Cocktails, live music and more – a weekend in Canberra has never sounded so good | HerCanberra

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Cocktails, live music and more – a weekend in Canberra has never sounded so good

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There are plenty of reasons to stay in Canberra this weekend, and we’ve found them all.

From a self-guided cocktail trail, to live music, and more, here are 50+ events to keep you booked and busy.

Looking for even more to do in Canberra? Check out our What’s On section to find hundreds of events happening around town.

Urban Cocktail Trail Canberra

A self-guided experience where you decide to stop and sip? Sign us up! The Urban Cocktail Trail is back for another year.

Rally your friends together and start the afternoon with a bite to eat and (of course), a cocktail at your starting location before making your way around the trail to redeem your cocktail vouchers, choosing your favourites from the Signature Cocktail List!

Saturday 15 February, 1 pm – 5 pm | Various locations | Book here.

2025 Lantern Festival

Don’t miss the Australia-China Friendship Society’s Lantern Festival! Held from 6.15 pm – 8.30 pm on Saturday 15 February at the Beijing Garden, this free event is fun for the whole family.

There will be performances of Chinese music, dancing, and martial arts, with a Lantern Parade at the end. Bring a picnic and enjoy a family evening by the lake. Bring your own lantern or buy one there!

Saturday 15 February, 6.15 pm – 8.30 pm | Beijing Garden, Flynn Drive, Yarralumla | More information here

Belco Bowl Jam 2025

Is this Australia’s most popular and best annual skateboarding event?

Head along to enjoy three days of skateboarding and music around Canberra City and Belconnen where some of the world’s best skateboarders will compete for over $30,000 in cash prizes.

Until Sunday 16 February | Various locations | More information here.

The QURE Gala

The QURE Ball is Canberra’s premier fundraising gala dinner, proudly supporting the amazing work of Tour de Cure, in raising critical funds to support cancer research in Australia.

Held on International Childhood Cancer Day, funds raised at the  QURE Gala will support Tour de Cure’s commitment to funding the Public Laboratory at the Minderoo Children’s Comprehensive Cancer Centre (MCCCC) in Randwick, part of Australia’s first dedicated children’s comprehensive cancer centre.

In addition to speakers, dancing and dinner, a variety of offerings will be available on the night including special event cocktails, raffles, silent auction items on display and a live auction.

Saturday 15 February | The Hyatt Hotel Canberra, 120 Commonwealth Avenue, Yarralumla | Book here.

Googfest

Googong’s annual free music festival Googfest returns at Rockley Oval this month! Headlined by ARIA Award-winning, Samantha Jade, the event offers a diverse musical line-up with something for all the family to enjoy.

Head along to see DJ and rapper, Matthew Charles, and Last Call, fronted by the charismatic duo of Liam James and Claudia Tetreault-Percy. Plus, if that’s not enough there will be a range of food vendors!

Saturday 15 February, 5 pm – 9 pm | Rockley Oval, Googong | More information here.

Craft + Design Canberra X Tipsy Sketching

Want to try life drawing in a fun atmosphere? Been sketching for years and feel like a fun night out with friends over a few drinks? This event is for you!

Join Loz, an experienced life model and founder of Tipsy Sketching, as she guides you through a workshop with a range of life models. Basic materials (pencils, erasers, paper) will be provided, however participants are encouraged to bring their own if they have it. And don’t worry, you’ll get to keep your clothes on.

Saturday 15 February | Craft + Design Canberra, North Building, 1, 180 London, City | Book here.

Front Yard Fest

Like your live music with a side of cold brews? Front Yard Fest at Capital Brewing in Fyshwick may be just what you’re looking for!

Front Yard Fest is back in the ACT this summer scene on Sunday 16 February with a red-hot lineup of local and interstate artists, including smartcasual, ARCHIE, Hope Wilkins, Ava Martina, Flik and finally headlined by Apricot Ink.

