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Fall of an ayahuasca empire, the secrets of self-optimisers, and when digital nomad life turns sour
Fall of an ayahuasca empire, the secrets of self-optimisers, and when digital nomad life turns sour

The Guardian

time04-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Fall of an ayahuasca empire, the secrets of self-optimisers, and when digital nomad life turns sour

Top of the weekend to you all, and happy Naidoc Week to all who celebrate. Hopefully this week's first selection inspires you to seek out your nearest event. Recent attenders of Sydney's Vivid festival would have seen Vincent Namatjira's King Dingo character, pictured above, in animated form on the MCA building. Now the First Nations artist's work is UK-bound as part of an Indigenous art explosion in the UK. And Archie Moore, a Kamilaroi/Bigambul man who shared the top prize at the 2024 Venice Biennale, is getting some of the credit. How long will it take to read: Three minutes. Alberto Varela claimed his Inner Mastery venture was the first to take the ayahuasca experience multinational. Users of the Amazonian plant brew often report revisiting past trauma or repressed experiences, and Varela was warned that rolling it out on an industrial scale with minimal oversight would result in accidents. As the company grew, so did the number of accidents – and deaths. Sam Edwards tells the story of how Varela's cult-like 'anti-therapy' empire unravelled. Delusions of grandeur: In March 2020, not long after Covid had been declared a pandemic, a half-naked Varela shared a video with the findings from his latest ayahuasca trip: 'I created the coronavirus.' How long will it take to read: 14 minutes. Work your own hours at your own pace, wherever you want in the world? Been there, posted the Facebook updates from Goa. But, as Emily Bratt discovered in her own stint as a digital nomad, the reliability of a certain global coffee chain's wifi gives it a strong gravitational pull. And by the final month of her latest six-month stint on a south-east Asian island, she found herself wondering: 'What am I doing?' 'I watched friends go about their days, following through on plans made before I arrived and making new ones for after I had gone. I was like a time traveller, temporarily injected into their world from another realm.' – Bratt on the ennui of digital nomad life in Sydney. How long will it take to read: Five minutes. Who to target after you've made a water-cooler show that mirrors the travails of the Murdoch media empire? In his new film Mountainhead, Succession creator Jesse Armstrong pulls back the curtain on tech billionaires. Sign up to Five Great Reads Each week our editors select five of the most interesting, entertaining and thoughtful reads published by Guardian Australia and our international colleagues. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Saturday morning after newsletter promotion The former British political staffer tells Danny Leigh why he was terrible at his old job – and how his research for Mountainhead made him feel sorry for Elon Musk. Move fast and break things: Film and television projects are typically a long haul. But not Mountainhead, which Armstrong conceived in November and premiered in May. How long will it take to read: Four minutes. Further reading: Back to the Future at 40, as told by the co-writer and one of its stars. I'll sometimes brush my teeth in the shower if I've left my run for the office a little late. Some people do this all the time – life comes at you pretty fast, after all, and they figure every second saved is a second you can pay forward to your future self. Are these so-called microefficiencies clever life hacks, or another sign of a snowed-under, productivity-obsessed society? Whatever the case, the self-optimisers Chloë Hamilton spoke to were uniformly chuffed with their time-saving innovations. Basic maths: One 'microefficient' person makes two cups of tea each time they boil the jug. If you drink eight cuppas a day, that saves you 20 minutes of jug-watching time. Across two years that adds up to more than 10 full days reclaimed. Simples. How long will it take to read: Four minutes. Enjoying the Five Great Reads email? Then you'll love our weekly culture and lifestyle newsletter, Saved for Later. Sign up here to catch up on the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture, trends and tips for the weekend. And check out the full list of our local and international newsletters.

Entries Now Open For The 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize
Entries Now Open For The 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize

Scoop

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scoop

Entries Now Open For The 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize

Artists are invited to submit entries for the 2025 Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize - Australia's most prestigious award dedicated to small-scale sculpture. Now in its 24th year, the Prize celebrates artistic excellence in works measuring up to 80cm in any dimension. Presented by Woollahra Council and hosted at Woollahra Gallery at Redleaf, the Prize offers a platform for established and emerging, local and international artists to present original sculptures on a small scale. All works are blind judged, with the selected finalists exhibited in a free public exhibition from 26 September to 16 November 2025. Winners will be announced at the official opening on 25 September. A total prize pool of $29,000 will be awarded: The Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize – $25,000 Special Commendation Award – $2,000 Mayor's Award – $1,000 Viewers' Choice Award – $1,000 The Prize, won by Hannah Gartside in 2024, has helped spotlight some of the most compelling artists working today. Past winners include Archie Moore and Adam Cullen and past finalists include Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran, Julie Rrap and Jonathon Jones. Eligible works must be original, freestanding or wall-mounted sculptures, designed or completed after July 2024. There is no limit to the number of entries an artist can submit, and collaborative entries are welcome. 'Sculpture is often overlooked in art prizes, but here it's given the spotlight it deserves. I'm excited to bring together the work of emerging and established voices for one of Australia's most prestigious and exciting exhibitions.' Sep Pourbozorgi, Director Woollahra Gallery at Redleaf KEY DATES Entries close: Sunday 13 July 2025 Exhibition: 26 September – 16 November 2025 Winners announced: Thursday 25 September 2025

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