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A guide to the Archibald Prize, for the people who don't speak art

A guide to the Archibald Prize, for the people who don't speak art

The ultimate selfies
Why bother with celebrities when you can get results like these from self-portraits? Yvette Coppersmith's Self-portrait with two cats is mesmerising in its serenity, the artist's heavy-lidded visage matching her snoozing cats alongside her. She looks quite glamorous too, like Cleopatra-via-Old Hollywood, evoking advertisements from the art deco era. Even from afar it stands out in the room, a result of Coppersmith (the Archibald's 2018 winner) mixing her oils with sand to lend the picture an interesting, fleshy texture.
On the opposite end of the same wall hangs Tsering Hannaford's Meditation on time (a left-handed self-portrait), painted several months after the artist – an 11-time Archibald finalist – suffered a tendon injury in her right wrist, her dominant hand. There's something stoic and determined in her still gaze, emanating from a heavy swirl of darkness, that's hard to look away from.
From the always enjoyable Studio A collective in Sydney, first-time finalist Mathew Calandra's His face like my face – self-portrait as Robert Englund playing Freddy Krueger is sure to be a crowd-pleaser. The subject might be playful but the portrait is deceptively intricate, all obsessive ink work awash in a swathe of blood-red watercolour. Fun and creepy, like my soul.
The short kings and tiny queens
Little portraits have a rough time at the Archibald, maybe in galleries in general where bigger is always considered better, grander, more striking. But look at Natasha Bienek's portrait of artist Cressida Campbell and tell me that's not some painstaking ambition. At 15 x 20 centimetres, it's barely larger than a postcard but filled with photorealist detail so intricate, you could stare at it for hours. Sombre and reverent, Bienek paints Campbell in front of her garden and a tiny print from 18th-century Japanese artist Utamaro that I urgently need for my Sylvanian Families collection.
Another small wonder is Callum Worsfold's impressionistic Self-portrait in the studio, where he puts the process on display, depicting himself in a paint-splattered jumpsuit and a gas mask, surrounded by the chemically hazardous tools of his trade. Grimier than a Roc Marciano cut, it'd be suffocating if it was any larger than its merciful 23 x 13 centimetres.
The bonkers crowd favourite?
Marcus Wills' Cormac in Arcadia stretches the definition of portrait in a way that would probably annoy his fellow finalists, which is exactly why I'm here for it. It's supposedly a portrait of 13-year-old actor Cormac Wright, but it's actually a dramatic tableau done Rembrandt-style, filled with about two dozen mysterious figures, a frontally naked Jesus figure at dead centre, and even someone in adidas stripes. Wright, meanwhile, stands left of centre in a green Uniqlo hoodie, facing in the complete wrong direction, barely an onlooker in his own nightmare of a portrait.
It's unsettling and addictive and a crowd-pleaser judging by the number of people who hovered in front of it all evening. That the Archibald judges deemed this a finalist is perhaps a promising sign of bonkers things to come.

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Fight trends – and ‘real estate thinking': Anthony Burke's tips for home builders
Fight trends – and ‘real estate thinking': Anthony Burke's tips for home builders

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Fight trends – and ‘real estate thinking': Anthony Burke's tips for home builders