As well as the music, Capital Brewing Co. will boast over 20 freshly brewed beers for those looking for a cool beverage after dancing and singing their hearts out. And for our alcohol-free friends, lots of non-beer choices will be available to quench your thirst in the summer heat. It’s one event you don’t want to miss out on!

Sunday 16 February, 11.30 am | Capital Brewing Co. Taproom, Building 3/1 Dairy Road, Fyshwick | Book here.

Word-Juggling with Comic Poet Harry Laing at Play Day

Play Day is back! Take the kids for free play with water instruments, bubbles, toys, and tunnels.

Each session includes special performances from both local and visiting performers, delivering acts such as puppetry, cabaret, poetry, dance, live music, comedy and circus. Plus Harry Laing will be bringing his funny and entertaining word-juggling!

Sunday 16 February, 12 pm – 4 pm | Dairy Road, 1 Dairy Road, Fyshwick | More information here.

Markets

Capital Region Farmers Market

This market is a community project run by the Rotary Club of Hall, the only rural Rotary Club in the ACT.

Head along to browse over 100 stallholders who bring their freshly picked, grown, and hand-crafted produce. Speak to a stallholder and ask them where their produce comes from – you’ll be surprised what you’ll learn and pick up cooking storage, and usage tips!

Saturday, 7 am – 11.30 am | Exhibition Park in Canberra, Exhibition Park in Canberra, Mitchell | More information here.

Haig Park Village Markets

The Haig Park Village Markets runs every Sunday in the beautiful leafy grounds of Haig Park, Braddon.

This farmers and foodie market will delight your senses with delicious cuisines, tasty treats, beautiful blooms, fresh produce, delectable charcuterie, and artisan products. Plus you’ll discover locally handmade crafts including jewellery, art, natural body care, unique homewares, hand-poured candles, children’s apparel, pooch wares, and more. Plus, there’s live music, an artists’ table, face painting, and more!

Sunday, 8 am – 2 pm | 

Southside Farmers Markets

This village market is located at Canberra College, making it the perfect place to duck in to grab what you need (and maybe a few things you don’t). Order an egg and bacon roll to start the morning as you explore the best of fresh seasonal veggies, handmade pasta, and pet treats.

Sunday 8 am–11.30 am | 2 Launceston Street, Phillip | facebook.com

Food and Wine

Twilight in the Gardens

Join Hyatt Hotel Canberra for a magical evening in the gardens every Friday from 4 pm. With Tipple Time kicking off from 4 pm until 6 pm, head along to enjoy $12 boutique beers, $13 wines by the glass, and $15 cocktails.

Plus there will be live acoustic music, a Chandon pop-up bar and a gourmet live grill. Re-live the glory days of Fridays at the Hyatt and use it as the perfect excuse to catch up with friends.

Every Friday, from 4 pm | 120 Commonwealth Avenue, Yarralumla | Walk-ins welcome or for larger bookings, please call 02 6269 8901 or email canbe.dining@hyatt.com

Canberra Cellar Door – Pop up wine tasting

Popping up in the Canberra and Region Visitor’s Centre, this is the perfect introduction to local wines.

Head along to taste wines from multiple local wineries, discover the stories behind the region’s varieties and vintages and urchase the wines you love!

Saturday 15 February |

Stage and Screen

ANU Film Group

Free movies for a whole week? You read that right. Batman Returns, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, Star Wars: Return of the Jedi, The Mummy Returns, xXx: The Return of Xander Cage… these are just some of the movies you can see when the ANU Film Group returns on February 10!

After a nine-month intermission caused by building works, they are celebrating our long-awaited return with an entire week of free screenings. All seven films from February 10 to 15 will be open and free for all to attend – no membership or registration is required!

Until Saturday 15 February | The Australian National University, Cultural Centre, Kambri Precinct, Acton | More information here.

