NIDA Design students witness the Murder of Rasputin
Designed, directed, edited and produced by NIDA students over 12 months, The Horrific Murder of Grigori Rasputin or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Tsar is a hilarious short film.
NIDA acknowledges the Traditional Owners and Custodians of the lands on which we learn and tell stories, the Bidjigal, Gadigal, Dharawal and Dharug peoples, and we pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Elders past and present.
Designed, directed, edited and produced by NIDA students over 12 months, The Horrific Murder of Grigori Rasputin or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Tsar is a hilarious short film.
From high-tech to low, from opera to the fringe, this year’s AdelaideFringe and Adelaide Festival tour saw nearly 80 NIDA staff and students immersed in music, opera, dance and film events over nine intense days.
NIDA Bachelor of Fine Arts (Staging) student Grace Llanwarne loves making people fly as she discovers the mechanical side of live staging.
During her secondment in Europe, NIDA Master of Fine Arts (Voice) student Bosilka May has had the unique opportunity of working with hearing impaired actors on RCS’s Bachelor of Arts (BA) British Performance in Sign Language � the only course of its kind in Europe.
The Shifting Heart at Sydney’s Seymour Centre brings together several NIDA staff, students and alumni in directing, acting and stage production roles.
What parts do we present to others, and what do we keep hidden? What are the challenges on the road to leadership, and once the title is earned, how do we play the part? NIDA Melbourne is co-hosting its first PechaKucha night in partnership with architects Here Studio on 15 March.
Pursuing your creative calling is a lifelong and unique experience. No two journeys are exactly the same. But to provide insight to- and understanding of- the processes involved in such pursuits, we spoke to three Bachelor of Fine Arts second year students about what it took to enrich their own creative journey and come to NIDA.
Singer and Natural Voice presenter Frankie Armstrong brings her unique talents at NIDA’s Kensington campus in a workshop exploring the voice plus an intimate concert.
Rebecca Coronel is inspired to begin her first year of NIDA’s Master of Fine Arts (Cultural Leadership), fitting it into her full-time workload in the museums and galleries sector.
Each month we will be catching up with a different Head of Department at NIDA, to show you the artist behind the creative leader. February is Head of Properties and Objects, Marcelo Zavala-Baeza..