'We shape our buildings: and afterwards our buildings shape us.' – Winston Churchill Anthony Burke wants us to believe that sharing a bathroom makes for a happier life. 'We think we need a toilet next to every room,' he says brightly. 'But actually, if our goal is to have a happy family life, then another bathroom is not going to get us there.' I live in a one-bathroom house, and I profoundly disagree with this statement: I think everyone in my family would fight a bear for a second loo. But Burke – erudite career academic, encouraging host of Grand Designs Australia (et al), ebullient wearer of unstructured jackets and Japanese sneakers – has had a lot of practice at trying to educate us about the architectural facts of life. We are sitting in a cafe in Redfern's Central Park precinct. This is both random – we hustled in here because it's raining – and deliberate: it's just across the road from Burke's employer, UTS, where he is a professor of architecture; it's on the other side of the square from a house he loves, William Smart's Indigo Slam (philanthropist Judith Neilson's home); and we're only a block from the ABC, where Burke is the unassuming but popular host of not only Restoration Australia (which he has hosted since 2021), Grand Designs Australia and Grand Designs Transformations (2024) but also the new Culture By Design. His bathroom belief, however, transcends all context. 'Research shows us that a family that shares a bathroom actually has a much better social dynamic,' he says, leaning forward. 'You're negotiating with each other every morning for who's in the loo, who's having the first shower, 'You left the sink in a mess'. You're talking to each other, you're having everyday interactions, and there's a virtue to that.' He raises his hands, grinning. 'It doesn't sound very appealing to a lot of people, I understand.' Correct. But maybe he's right. Because Burke's job, after all, is to answer the eternal – and perhaps the central – question of architecture. The question that affects us all, whether we live in gigantic mansions or one-room studios. How do we create buildings that we love, and which make us feel happier in the world? 'Even a brick wants to be something.' – Louis Kahn In 2005, Australian writer Geraldine Brooks described the construction of the great concrete ribs of the Sydney Opera House, designed by Swedish architect JØrn Utzon. When these ribs came out of their wooden formwork, she wrote, quoting Australian architect Peter Myers, 'the concrete was perfect, the edges were pure, there wasn't a blemish'. Myers turned and found 'tears running down Utzon's face. And then I saw that the tough Italian workers were crying, too.' This is a touching story: a weeping Swede, many weeping Italians. But note: no weeping Aussies. And herein lies a paradox about Australians and our built environment. On the one hand, says Burke, we're very sensitive to architecture, and surprisingly knowledgeable about it. On the other, we're deeply reluctant to admit to this sensitivity – as he puts it succinctly – 'in case people think we're wankers'. 'We are now quite comfortable to talk about things like tiles, finishes, open-plan, these kinds of concepts,' he explains. 'And we understand, viscerally, that some environments literally change your physiology. When I was a kid, I loved that sense of release as you arrive at the beach. Your heart rate changes, your metabolism slows down, you get in sync with a very different kind of rhythm. It's the same when walking in the bush. We lived across the road from Ku-ring-gai [National Park], and when I'd go walking, I'd get that same feeling. Most Australians know that feeling: I think we're subconsciously very aware of our natural world: where the sun is, where the wind's blowing, how we feel out of doors.' We know, in other words, that natural physical spaces and surroundings have the power to change our mood. The difficulty comes in admitting that man-made ones do, too. 'A Swedish person is happy to talk about a beautifully designed chair,' explains Burke, who spent a university semester at KTH, a highly respected architectural school in Stockholm. 'They'll know exactly where it came from: 'That's actually a Finnish design – Alvar Aalto did that in the 1940s – isn't it great?' And you're like, 'Right, and you're an accountant. Great. Keep talking to me about the design culture of your country.' We don't have that here. We get it, but we don't want to admit it because it's a bit fluffy. If you start talking about the way the light falls on stone, you might be a bit of a wanker.' Burke laughs. 'Architects are, perhaps rightly, made fun of for that.' Burke wonders if our suspicion of beauty in architecture comes from our history. In terms of European building in Australia, 'we were the ultimate pragmatists. We were using whatever was available, we didn't have lofty ideas or much money. There was a deep sense of pragmatism. And we have not lost that – I think in terms of design culture, we are still deeply pragmatic in our assessment of form. But that's also meant we're dismissive, or cynical, about a cultural conversation. We're like, 'Why would we talk about beauty; why would we talk about an elegant solution? If something's going to work, and it's going to cost me the least amount of money, let's do that.' ' This, surely, is the most tragic thing an architect could hear: like a passionate chef hearing someone say, 'Who cares what it tastes like? If it's nutritious, and it's cheap, let's eat that.' But Burke is undeterred. 'I do think the conversation is changing,' he says, grinning. 'I really do.' 'The mission of an architect is to help people understand how to make life more beautiful, the world a better one for living in, and to give reason, rhyme, and meaning to life.' – Frank Lloyd Wright When Anthony Burke was a kid, there were no profound design conversations happening in his house. This was no bad thing – it sounds like a happy Sydney suburban childhood, full of surfing, sun-damage, hanging out with his mates. His family lived in Forestville, Collaroy, Clareville – suburbs full of natural beauty – but the man-made environment of the Northern Beaches didn't exactly fill him with wonder. Still, some pleasure in design must have struck early. He dearly loved drawing and doodling – highly technical little creations like the 'tickle machine' plan he produced, aged 7. 'I can remember it clearly, which is very weird,' he says. 'I think that enjoyment translated into a fascination with technical drawing, drafting; I found it therapeutic, or meditative, or something.' When he was 15, he went on a trip with his art class to Italy. It was his first trip to Europe, and for Burke, walking into the Sistine Chapel was like plunging into the ocean at north Avalon. 