HUB FEST 2025

Aussie Works. Done quick. Done good. Catch these two productions at the ACT Hub for the next week as they kick off the pilot program of their inaugural festival of new Australian work.

The Bestiary – An Interlude by Hannah Tonks is set in a dystopian 2038 Australia where artistic expression is outlawed. Four underground artists –Fox, Badger, Donkey, and Goat – capture the Minister for Aesthetics, seeking justice for the disappeared creatives and forcing a reckoning.

The Forsaken by Oliver Kuskie finds Leonard – alone in his rundown apartment – listening to his neighbours, a group of struggling young adults and a fractured family, forcing him to confront his past regrets and question whether he can find a place in a world that has left him behind.

Sunday 16 to Saturday 22 February | ACT Hub, 14 Spinifex Street, Kingston | acthub.com.au

Bubble Boy

Following Jimmy Livingston, a boy deathly allergic to germs who is kept in a decontaminated bubble room for his own protection, Bubble Boy is a gorgeous coming-of-age story full of love, laughs and self-discovery.

Head along to watch as his life is turned upside down when Chloe moves in next door and his eyes are opened to how big the world is.

Until Sunday 23 February, 7.30 pm – 9.30 pm | Belconnen Community Theatre, 23 Swanson Court, Belconnen | Book here.

Sunset Cinema

Who doesn’t love going to the movies? Get the most out of summer, by heading to the Sunset Cinema at the Botanic Gardens. Showing all the new hits, some old favourites, and family classics, bring a picnic, some camping chairs or a blanket and sit back and enjoy the show!

Until Saturday 22 February, from 6:30 pm |  Australian National Botanic Gardens, Clunies Ross Street, Acton | Movies and tickets can be found here.

The Great Kimberley Wilderness

Be transported to one of the world’s most breathtaking and pristine landscapes in The Great Kimberley Wilderness – a 35-minute virtual reality experience narrated by Luke Hemsworth.

Guided by scientists and traditional owners, this journey crosses stunning coastlines and majestic gorges, venturing deep into these timeless lands. Soar over the thundering King George Falls, explore the remarkable striped sandstone domes of the UNESCO-listed Purnululu National Park, and travel back more than 350 million years to the Devonian Reef, uncovering the ancient geology that has shaped life as we know it.

This experience reveals the history, geology, culture and wonder of the remarkable Kimberley wilderness, which has been nearly two billion years in the making.

Daily, every hour from 9.15 am to 4.15 pm | National Museum of Australia, Lawson Crescent, Acton Peninsula, Acton | Find out more here.

Shakespeare By the Lakes V: Macbeth

Something wicked this way comes this summer…and it’s the chance to see Shakespeare’s shortest, sharpest, and bloodiest play like never before. Following on from the success of A Midsummer Night’s Dream in December, Echo Theatre returns with a second offering of outdoor Shakespeare in 2025. That’s right, you can watch Macbeth outside.

Gather your friends, pack a picnic, and strap in for a night of greed, ambition, and deception as one couple’s ruthless thirst for power turns nature upside down.

Until Sunday 2 March | Various locations | Book here.

Elsie’s Film House

Elsie’s Film House is a pop-up cinema lounge and bar screening all of your retro favourites from the ’70s, ’80s, and ’90s, from cult classics, to arthouse and international films.

Offering a cozy movie night experience, Elsie’s also hosts weekly community nights offering diverse communities a safe and inclusive space to connect. Elsie’s will be hosting movie nights for different migrant communities as well. Keep an eye out to see what’s coming up!

Until Sunday 16 March, from 2 pm | 180 London Circuit, City | Book here

Music

In Hearts Wake – ‘Incarnation’ Summer Tour

After entirely selling out their capital city tour and playing across the United States with Miss May I, In Hearts Wake will return home in 2025 to play the Incarnation Summer Tour, and perform in Canberra

With support from Australia’s next wave of heavy hitters (Ocean Sleeper, Reliqa and Inertia), run, don’t walk to get your hands on tickets for this Australian metalcore band from Byron Bay.

