Sketches from Luzern
The piano recital had just passed the 90-minute mark and I’d run out of things to do. More pertinently, I was wrestling with my internal monologue.
The piano recital had just passed the 90-minute mark and I’d run out of things to do. More pertinently, I was wrestling with my internal monologue.
Zheng and his collaborators in the Yangjiang Group, Sun Qinglin and Chen Zaiyan,use Chinese calligraphy and alcohol to occupy exactly this space – the unconscious mind seething up through the cleft created when you know vaguely what it is you’re trying to say, but you’re so bladdered on the local Zhujiang Beer you can barely hold an ink brush.
Hotel art is so often synonymous with mass-produced prints, thoughtlessly arranged in carbon-copied rooms. But there a few emerging boutique properties who are celebrating artistic expression and embracing artists, both locally and on a global scale.
When I meet Ben Quilty he looks and smells exactly as I imagined. He’s dressed in a flannelette shirt, jeans and sneakers, with scruffy hair and a beard that's fiercely thick. He smells of oil paint and I can see it still jammed under his fingernails. Sitting in a leafy courtyard at the National Art School, Quilty disarms me with his warm and welcoming presence despite the obvious emotion he displays as we start discussing his latest exhibition.
They have been dubbed the Dad's army of the sea, but this old rust bucket is being repurposed as a modern day Letter of Marque – the first in more than two decades.
There’s a new, or perhaps old, kid in town and it’s pulling both the punters and the posh crowd to Philadelphia. The Barnes Foundation is probably THE most talked about opening in the art world these days. Its list of holdings alone is staggering: 181 Renoirs (the largest single group of the artist’s paintings), 69 Cézannes, 59 works by Matisse, 46 Picassos, and 16 Modigliani’s are just some highlights. Barnes also befriended and collected American painter William Glackens (70 of his works reside at the Foundation).
Most tourists flock to Paris for the kind of bread that breaks the will of even the most die-hard Atkins devotees, but the French aren’t the only ones who take their crust seriously. The Baltic state of Estonia could mount a marketing campaign based on their thick, black rye bread.
On her journey to speak with Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, Amy Hughes uncovers an evolving nation keen on making up for lost time
Boston’s a city dear to my heart. I grew up just a couple of hours south, in Connecticut, a small state that straddles New York and New England; the best of both worlds.
It’s not often you get to walk into an airport and know from the outset that what’s about to unravel over the next 24-hours is going to be the worst airline experience of your life.
If you listened to Australian businesses you could be forgiven for thinking there aren’t any other countries left in the world that matter – aside from China that is.
Ever made an absurd travel insurance claim? Yes? We can guarantee you that you’ve never made a claim as wacky as some of these. From bag snatching monkeys to Mozambique cobra snakes, travellers are constantly faced with the absolute unexpected. Compare Travel Insurance media spokesman, Natalie Ball today revealed some of the most crazy travel […]
An unfashionable pair of homemade harem pants worn by 50 women has raised $10,000 to help prevent violence against women. The pants made it to Las Vegas, appeared on Oprah, went skydiving and even had the odd breakfast in bed and returned to their maker with a large mystery hole in one leg.
Sisters wear pants when it comes to preventing violence Read More »
GFC has driven ex-foes together, writes Lunch's Amy Hughes
If there’s one thing I despise in a columnist it’s the phrase: "I was watching TV the other night.'' Writers should be out living - goddammit! Not watching TV. They should be dragging themselves through the gutter. Sharing the slumgullion of the Earth’s forgotten.
In the heart of London’s theatre district, one woman has been serving customers for more than 70 years and she’s still going. Elena Salvoni is heralded as the unofficial Queen of Soho, greeting a loyal, and famous fan base once a month for lunch.
On a crisp, cold, sunny winter’s day, I meet President Grimsson at his official residence just outside Rejkjavik. With minimal security, I’m led into the President’s library where we being talking about his controversial handling of the banking collapse three years ago.
Where better to escape with a brace of breeding females than the ocean - millions of uninhabited islands to choose from, fresh water and unlimited food. What better way to ride out a zombie apocalypse or just the end of the world as we know it and get away from the madding and possibly murderous and brain eating crowd? But wait I hear you ask - what about that apartment I just bought in that nuclear missile silo in Missourah? As my sergeant used to say, “a bunker is a grave’’.
