Leslie Moran investigates the portraits of judges in the National Portrait Gallery's collection.
Penelope Grist explores the United Nations stories in the Gallery’s collection.
Photographed 60 years apart, these portraits trace the lives and love story of Penelope Seidler AM and Harry Seidler OBE.
The National Portrait Gallery acquired the self-portrait by Grace Cossington Smith in 2003.
Angus Trumble treats the gallery’s collection with a dab hand.
Former NPG Director, Andrew Sayers describes the 1922 Self-portrait with Gladioli by George Lambert.
Michael Desmond explores the portraiture of Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud.
Charles Haddon Chambers the Australian-born playboy playwright settled permanently in London in 1880 but never lost his Australian stance when satirising the English.
Sarah Engledow bristles at the biographers’ neglect of Kitchener’s antipodean intervention.
Frank Hurley's celebrated images document the heroism and minutiae of Australian exploration in Antarctica.
Sarah Engledow is seduced by the portraits and the connections between the artists and their subjects in the exhibition Impressions: Painting light and life.