Saturday 15 February, 7 pm – 11 pm | UC Hub, 11 Kirinari Street, Bruce | Book here.

Eishan Ensemble in Concert

Eishan Ensemble has performed at the most well-known venues and festivals around the world since it was formed in 2016 in Sydney Australia.

Led by acclaimed Persian-Australian tar virtuoso and composer, Hamed Sadeghi, the ARIA-nominated Eishan Ensemble draws on contemporary and classical music traditions of both East and West. This is a rare chance to see (and hear) the fine compositions for yourself.

Saturday 15 February, 7.30 pm – 9.20 pm | 

Steve Edmonds Band – Hendrix & Heroes

The Hendrix & Heroes Show is a heartfelt tribute to the great music and imagery of Jimi Hendrix and a tribute to the greatest guitar songs and bands of the ’70s.

A must for fans of great Classic 70’s style guitar-driven rock and Jimi Hendrix devotees, this promises to be fun night out for real rock and rollers!

Saturday 15 February, 7 pm – 10.30 pm | Harmonie German Club, 49 Jerrabomberra Avenue, Narrabundah | Book here.

Richard Clapton

With a career that spans over four decades, Richard Claption is known as one of Australia’s foremost singer/songwriters, paved the way for generations of songwriters to write about the experience of being Australian.

This concert is a chance to see one of the world’s most cherished singer/songwriters in the flesh.

Sunday 16 February, 7 pm – 8.50 pm | 

Tyler Childers – Mule Pull Tour

Tyler Childers and his longtime band, The Food Stamps, are coming to Canberra!

Grab your tickets to hear the GRAMMY-nominated singer, songwriter and musician, who is known for his electric live concerts.

Sunday 16 February, 8 pm – 10 pm | 

Exhibitions

…Is somebody gonna match my freak?

This is a joint exhibition by Sophie Dumaresq and Asil Habara (wet sahara), the 2024 recipients of the M16 Artspace ANU Emerging Artists Support Scheme.

A tongue-in-check nod to the two artists shared sense of humour and interest in online popular culture, shit posting, and the very real-life currents behind driving viral trends, you’ll want to see this for yourself.

Until Sunday 16 February | 

Creek

This is a solo exhibition by Kirsten Wehner, recipient of the 2024 M16 Artspace Environmental Artist Residency, generously supported by ConceptSix.

Exploring life along Weston Creek (a little-known waterway in suburban Canberra), ‘Creek’ presents drawings, sculptures and experimental collaborations that honour work to rehabilitate the catchment and invite attention to the waterway’s possibility as a place of cultural/ecological flourishing.

Until Sunday 16 February | 

VIEW2025

VIEW2025 brings together the work of Cailyn Forrest, Adam Hsieh, Fiona Lee, Aia Solis, and Emma Lyn Winkler. This annual exhibition spotlights regional emerging artists—the future leaders of Australian photo media practice—and is accompanied by a publication offering insights into current photographic trends across analogue, digital, and experimental forms.

In Darkroom VisceraCailyn Forrest transforms the act of photography into a bodily ritual, intertwining artist and material. Adam Hsieh’s I Didn’t Come Here for Love juxtaposes wide-angle views of Hobart’s kunanyi/Mount Wellington with intimate Grindr encounters, exploring how social currents shape our experience of place.

Fiona Lee’s Future Critical confronts ecological loss and political inertia, informed by her displacement during the 2019–2020 bushfires. In Tarantana MunaAia Solis merges past memories and present realities, revealing a delicate balance between control and disorder. Emma Lyn Winkler’s Shadow Puppets fuses painting, photography, and animation into textured narratives infused with humour and existential absurdity.

Until photo access, Manuka Arts Centre, 30 Manuka Circle, Griffith | More information here.