'You walk into those spaces and they work on you. You feel the space with every sense. Not just your eyes and not just your head: you feel it in your skin.' He pauses. 'I mean, I was in year 10, so I'm not having deep thoughts about that. I'm probably thinking, 'Where can I sneak a beer on my fake ID?' But at the same time, you're noticing that there is so much depth and feeling happening around you, in the walls of the building. The temperature, the humidity, the sounds: those buildings work on you on every level – that's why they're so damn impressive.' Despite deciding to be an architect 'pretty much as soon as I decided I didn't want to be a fireman', he didn't make it into architecture straight out of school. 'I think that was maybe a bit of a humbling moment,' recalls his wife, marketing director Kylie Moss, whom Burke met when he was 20 and they were both working at that well-known cradle of aesthetic talent, the Harbord Diggers. 'It just fired up his passion even more.' He got the marks to transfer from arts at the University of Sydney to architecture at UNSW after first year. Once there, he excelled. Professor Desley Luscombe, the future Dean of Architecture at UTS, remembers him as part of 'an unusually enthusiastic, capable group – and even in that cohort, he was one of the very top achievers'. 'Ant was always delighted by ideas,' recalls close friend, Annie Tennant, now Director, Design and Place at NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment. 'A big group of us met at uni – we're still friends now – and he was the guy from the Northern Beaches with a thick, blond ponytail who wore a lot of denim and white. And then in fifth year, when the course got into all this conceptual stuff, his fashion changed, and he started wearing a lot of black and talking about Derrida. We were all a bit like, 'Dude, how long is this going to last?' But he genuinely loved the ideas, loved the deep theory. And to be fair, he never went full skivvy. He was too grounded, too funny and nice.' Skivvy or not, Burke's plan was certainly to become a practising architect. But according to Moss, he revelled in 'the force for change that university can be: learning from people who were equally passionate; meeting all sorts of opinions, talking about ideas. It really brought out an intellectual hunger.' A gap year in Hong Kong, hearing professional architects discuss concepts he'd never heard of; a semester in Sweden 'immersed in beautiful Scandinavian modernism, so elegant and civilised' all fed what Moss calls 'this real inquisitive drive. He wants to understand people and environments, as well as buildings.' After graduating, Burke worked as an architect with Philip Cox (now Cox Architecture). Going on site, he recalls, was 'so great, and so scary. The builders are saying, 'I'm not building this stupid f---ing house,' and you're just out of uni, and you have to say, 'Um, OK … but that looks wrong to me, can we check the plans again?' ' But when he was only 27, his father died suddenly of cancer – just three months between diagnosis and death – and Burke decided to do something dramatic. 'Dad left my [younger] brother and me about $80,000 each,' he explains, 'and I thought, 'Right, well that's enough for a degree overseas.' I'd been thinking for a while that I wanted to go and get the highest level of architectural conversation I could find.' Loading This turned out to be at Columbia University in New York, where Burke earned himself a master's degree, tutored, and worked as a teacher's assistant to Pritzker Prize-winning architect Shigeru Ban. In 2001, he and Moss returned to Sydney and married. But the 3300 hours he needed to log to apply for his full registration (and actually call himself an architect) were destined to remain out of reach; almost immediately, he was invited to apply for a teaching role back in the US, at one of the country's top-tier universities, Berkeley, in California. 'It was a tenure-track position, so it had a kind of esteem to it,' he recalls. 'And I was completely blindsided by the fact that I got it.' During the five years they spent in California, he and Kylie had a son and daughter, now young adults. In 2007, Luscombe – by then Dean of Architecture at UTS – lured him back to Australia again. In the almost two decades since, Burke has had two stints as head of School of Architecture at UTS (2010-17). He's been co-creative director of the Australian Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, and architectural judge for London Design Week. He's written books, chaired excellence committees, founded design competitions and taken everyone from first-year uni students to retirees on overseas architecture tours. (He likes both groups, though he admits his mature audience members 'actually stay in the room when I'm talking'.) In the past 20 years, however, he has not designed a single building. Does he regret this? 'Well, I don't feel like I'm done yet,' he says. 'I often think that the next chapter for me might involve going back to that. And when we did our own place a couple of years ago – a really tiny place, very modest – I totally loved it. So, maybe. But I have to admit, it feels natural to be where I am.' '98 per cent of what gets built today is shit.' – Frank Gehry Anthony Burke, perhaps unlike Frank Gehry, is an optimist. He is, according to Grand Designs Australia producer Brooke Bayvel, 'utterly untarnished by cynicism'. When he turned up to audition for Restoration Australia, back in 2019, 'he really stood out. Not for what he brought on camera, but off: he was just very interested in everybody. Interested, open, kind.' This, of course – along with optimism – is exactly what's required on Grand Designs: an endless sympathetic engagement with ordinary people and their architectural dramas. Will the council allow the solar panels on the front side of the cottage roof? Will the horse-poo render really stick to the walls? Is the cantilevered platform actually going to solve the family's space issues, or will it plunge them all to the bottom of the picturesque valley? Burke, says Bayvel, can ask these questions, and nobody takes offence. 'All the people on the show love him. They'll tell him anything!' Audiences clearly feel the same: the ABC requested him across its full suite of architecture shows, Bayvel explains, which means Thursday night on the national broadcaster is now something akin to The Anthony Burke Evening. (Even Burke's genial charm, however, may not be enough to enliven the new program, Culture By Design – an extremely cerebral investigation of Asian design without a single concreting calamity or rain delay, made for the ABC's Asian audiences. As Burke says ruefully: 'I do wonder if Australian audiences are going to be watching, saying, 'Hang on, what's going on? Is she pregnant? Did they say: in by Christmas?' ') After half a decade working together, Bayvel concludes that Burke's reputation for niceness remains untarnished. 