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Art Gallery Attractions In Melbourne

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Melbourne is the capital and most populous city of the Australian state of Victoria, and the second-most populous city in Australia and Oceania. Its name refers to an urban agglomeration of 9,992.5 km2 , comprising a metropolitan area with 31 municipalities, and is also the common name for its city centre. The city occupies much of the coastline of Port Phillip bay and spreads into the hinterlands towards the Dandenong and Macedon ranges, Mornington Peninsula and Yarra Valley. It has a population of approximately 5 million , and its inhabitants are referred to as Melburnians.The city was founded on the 30 August 1835, in what was the British colony of ...
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Art Gallery Attractions In Melbourne

  • 2. Australian Tapestry Workshop Melbourne
    The Australian Tapestry Workshop is a not-for-profit organisation that employs weavers to create tapestry pieces and promotes tapestry creation though collaboration with contemporary artists. Founding director of the workshop, Sue Walker, described role of the workshop to be the fostering of artistic collaboration rather than the development of a subservient technical skill.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 5. FortyFiveDownstairs Melbourne
    fortyfivedownstairs is a not-for-profit theatre and gallery in Melbourne, Australia. Located on the lower floors of a brick nineteenth century building in Flinders Lane, it showcases independent visual art, theatre and music.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 6. Printism Melbourne
    RPH Australia is the national peak representative organisation for a unique Australian network of radio reading service designed to meet the daily information needs of people who, for any reason, are unable to access normal printed material. It is conservatively estimated that 18.4% of the Australian population has a print disability . Historically RPH stood for Radio for the Print Handicapped and they began in Australia in 1975 on Melbourne's 3ZZ. On 23 July 1978 the Minister for Post and Telecommunications announced: The establishment of a special radio communications service for the blind and other people with reading difficulties. The federal government began its direct funding of the service with a $250,000 grant in the 1981/82 budget. Initially using marine band frequencies, stations...
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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