Carol Jerrems: Portraits

Photographers, this one’s for you! This week, spend time learning about a key influential figure in Australia’s photographic history at the National Portrait Gallery’s latest exhibit – Carol Jerrems: Portraits. The exhibition showcases more than 140 photographs, drawn from the National Gallery of Australia, the National Library of Australia, and the National Portrait Gallery.

Expect to see photographs from her earlier work to her more famous works, including Vale Street 1975. Learn how her work defined the 1970s and the future of Australian photography while examining portraits of cultural figures like tennis legend Evonne Goolagong, fashion designer Linda Jackson, and author Bobbi Sykes.

Until Sunday 2 March | National Portrait Gallery, King Edward Terrace, Parkes | Book here.

History: Solo Exhibition by Martyn Thompson

Head along to the Canberra Glassworks to see the stunning works of cross-disciplinary artist Martyn Thompson.

Reimagining his ceramic vessels in glass, blending nostalgia and modernity through a tactile, painterly approach, this exhibition has been curated by Aimee Frodsham, the exhibition integrates his new glasswork with textiles, furniture, and objects from his studio.

Until Sunday 23 March | 

The Bald Archy Prize 2025

Get ready for Australia’s leading satirical art extravaganza, the Bald Archy Prize! Born in 1994 as a whimsical take that more serious competition, this prize throws open its canvas to artists of every stripe, inviting them to unleash their creativity in portrait paintings teeming with humour, dark satire, light comedy, or caricature.

Now, entering its 29th year in 2025, the Bald Archy Prize beckons artists to carry forward the rich tradition of revelling in laughter while basking in the beauty of art. The exhibition kicks off in Canberra before embarking on a tour across various venues in Eastern Australia, so make sure you don’t miss out!

Until Sunday 23 March | Watson Arts Centre (Canberra Potters), 1 Aspinall St Watson | More information here.

Waves of Kinship

This is a new photo-based work by Polish-born Kamberri/Canberra-based artist Marzena Wasikowska.

Inspired by fieldwork and studio meditations on the built environment, waterscapes and global warming, as well as her immediate family, works in this exhibition have been created with support from a Capital Arts Patrons’ Organisation (CAPO) grant.

Until Sunday 23 March | Platform, 19 Furneaux St Manuka | More information here.

Celebrate Gungahlin: Young Voices

This exhibition features artworks and documentation from the 2024 Celebrate Gungahlin Festival.

Local artists Megan Daley and Pinal Maniar worked with children and their families to create masks, banners, and props for the inaugural festival parade. Showcasing the documentation of the process and the parade, as well as highlights from Our Town: A Celebrate Gungahlin Community Exhibition, head along to support over 100 young people who live, work or play in the Gungahlin region.

Until Sunday 23 March, 10 am – 4 pm | 

Escape. Control. Delete. by Kristie Watts

In Australia, more than one in three women have been physically and/or sexually assaulted. Every week a woman is murdered by her current or former partner. Escape Control Delete is a process and conceptual-based installation that makes the statistics of violence against women in Australia visible.

Each blacked-out key represents a woman in the community creating an unavoidable visual representation of words heard and reports read about the increasing statistics of women in Australia affected by abuse.

Until Sunday 23 March, 10 am – 4 pm | 

TILT by Alex Asch and Mariana del Castillo

This is the final exhibition in a two-year collaboration between artists Alex Asch and Mariana del Castillo.

Exploring ideas around identity, memory, belonging, and ownership, through colonisation, migration, and displacement the two artists enter the conversation from opposite ends. Head along to see it for yourself.

Until Sunday 23 March, 10 am – 4 pm | 

3000 days … and counting …

Esteemed Australian botanical artist Sharon Field is waging a personal protest against global warming. And in doing so, she is creating a monumental piece of art.

Setting herself a challenge to create a draw/painting for 3000 days on a series of scrolls, she is making Australia’s own version of the Bayeux Tapestry (the historic 11th Century tapestry depicting the Norman conquest of England and measuring approximately 68 metres).