'These shows are bloody hard work – there are about 70 houses in progress across all three – but I've never heard him utter a cross word to anyone. I've never heard even a little tone. But also, you'd underestimate him at your peril because he's super smart.' His intellectual heft, indeed, has brought an unexpected boost to the programs, even among a group they weren't initially intended for – architects themselves. 'I think him stepping into that role has really elevated it,' says Adam Haddow, president of the Australian Institute of Architects. 'People [in the profession] have such a high level of respect for him.' He can do two things architects appreciate, Haddow goes on. 'He can translate. Architects are renowned for talking architecture talk, and often we don't even know we're talking it. But Anthony can understand challenging and complex issues, and translate them into everyday language, and get the general public involved.' Secondly, 'I think he lives in a really interesting space where he is able to be critical. It can be quite difficult, [from inside] the profession, to ever suggest things could be different, either in a particular building, or industry-wide. But he can be critical, and people listen to him.' This twin appeal, to general viewers and specialists, also gives Burke a chance to steer the broader design conversation in Australia towards the issues he thinks are important: sustainability, alternatives to traditional building techniques and materials, and new ways of visualising how families might live. That's why he does TV, he says: 'the chance to help nudge the conversation gently towards what we should be doing'. The fact is, he says, 'the current housing model in this country is broken – financially, socially, health-wise, sustainably. There are about 10.9 million houses in Australia and on average, about a million are empty every night. And we have the biggest houses in the world, along with America. That's just not going to keep working for us as a model. We need to face up to the fact that life for our kids in a home in Australia is not going to look like the last 70 years – three bedrooms, two bathrooms, carport, flamingo on the front lawn. I think our job right now [as architects] is to help people imagine something different. Whether it's higher-density, or multi-generational, or granny flats, single-room occupancies on existing medium-density suburbs, whatever. And we need to be enabling those things – finding the advantages and interest and beauty in all those options – rather than fighting them.' Central Park, the old Carlton United brewery site on Sydney CBD's southern edge, contains an Edwardian factory building, a Jean Nouvel tower block, and two buildings by three Australian architecture practices – the Phoenix gallery, by Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects, and the dramatic domestic residence, Indigo Slam, by Smart Design Studio. Indigo Slam, you could argue, is domestic only insofar as the Doge's palace in Venice, say, is domestic – when it eventually stops raining, we head for the home William Smart designed for Judith Neilson. Australian 'resi' is a topic Burke is always discussing overseas, he confesses as we walk. 'I don't think the rest of the world knows enough about what's going on here: hand on heart, I think we're doing some of the best work in the world.' With its sweeps and stretches of milky concrete, Indigo Slam is like something designed by Zeus – Olympian, slightly unsettling, apparently disconnected from the world of mere mortals. But no, says Burke, pointing out the water rill running alongside the footpath, the generous front gate. 'Gorgeous,' he says, peering through the rails. 'And look at the bricks behind, the different texture of the slate here, the granite here. There's just so much thoughtful loveliness. What you see when you walk past is that someone has designed it. Someone has thought about all these little things.' And this, it transpires, is what Anthony Burke wants us to remember when it comes to our own houses. Thoughtfulness is not simply the province of those with unlimited means, after all – in fact, it costs absolutely nothing. 'So,' he says, 'if you are faced with the opportunity – which is a massive opportunity – to build your own home, start from the fundamentals. Really interrogate your family, and the way you live.' Whatever else you do, don't fall prey to fashion. 'Do not go to the cover of Vogue Living and say, 'Right. I want that living room,' ' he pleads. 'Your home should not end up being some kind of tasteful catalogue of the season's best. Oh my god, I hate that stuff! The latest stove from Europe or tile from Italy: these things are ephemeral nonsense.' As well as steering clear of fashion, he goes on, we must at all costs avoid 'real estate thinking'. 'We've developed this idea, because of the way real estate operates in this country, that there is only one version of how a house can look,' he says, looking genuinely pained. ' 'Because that's what the market wants.' But what everybody doesn't talk about is that what the market wants is exactly the most mediocre, middle-ground, vanilla idea of a life. That's not a life: it's just a vision of a product. We think, 'Everyone else will want this; when I'm sick of it, someone else will want to buy it.' But what about what we want?' Loading What we should do instead, if we get the chance, is have faith in the power of 'doing the fundamentals better and better and better. We don't need more than that. And that means focusing on things like the way our family is healthy in a home – clean air, no mould, natural light, no VOCs [volatile organic compounds]; the scale of the home being just right for the people living in it; the fact that light is always coming from the north in Australia; that we always have a need for elbow room, but also closeness with the people we love.' And so we finish as we began – with toilets. I know, from a cunning confidential source, that when Burke renovated his own home in Sydney's inner west, he installed only one full bathroom, and one powder room (ie. a loo with no shower). This seems incredibly disciplined, but Burke doesn't hold everybody to such rigorous standards. 'There is definitely a Goldilocks scale,' he concludes. 'And it's not the same for everybody. So I am not advocating a particular number of toilets. But I am saying that things are going to change in the next 20 years, even if we don't want them to, and we have to decide whether we're on board or we're off board.' He spreads his hands wide, taking in toilets everywhere. 'So let's get on board!'

