SEG Agency presents two of Australia’s most iconic bands who are back again for one last time with their double-barrelled catalogue of hits and classic songs.
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After two years of national touring as one of the best double bills, 1927 and Pseudo Echo are teaming up for one final series of shows and will play at Bathurst Memorial Entertainment Centre this Friday, January 25.
Between them they share a catalogue of songs that are still heard on Australian radio and have accumulated many awards and accolades along the way.
Tickets online at www.bmec.com.au and contact BMEC on 6333 6161 if you require mobility seating.
The big screen
BATHURST Regional Art Gallery will host a free showing of the film Alice In Wonderland tonight from 6pm.
“But her sister sat still just as she left her, leaning her head on her hand, watching the setting sun, and thinking of little Alice and all her wonderful Adventures.”
The classic 1951 Walt Disney animated production of Alice In Wonderland was inspired by Lewis Carroll’s Alice books (Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass). The screening is courtesy of Roadshow Public Performance Licensing.
A free showing of Wonderland will be held at the art gallery next Wednesday, January 30 at 6pm.
Wonderland is a 1986 documentary film, directed by Christopher Lynch, exploring the collaboration between choreographer Barry Morehead and painter Charles Blackman for the West Australian Ballet’s premier season of Alice in Wonderland in 1984.
The screening will be courtesy of the National Film and Sound Archive.
Hill End stories
A PORTRAIT of Landscape and Time in Hill End: Myth-making, Heroes and Villains will be on show until February 24 at Grenfell Gallery.
This exhibition of paintings and research by Hill End artist Rebecca Wilson has an accompanying book. These works unearth lesser known stories of the remote and iconic town of Hill End.
They disrupt common narratives of the region, questioning who the real heroes and villains are in recorded history and how we create myths and icons.
The artist’s paintings and research introduce Bathurst war hero and Wiradyuri leader, Windradyne.
There are further tales of murder and racism in the gold rush era featuring Sammy Poo, Australia’s only Chinese bushranger, eventually hanged at Bathurst in 1865.
The journey through time also explores artists who have visited or lived in the region from the 1940s and 1960s while also commenting on the broader concepts of the human condition.
You can find lots more local and regional arts events at artsoutwest.org.au