Providing a visual record of the plants the planet is in danger of losing, you can see it at the Belconnen Arts Centre.

Until Sunday 23 March, 10 am – 4 pm | W

Neither Here Nor There by Liz Faul

Liz Faul was born in Canberra and grew up here. And that’s what inspires her work.

Conveying her feelings about Canberra and how it’s changed over the years, in this exhibition, she uses repeated motifs to express her memories of growing up here — the Burley Griffin map, the photographs of familiar places, and silhouettes of the family at different times. It combines painted papers, recycled printed materials, found papers and her illustrations on canvasses or boxes.

Until Sunday 23 March, 10 am – 4 pm | 

Mumkurla-nginyi-ma parrngalinyparla – From the darkness into the light

The Gurindji Freedom Banners retell the story of the historic Wave Hill Walk-off in 1966.

The ten iconic banners will be on display to tell the Gurindji account of the ‘walk-off’, which was led by Vincent Jurlama Lingiari AM with Gurindji, Ngarinyman, Mudburra, Bilinara and Walpiri workers from Wave Hill Station, located in the Victoria River District on the northern edge of the Tanami Desert. This strike was a response to the unfair working and living conditions for Aboriginal people under the station’s management; Vestey’s Group.

Until Friday 28 March | ANU School of Art & Design Gallery, Corner Liversidge St & Ellery Crescent, Acton | More information here.

Moonsnake

Thinking about possible connections between the moon and snakes, Steven Holland brings together a recent series of yellow-snake dream drawings with a selection of his bronze Serpent sculptures that were created over several decades.

Designed to coincide with the Chinese New Year, Luna Year of the Snake in 2025, this exhibition is free to visit.

Until Saturday 5 April | 137 Reed Street North, Greenway | More information here.

Unconditional

This is a mixed-media examination of loves in many forms, from the joyful, to the painful, life-affirming, difficult at times, but invariably unconditional.

Reflecting the multi-faceted qualities of love, in terms of media used as well as subjects, it shows various expressions of love and argues that we are all different yet united by emotions.

Until Saturday 5 April | 137 Reed Street North, Greenway | More information here.

This Is Studio&

Studio&’s debut exhibition as a collaborative, celebrating two years of making together.

In it, works are reflective of the diversity, interests and skills being honoured at Studio&. It’s a wonderful reminder the power art has in personal expression and community building and demonstrates that art exists in the exchange, process, collaboration, providing access to and noticing in everyday life.

Until Saturday 5 April | 137 Reed Street North, Greenway | More information here.

Jonas Balsaitis: Analogue

Jonas Balsaitis: Analogue is a survey exhibition of paintings, prints, and experimental films by Australian artist Jonas Balsaitis.

The exhibition re-considers the artist’s use of ‘imaging systems’ in light of contemporary developments in data imagery and digital technologies. Particular focus is given to the translation of Balsaitis’ paintings into film, highlighting the artist’s dedication to find a new, more experimental mode of experience in a pre-digital age.

Until Saturday 12 April | Drill Hall Gallery, Kingsley Street, Building 29, Acton | More information here.

BLAZE 2025

Canberra Contemporary’s eagerly awaited emerging artist showcase, BLAZE, returns to present the dynamic and diverse voices of Kamberri/Canberra’s rising creative talents.

Featuring six exciting artists at the beginning of their careers, BLAZE offers an insight into the evolving art scene of the region and exhibits bold, thought-provoking works across installation, painting, photography and sculpture.

Featuring the work of Sophia Childs, Sophie Dumaresq, Gabrielle Hall-Lomax, Emeirely Nucifora-Ryan, Brennan O’Brien and Jessika Spencer.