Fight trends – and ‘real estate thinking': Anthony Burke's tips for home builders
Fight trends – and ‘real estate thinking': Anthony Burke's tips for home builders

The Age

timea day ago

  • The Age

Fight trends – and ‘real estate thinking': Anthony Burke's tips for home builders

'We shape our buildings: and afterwards our buildings shape us.' – Winston Churchill Anthony Burke wants us to believe that sharing a bathroom makes for a happier life. 'We think we need a toilet next to every room,' he says brightly. 'But actually, if our goal is to have a happy family life, then another bathroom is not going to get us there.' I live in a one-bathroom house, and I profoundly disagree with this statement: I think everyone in my family would fight a bear for a second loo. But Burke – erudite career academic, encouraging host of Grand Designs Australia (et al), ebullient wearer of unstructured jackets and Japanese sneakers – has had a lot of practice at trying to educate us about the architectural facts of life. We are sitting in a cafe in Redfern's Central Park precinct. This is both random – we hustled in here because it's raining – and deliberate: it's just across the road from Burke's employer, UTS, where he is a professor of architecture; it's on the other side of the square from a house he loves, William Smart's Indigo Slam (philanthropist Judith Neilson's home); and we're only a block from the ABC, where Burke is the unassuming but popular host of not only Restoration Australia (which he has hosted since 2021), Grand Designs Australia and Grand Designs Transformations (2024) but also the new Culture By Design. His bathroom belief, however, transcends all context. 'Research shows us that a family that shares a bathroom actually has a much better social dynamic,' he says, leaning forward. 'You're negotiating with each other every morning for who's in the loo, who's having the first shower, 'You left the sink in a mess'. You're talking to each other, you're having everyday interactions, and there's a virtue to that.' He raises his hands, grinning. 'It doesn't sound very appealing to a lot of people, I understand.' Correct. But maybe he's right. Because Burke's job, after all, is to answer the eternal – and perhaps the central – question of architecture. The question that affects us all, whether we live in gigantic mansions or one-room studios. How do we create buildings that we love, and which make us feel happier in the world? 'Even a brick wants to be something.' – Louis Kahn In 2005, Australian writer Geraldine Brooks described the construction of the great concrete ribs of the Sydney Opera House, designed by Swedish architect JØrn Utzon. When these ribs came out of their wooden formwork, she wrote, quoting Australian architect Peter Myers, 'the concrete was perfect, the edges were pure, there wasn't a blemish'. Myers turned and found 'tears running down Utzon's face. And then I saw that the tough Italian workers were crying, too.' This is a touching story: a weeping Swede, many weeping Italians. But note: no weeping Aussies. And herein lies a paradox about Australians and our built environment. On the one hand, says Burke, we're very sensitive to architecture, and surprisingly knowledgeable about it. On the other, we're deeply reluctant to admit to this sensitivity – as he puts it succinctly – 'in case people think we're wankers'. 'We are now quite comfortable to talk about things like tiles, finishes, open-plan, these kinds of concepts,' he explains. 'And we understand, viscerally, that some environments literally change your physiology. When I was a kid, I loved that sense of release as you arrive at the beach. Your heart rate changes, your metabolism slows down, you get in sync with a very different kind of rhythm. It's the same when walking in the bush. We lived across the road from Ku-ring-gai [National Park], and when I'd go walking, I'd get that same feeling. Most Australians know that feeling: I think we're subconsciously very aware of our natural world: where the sun is, where the wind's blowing, how we feel out of doors.' We know, in other words, that natural physical spaces and surroundings have the power to change our mood. The difficulty comes in admitting that man-made ones do, too. 'A Swedish person is happy to talk about a beautifully designed chair,' explains Burke, who spent a university semester at KTH, a highly respected architectural school in Stockholm. 'They'll know exactly where it came from: 'That's actually a Finnish design – Alvar Aalto did that in the 1940s – isn't it great?' And you're like, 'Right, and you're an accountant. Great. Keep talking to me about the design culture of your country.' We don't have that here. We get it, but we don't want to admit it because it's a bit fluffy. If you start talking about the way the light falls on stone, you might be a bit of a wanker.' Burke laughs. 'Architects are, perhaps rightly, made fun of for that.' Burke wonders if our suspicion of beauty in architecture comes from our history. In terms of European building in Australia, 'we were the ultimate pragmatists. We were using whatever was available, we didn't have lofty ideas or much money. There was a deep sense of pragmatism. And we have not lost that – I think in terms of design culture, we are still deeply pragmatic in our assessment of form. But that's also meant we're dismissive, or cynical, about a cultural conversation. We're like, 'Why would we talk about beauty; why would we talk about an elegant solution? If something's going to work, and it's going to cost me the least amount of money, let's do that.' ' This, surely, is the most tragic thing an architect could hear: like a passionate chef hearing someone say, 'Who cares what it tastes like? If it's nutritious, and it's cheap, let's eat that.' But Burke is undeterred. 'I do think the conversation is changing,' he says, grinning. 'I really do.' 'The mission of an architect is to help people understand how to make life more beautiful, the world a better one for living in, and to give reason, rhyme, and meaning to life.' – Frank Lloyd Wright When Anthony Burke was a kid, there were no profound design conversations happening in his house. This was no bad thing – it sounds like a happy Sydney suburban childhood, full of surfing, sun-damage, hanging out with his mates. His family lived in Forestville, Collaroy, Clareville – suburbs full of natural beauty – but the man-made environment of the Northern Beaches didn't exactly fill him with wonder. Still, some pleasure in design must have struck early. He dearly loved drawing and doodling – highly technical little creations like the 'tickle machine' plan he produced, aged 7. 'I can remember it clearly, which is very weird,' he says. 