Nowadays the wind is used to power Bahrain’s megaskyscrapers, like the mighty turbines between the gleaming sails of the 290m World Trade Centre. But for thousands of years wind towers were an ancient architectural technique used in Bahrain to cool buildings. They’re now coming back into fashion, and it’s less about substance, and more about style.
One of the key planks to the brand’s success has been its loyalty scheme, the debonair chief told Lunch Magazine in an exclusive interview in Sydney recently. “There are three levels: guests are either Special, Loved, or Honoured,’’ he said with a smile. The brand is also investing heavily in technology and scrapping its mouth watering coffee-table book which lists all the organisation’s 500-plus hotels in 74 nations around the globe.
It is difficult to imagine Liz Anne Macgregor being humble. But the tenacious flame-haired Scott who has headed one of Australia’s premier cultural icons for the past 13 years says that is just what overseeing its $53 million revamp has made her. “It’s neen humbling, exhilarating exasperating, but finally it’s come together and look at the results,’’ she tells Lunch Magazine from the Sculpture Garden on level three of the new wing that was three years in the making. “There were moments when I thought it was never going to happen and I felt like saying “let’s give it up and go home’.’’
Irish-American John Timoney spent 40 years successfully reducing crime and excessive force within police departments in New York, Philadelphia and Miami. I sat down with John Timoney to ask about the goals and timelines for Bahrain’s Police Department.
On the first anniversary of the Bahraini protests, Lunch Magazine's Amy Hughes talks to Dr Fatima Haji and finds herself in the thick of an anti-government protest
Did you know that going into space will soon be slightly simpler than buying a loaf of bread in Weimar Germany? That’s right, all you need is to take a wheelbarrow full of cash into the offices of Virgin Galactic, or even better use a credit card with $20,000 room on it. Sometime in the […]
Amy Hughes takes a bike tour of Slovenia's capital. Set in the centre of Europe, Slovenia recently elected a new Prime Minister, Zoran Janković. The former Mayor of the capital city, Ljubljana, Jankovic is credited with creating what many consider a model city for its pedestrian and bike-friendly city streets. On a recent visit, I took a whirlwind tour with Ljubljana’s Deputy Mayor Janez Koželj and urban mobility expert Blaz Lokar.
Squatting in the ex-military complex, so from a really rigid military concept into a free art space...that’s something really important. It’s the image; the way it looks, that still everything is possible, what is nowhere else possible. It has a Metelkova style. It’s very Metelkova.
Ask any non-Aussie traveller and they will tell you they’re a friendly, laid back bunch. Though positive on the surface, a new study by Macquarie Banking and Financial Services Group points to the fact that this nationally celebrated “she’ll-be-right”-ism is a clever façade for the sinister truth: They are terminally incapable of making decisions. The […]
A smaller, quieter, more charming sister to Cannes, Le Cannet is just a few miles west of the French Riviera’s most glamourous city. Le Cannet is also now home to the first museum devoted to the French 19th and 20th century artist Pierre Bonnard.
The entrance sets the stage perfectly, with a dramatic, darkened room. Shadows of ballerinas float on the walls, in a scene not unlike the tiny plastic dancers doing endless pirouettes atop musical jewellery boxes in little girls’ bedrooms.
Karma has a way of working out for Spence, who chatted with Lunch Magazine recently. “I’ve been very fortunate in that I’ve never done a job I didn’t like doing,’’ he says.
Profile: Matt Barrie founder of revolutionary Freelancer.com
The island nation exports green technology to the world. It is one of the most densely populated nations on the planet yet Singapore also happens to be one of the most resource efficient. With virtually no resources of its own to speak of and little access to fresh water, the island state is very near self-sufficient in its utility needs.
It was a strange place to lament Arnold Schwarznegger's lost years. The years as Governor of California which ripped away from us the greatest bad acting talent of his generation. I was sitting in the Sands Theater in Singapore's magnificent new Marina Bay Sands development listening to the chairman of Las Vegas Sands,
Mark Eggleton It was a strangely exhilarating experience. Standing in-between a couple of hessian bags hanging from the ceiling I was subject to one of the first pat downs (outside of an airport) of my life. I was in Durban’s A5 Hawkers Wholesaler at the city’s Victoria Markets and had just bought some toothpaste. Now […]