Until 17 April | Canberra Contemporary, 44 Queen Elizabeth Terrace, Parkes | canberracontemporary.com.au

Anne Dangar

Get lost in a world of swirls, squares, lines, and colours at the NGA’s free Anne Dangar exhibit.

This iconic Australian artist played an important part in bringing modern art to Australia in the twentieth century, and this exhibit allows locals a chance to browse her ceramics, paintings, archival material, and more in this major retrospective exhibition celebrating her life and art.

Until Sunday 27 April | National Gallery of Australia, Parkes Place East, Parkes | More information here.

Ethel Carrick

The National Gallery of Australia is continuing its focus on celebrating the work of all women artists, with its major exhibition Ethel Carrick. Post-impressionist art lovers will be excited to see 140 pieces by Carrick, in the first retrospective of her work for nearly half a century.

What’s even better? Entry is free, so you can visit as many times as you want!

Until Sunday 27 April | National Gallery of Australia, Parkes Place East, Parkes | More information here.

20 Years of Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year

Experience the wonder of two decades of award-winning nature photography as a new exhibition opens at the National Archives of Australia. 20 Years of Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year celebrates the winning entries from each year since its inception.

Conceived in 2004 by Dr. Stuart Miller AM, the competition aims to stoke the public’s fascination with the natural world and provide a platform for emerging and established photographers alike to showcase the remarkable flora, fauna, and landscapes of Australia, New Zealand, Antarctica, and New Guinea.

Until Sunday 27 April | National Archives of Australia, Kings Avenue, Parkes | More information here.

Pompeii

If seeing Pompeii in Italy is on your bucket list, mark your calendars for this one! The National Museum of Australia is showing its Pompeiiexhibit, featuring over 90 discovered objects from the ancient city before Mount Vesuvius erupted. This display in Canberra will be the first time some of these objects have been seen outside Europe!

Visitors will be taken into the exhibit with an engaging atmosphere created by large-scale digital projections and captivating soundscapes. Expect to see recovered jewellery, sculptures, pottery, frescoes, and other objects once used by this civilisation.

Until Sunday 4 May | 

Lindy Lee

Lindy Lee is one of Australia’s most accomplished contemporary artists. This exhibition brings together highlights from across the artist’s career as well as a monumental new installation and works on paper.

Exploring themes of ancestry, spirituality, the environment, and the cosmos, this display of new and recent works will shed light on Lee’s ever-evolving and ambitious practice.

Until Tuesday 1 July | National Gallery of Australia, Parkes Place East, Parkes | More information here.

Sport and Wellness

UC Capitals v Bendigo Spirit

This is the final home game of the regular WNBL season and it won’t be one to miss.

Be there as Canberra cheers on the Caps as they take on the Bendigo Spirit at AIS Arena. It promises to be some entertaining Saturday afternoon basketball!

Saturday 15 February, 3.30 pm – 5 pm | 

The Big Gay Yoga Day

It’s all in the name. Get ready to experience a fabulous day of yoga, meditation, breathwork and sound healing with the LGBTQ+ community, allies, friends and family.

Led by four local experienced queer wellness facilitators, The Big Gay Yoga Day will nourish, inspire and connect the Canberra community deeper to themselves and each other. Along with a gentle yoga session and a guided breathwork practice and reiki healing, you’ll enjoy a delicious vegan lunch catered by Canberra queer caterers “Rosalie’s”, and baked treats from  Sweet Bones Bakery & Cafe.

Saturday 15 February, 10 am – 4 pm | 

Breathwork & Sound Healing Journey

Experience a transcendental healing journey thanks to this soul-nourishing session.

The session starts with 15 minutes of relaxing breath-work to tune the body into a meditative state, using ancient and modern techniques, followed by the sound healing journey where native and meditative instruments are used. Make sure to bring your mat and pillow to enjoy!

Sunday 16 February, 6 pm – 7.10 pm | SaltHouse Community Centre, Henty Street, Braddon | Book here.

Feature image via @hyattcanberra.

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