'I think that enjoyment translated into a fascination with technical drawing, drafting; I found it therapeutic, or meditative, or something.' When he was 15, he went on a trip with his art class to Italy. It was his first trip to Europe, and for Burke, walking into the Sistine Chapel was like plunging into the ocean at north Avalon. 'You walk into those spaces and they work on you. You feel the space with every sense. Not just your eyes and not just your head: you feel it in your skin.' He pauses. 'I mean, I was in year 10, so I'm not having deep thoughts about that. I'm probably thinking, 'Where can I sneak a beer on my fake ID?' But at the same time, you're noticing that there is so much depth and feeling happening around you, in the walls of the building. The temperature, the humidity, the sounds: those buildings work on you on every level – that's why they're so damn impressive.' Despite deciding to be an architect 'pretty much as soon as I decided I didn't want to be a fireman', he didn't make it into architecture straight out of school. 'I think that was maybe a bit of a humbling moment,' recalls his wife, marketing director Kylie Moss, whom Burke met when he was 20 and they were both working at that well-known cradle of aesthetic talent, the Harbord Diggers. 'It just fired up his passion even more.' He got the marks to transfer from arts at the University of Sydney to architecture at UNSW after first year. Once there, he excelled. Professor Desley Luscombe, the future Dean of Architecture at UTS, remembers him as part of 'an unusually enthusiastic, capable group – and even in that cohort, he was one of the very top achievers'. 'Ant was always delighted by ideas,' recalls close friend, Annie Tennant, now Director, Design and Place at NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment. 'A big group of us met at uni – we're still friends now – and he was the guy from the Northern Beaches with a thick, blond ponytail who wore a lot of denim and white. And then in fifth year, when the course got into all this conceptual stuff, his fashion changed, and he started wearing a lot of black and talking about Derrida. We were all a bit like, 'Dude, how long is this going to last?' But he genuinely loved the ideas, loved the deep theory. And to be fair, he never went full skivvy. He was too grounded, too funny and nice.' Skivvy or not, Burke's plan was certainly to become a practising architect. But according to Moss, he revelled in 'the force for change that university can be: learning from people who were equally passionate; meeting all sorts of opinions, talking about ideas. It really brought out an intellectual hunger.' A gap year in Hong Kong, hearing professional architects discuss concepts he'd never heard of; a semester in Sweden 'immersed in beautiful Scandinavian modernism, so elegant and civilised' all fed what Moss calls 'this real inquisitive drive. He wants to understand people and environments, as well as buildings.' After graduating, Burke worked as an architect with Philip Cox (now Cox Architecture). Going on site, he recalls, was 'so great, and so scary. The builders are saying, 'I'm not building this stupid f---ing house,' and you're just out of uni, and you have to say, 'Um, OK … but that looks wrong to me, can we check the plans again?' ' But when he was only 27, his father died suddenly of cancer – just three months between diagnosis and death – and Burke decided to do something dramatic. 'Dad left my [younger] brother and me about $80,000 each,' he explains, 'and I thought, 'Right, well that's enough for a degree overseas.' I'd been thinking for a while that I wanted to go and get the highest level of architectural conversation I could find.' Loading This turned out to be at Columbia University in New York, where Burke earned himself a master's degree, tutored, and worked as a teacher's assistant to Pritzker Prize-winning architect Shigeru Ban. In 2001, he and Moss returned to Sydney and married. But the 3300 hours he needed to log to apply for his full registration (and actually call himself an architect) were destined to remain out of reach; almost immediately, he was invited to apply for a teaching role back in the US, at one of the country's top-tier universities, Berkeley, in California. 'It was a tenure-track position, so it had a kind of esteem to it,' he recalls. 'And I was completely blindsided by the fact that I got it.' During the five years they spent in California, he and Kylie had a son and daughter, now young adults. In 2007, Luscombe – by then Dean of Architecture at UTS – lured him back to Australia again. In the almost two decades since, Burke has had two stints as head of School of Architecture at UTS (2010-17). He's been co-creative director of the Australian Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, and architectural judge for London Design Week. He's written books, chaired excellence committees, founded design competitions and taken everyone from first-year uni students to retirees on overseas architecture tours. (He likes both groups, though he admits his mature audience members 'actually stay in the room when I'm talking'.) In the past 20 years, however, he has not designed a single building. Does he regret this? 'Well, I don't feel like I'm done yet,' he says. 'I often think that the next chapter for me might involve going back to that. And when we did our own place a couple of years ago – a really tiny place, very modest – I totally loved it. So, maybe. But I have to admit, it feels natural to be where I am.' '98 per cent of what gets built today is shit.' – Frank Gehry Anthony Burke, perhaps unlike Frank Gehry, is an optimist. He is, according to Grand Designs Australia producer Brooke Bayvel, 'utterly untarnished by cynicism'. When he turned up to audition for Restoration Australia, back in 2019, 'he really stood out. Not for what he brought on camera, but off: he was just very interested in everybody. Interested, open, kind.' This, of course – along with optimism – is exactly what's required on Grand Designs: an endless sympathetic engagement with ordinary people and their architectural dramas. Will the council allow the solar panels on the front side of the cottage roof? Will the horse-poo render really stick to the walls? Is the cantilevered platform actually going to solve the family's space issues, or will it plunge them all to the bottom of the picturesque valley? Burke, says Bayvel, can ask these questions, and nobody takes offence. 'All the people on the show love him. They'll tell him anything!' Audiences clearly feel the same: the ABC requested him across its full suite of architecture shows, Bayvel explains, which means Thursday night on the national broadcaster is now something akin to The Anthony Burke Evening. (Even Burke's genial charm, however, may not be enough to enliven the new program, Culture By Design – an extremely cerebral investigation of Asian design without a single concreting calamity or rain delay, made for the ABC's Asian audiences. As Burke says ruefully: 'I do wonder if Australian audiences are going to be watching, saying, 'Hang on, what's going on? Is she pregnant? Did they say: in by Christmas?' ') After half a decade working together, Bayvel concludes that Burke's reputation for niceness remains untarnished. 