Lithgow Street Art Walk map held in front of Michael Bourke’s mural ‘Do you see what I see?’ Photo: Ann Niddrie

Research Spotlight

 

The Lithgow Street Art Walk is a testament to the power of creativity and collaboration, transforming the town’s main street into an open-air gallery. With over 20 artworks; bronze sculptures, large-scale murals, and a hidden laneway of painted tiles, it offers a unique way to experience Lithgow’s cultural vibrancy. At the heart of this initiative is the Lithgow Transformation Hub, a space dedicated to bringing together community, education, business, and government to drive positive change. In partnership with Lithgow Tidy Towns, Lithgow City Council, and Gang Gang Gallery, the Hub has helped revitalize public spaces while supporting local artists. More than an art trail, the project embodies the Hub’s commitment to fostering a connected, creative, and thriving future for Lithgow. Find more

News

To be selected as the artist and curator team to represent Australia at the Venice Biennale is considered the ultimate exhibition for an artistic team. To have your selection rescinded, as has now happened to the 2026 team of Khaled Sabsabi and curator Michael Dagostino, is without precedent.
Social enterprises are an important tool in humanitarian and development policy. However, western-centric thinking and an overemphasis on management tools and business strategies can hamper their effectiveness, warns Dr Isaac Lyne, a research fellow at Western Sydney University’s Institute for Culture and Society.
In a remarkable achievement, Institute researchers have secured over $3.3 million in funding for three ICS based projects in the ARC’s Discovery Projects (DP) scheme for 2025. This exceptional outcome comes with a sense of additional joy as all submitted applications were awarded.
This paper is based on a talk at Western Sydney University Research Week, Better Futures Now: Leisure, Health and Wellbeing, Parramatta City Campus, 15 July 2024.From Devil’s Hands to Healthy Minds and Bodies: A Social Scientific History of the Concept of Leisure.
Back in 2005 – before the rise of social media or smart phones, let alone blockchain, metadata and OpenAI – computer scientist and entrepreneur Ray Kurzweil published a breathlessly prophetic account of what he called “the singularity”
Congratulations to Professor Corrinne Sullivan for being honoured as Indigenous Person of the Year at the inaugural Western Sydney University NAIDOC Awards 2024!As an Aboriginal scholar from the Wiradjuri Nation in Central-West New South Wales and Associate Dean of Indigenous Education at the School of Social Sciences

Highlights

Audience at the Mapping the Humanities event.
The ICS Seminar Series presents an exciting breadth of social and cultural research from the Institute’s renowned staff and doctoral candidates as well as a range of national and international visiting scholars.
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We are excited to share the release of the latest issue of Future-Makers! Some of our fabulous Institute researchers have again been featured in this issue: Karen Soldatić and Corrinne Sullivan’s inspiring collaboration.
HDR Director Malini Sur Portrait
New 2024 lectures have been added on the topic of Community check them out now.
The Institute for Culture and Society, incorporating the Young and Resilient Research Centre and the Urban Transformations Research Centre, is made up of a cohort of researchers on staff and a number of Western Sydney University School-based members.