crab meat, prawns, pickled carrot, Lebanese cucumber, basil leaves 224kj / 10g fat / 10g protein / 3g carb per 100g

603 crispy Snapper noodle salad $11.5 Sushi rice, Lebanese cucumbers, prawns 235kj / 8g fat / 25g protein / 0g carb per 100g

604 beef pho $10.5 rice noodles, beef eye fillet, onion, basil laves 324kj / 10g fat / 25g protein / 3g carb per 100g

602

mainThese meals are prepared and uncooked, simply bake, pan fry or bbq. Just add vegetables or salad to complete the meal. Vacuum sealed to last in your fridge for up to 10 days and they can be frozen.Each dish serves 2.

501

502

504

503

505501 lemongrass prawns pancakes $18.5 prawns, pork mince, garlic, ginger, cilantro leaves, red chilli, egg white, mint leaves 534kj / 9g fat / 22g protein / 4g carb per 100g

502 corn prawn fritters $17.5 corn kernels, prawns, cilantro leaves, red chilli, lemond wedges, tomoto 234kj / 10g fat / 10g protein / 5g carb per 100g

503 char-grilled pizza $16.5 char-grilled pizza with fig, mozzarella and caramelised onion 654kj / 8g fat / 20g protein / 0g carb per 100g

504 whole coconut fish $18.5 assorted fish, cook rice, coconut milk, cilantro leaves, ginger 184kj / 8g fat / 7g protein / 5g carb per 100g

505 chive chicken $16.5 flattened chickens, buttermilk, chives, garlic, lemon wedges 209kj / 10g fat / 10g protein / 8g carb per 100g

dessertThese meals are cooked and snap frozen. Just add vegetables or salad to complete the meal. Defrost and heat for approx 20 minutes.

701

701 toffee figs $8.5 figs, vanilla ice cream 154kj / 8g fat / 22g protein / 2g carb per 100g

702 rosewater pavlovas $6.5 eggwhite, cornflour, rosewater, cream, blueberries 64kj / 8g fat / 10g protein / 2g carb per 100g

703 chocolate pavlovas $6.5 eggwhite, cornflour, dark chocolate, raspberries 654kj / 8g fat / 20g protein / 0g carb per 100g

704 brown sugar pavlovas $6.5 eggwhite, cornflour, brown sugar, cream, choice of fruit-flavoured 154kj / 8g fat / 22g protein / 2g carb per 100g

705 maple bircher muesli $8.5 apple juice, vanilla yoghurt, raspberries 34kj / 8g fat / 6g protein / 0g carb per 100g

703

705

702

704

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THANK YOU CARD greeting card 2010

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X’MAS CARD greeting card 2010

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THANK YOU CARD greeting card 2010

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EMMA & PETER wedding invites 2010

Emma Ro�lliard & Pe�r McRae Together with their parents

Garry & Lyn Robilliard and Graeme & Gay McRae

request the pleasure of the company of

Kelly Smithat their marriage at

Geelong Botanical GardensEastern Park Circuit, Geelong Victoria

on Saturday 16th April 2011 at 3.30pm

Please also join them for

the celebration reception at

The Beach House

Eastern Beach Reserve - opposite the Geelong Promenade at 7pm

Dress code semi formal

Entertainment will be provided

at the Beach House between ceremony and reception

with refreshments available at bar prices

RSVP

adults only please to

Garry and Lyn Robilliard on 03 53362344

or Graeme and Gay McRae on 02 94026432

by Friday 11th March 2011

How beautiful is life when shared with someone special,

the years float by like moments and love grows ever stronger

RS VPthe favor of a reply is requested

by Friday 11th March 2011

Accepts with pleasure

Declines with regrets

M

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

RSVP-1.pdf 3 6/10/10 5:01 PM

Save �e DateEmma Ro�lliard & Pe�r McRae Times are busy and calendars are full.

Invitations to followGeelong is 30 minutes from Avalon Airportor 75 minutes from Tullamarine(airport shuttles are available to Geelong from both airports and car hire is available)

Hotels close to wedding venue Hotels a short taxi ride awayComfort Inn Bay City Chifley on the EsplanadeComfort Inn Eastern Sands Quest GeelongFour Points Sheraton Mercure Hotel GeelongWaterfront Apartments Call 03 5223 6200 or email [email protected] and ask for the Emma & Peter Rate www.mercuregeelong.com.au

Saturday 16 April 2011Geelong Botanical GardensGeelong, Victoria

want you to know their wedding is planned for

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY birthday card 2010

H A P P Y B I R T H D A Y

JASONy o u a r e t h e s t a r

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SALT WORK DL card 2009

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LOGOS barbie logos 2007

LOVE

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WATCHES story board 2009

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cartoon

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DIDI WORLD didi family 2008

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DIDI WORLD leo’s house 2008

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DIDI WORLD didi’s house 2008

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DIDI WORLD jiajia’s house 2008

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DIDI WORLD jj’s house 2008

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DIDI WORLD chacha’s house 2008

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DIDI WORLD minmin’s house 2008

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thank you.