'These shows are bloody hard work – there are about 70 houses in progress across all three – but I've never heard him utter a cross word to anyone. I've never heard even a little tone. But also, you'd underestimate him at your peril because he's super smart.' His intellectual heft, indeed, has brought an unexpected boost to the programs, even among a group they weren't initially intended for – architects themselves. 'I think him stepping into that role has really elevated it,' says Adam Haddow, president of the Australian Institute of Architects. 'People [in the profession] have such a high level of respect for him.' He can do two things architects appreciate, Haddow goes on. 'He can translate. Architects are renowned for talking architecture talk, and often we don't even know we're talking it. But Anthony can understand challenging and complex issues, and translate them into everyday language, and get the general public involved.' Secondly, 'I think he lives in a really interesting space where he is able to be critical. It can be quite difficult, [from inside] the profession, to ever suggest things could be different, either in a particular building, or industry-wide. But he can be critical, and people listen to him.' This twin appeal, to general viewers and specialists, also gives Burke a chance to steer the broader design conversation in Australia towards the issues he thinks are important: sustainability, alternatives to traditional building techniques and materials, and new ways of visualising how families might live. That's why he does TV, he says: 'the chance to help nudge the conversation gently towards what we should be doing'. The fact is, he says, 'the current housing model in this country is broken – financially, socially, health-wise, sustainably. There are about 10.9 million houses in Australia and on average, about a million are empty every night. And we have the biggest houses in the world, along with America. That's just not going to keep working for us as a model. We need to face up to the fact that life for our kids in a home in Australia is not going to look like the last 70 years – three bedrooms, two bathrooms, carport, flamingo on the front lawn. I think our job right now [as architects] is to help people imagine something different. Whether it's higher-density, or multi-generational, or granny flats, single-room occupancies on existing medium-density suburbs, whatever. And we need to be enabling those things – finding the advantages and interest and beauty in all those options – rather than fighting them.' Central Park, the old Carlton United brewery site on Sydney CBD's southern edge, contains an Edwardian factory building, a Jean Nouvel tower block, and two buildings by three Australian architecture practices – the Phoenix gallery, by Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects, and the dramatic domestic residence, Indigo Slam, by Smart Design Studio. Indigo Slam, you could argue, is domestic only insofar as the Doge's palace in Venice, say, is domestic – when it eventually stops raining, we head for the home William Smart designed for Judith Neilson. Australian 'resi' is a topic Burke is always discussing overseas, he confesses as we walk. 'I don't think the rest of the world knows enough about what's going on here: hand on heart, I think we're doing some of the best work in the world.' With its sweeps and stretches of milky concrete, Indigo Slam is like something designed by Zeus – Olympian, slightly unsettling, apparently disconnected from the world of mere mortals. But no, says Burke, pointing out the water rill running alongside the footpath, the generous front gate. 'Gorgeous,' he says, peering through the rails. 'And look at the bricks behind, the different texture of the slate here, the granite here. There's just so much thoughtful loveliness. What you see when you walk past is that someone has designed it. Someone has thought about all these little things.' And this, it transpires, is what Anthony Burke wants us to remember when it comes to our own houses. Thoughtfulness is not simply the province of those with unlimited means, after all – in fact, it costs absolutely nothing. 'So,' he says, 'if you are faced with the opportunity – which is a massive opportunity – to build your own home, start from the fundamentals. Really interrogate your family, and the way you live.' Whatever else you do, don't fall prey to fashion. 'Do not go to the cover of Vogue Living and say, 'Right. I want that living room,' ' he pleads. 'Your home should not end up being some kind of tasteful catalogue of the season's best. Oh my god, I hate that stuff! The latest stove from Europe or tile from Italy: these things are ephemeral nonsense.' As well as steering clear of fashion, he goes on, we must at all costs avoid 'real estate thinking'. 'We've developed this idea, because of the way real estate operates in this country, that there is only one version of how a house can look,' he says, looking genuinely pained. ' 'Because that's what the market wants.' But what everybody doesn't talk about is that what the market wants is exactly the most mediocre, middle-ground, vanilla idea of a life. That's not a life: it's just a vision of a product. We think, 'Everyone else will want this; when I'm sick of it, someone else will want to buy it.' But what about what we want?' Loading What we should do instead, if we get the chance, is have faith in the power of 'doing the fundamentals better and better and better. We don't need more than that. And that means focusing on things like the way our family is healthy in a home – clean air, no mould, natural light, no VOCs [volatile organic compounds]; the scale of the home being just right for the people living in it; the fact that light is always coming from the north in Australia; that we always have a need for elbow room, but also closeness with the people we love.' And so we finish as we began – with toilets. I know, from a cunning confidential source, that when Burke renovated his own home in Sydney's inner west, he installed only one full bathroom, and one powder room (ie. a loo with no shower). This seems incredibly disciplined, but Burke doesn't hold everybody to such rigorous standards. 'There is definitely a Goldilocks scale,' he concludes. 'And it's not the same for everybody. So I am not advocating a particular number of toilets. But I am saying that things are going to change in the next 20 years, even if we don't want them to, and we have to decide whether we're on board or we're off board.' He spreads his hands wide, taking in toilets everywhere. 'So let's get on board!'

The Nintendo Switch 2 is Out Today: Here's What You Need to Know
The Nintendo Switch 2 is Out Today: Here's What You Need to Know

Man of Many

time2 days ago

  • Man of Many

The Nintendo Switch 2 is Out Today: Here's What You Need to Know

By Dean Blake - News Published: 5 June 2025 Share Copy Link Readtime: 8 min Every product is carefully selected by our editors and experts. If you buy from a link, we may earn a commission. Learn more. For more information on how we test products, click here. The day we've been waiting for is finally here: The Nintendo Switch 2 launches today. After literal years of leaks, months of waiting since the reveal event hosted in April, and a deluge of information being released by the Japanese company what feels like every day, people will today be able to get their hands on the next-gen handheld-hybrid console. I got the chance to test the console out a few months ago, which you can read about here, but if you haven't been able to try out the device at any of the local showings, it honestly looks and feels great. That's not a review, though: those are likely to start dropping in the next few days and weeks. Nintendo has made the very-Nintendo decision to send out review consoles this week, rather than ahead of time, due to the fact the console will need a firmware update to operate. Does this mean the console won't work at all without being able to connect to the internet at least once? We honestly don't know yet. We'll be getting a console and a few games care of Nintendo this week, and getting you some honest thoughts and feedback on the console will be my personal highest priority. For now though, let's review (ha) what the console is delivering in terms of upgrades over the original system, the games you can grab on day one, as well as where you can even buy this thing. 'Mario Kart World' on Nintendo Switch 2 | Image: Dean Blake/Man of Many How Powerful is the Nintendo Switch 2? While the Switch 2's reveal event was pretty light on technical details, we've since gotten quite a bit more clarity on exactly what is powering Nintendo's next-gen efforts. Here's what we know, care of the wonderful people over at Digital Foundry for the meaty tech specs. Nintendo Switch 2 Nintendo Switch 1 (OLED Model) Price AUD$699 (console only) AUD$769 (w/ Mario Kart World) AUD$539 Screen 7.9' 1080p LCD screen 279 pixels-per-inch Up to 120hz refresh rate HDR capable 10-point multi touch 7' 720p OLED screen 210 pixels-per-inch Up to 60hz refresh rate 10-point multi touch GPU Nvidia custom Ampere 1007MHz (docked), 561MHz (mobile), Max 1.4GHz Nvidia custom Tegra X1 768MHz (docked), 460MHz (mobile), Max 921MHz CPU 8x ARM Cortex A78C 998MHz (docked), 1101MHz mobile, Max 1.7GHz 1536 CUDA Cores 4x ARM Cortex A57 1020 MHz (docked and mobile), Max 1.785GHz 256 CUDA cores Memory 12GB LPDDR5 RAM 4GB LPDDR4 RAM Battery 5220mAh Approximately 2-6 hours playtime Approximately 3 hours to charge to full 4310mAh Approximately 4.5-9 hours playtime Approximately 3 hours to charge to full Built-in Storage 256GB 64GB Ports Game Card Slot 2 USB-C ports 4-pole stereo 3.5mm audio jack microSD Express card slot Game Card Slot 1 USB-C port 4-pole stereo 3.5mm audio jack microSD card slot Dimensions 166mm x 272mm x 13.9mm Approximately 401 grams 102mm x 242mm x 13.9mm Approximately 320 grams What's included – Switch 2 Console – Joy-Con 2 controllers (L+R) – Joy-Con 2 Grip – Joy-Con 2 Straps – Nintendo Switch 2 Dock – Ultra High-Speed HDMI Cable – Nintendo Switch 2 AC Adapter – USB-C Charging Cable – Mario Kart World Download Code (in bundle) – Switch OLED Console – Joy-Con controllers (L+R) – Joy-Con Grip – Joy-Con Straps – Nintendo Switch Dock – HDMI Cable – Nintendo Switch AC Adapter – USB-C Charging Cable – Pack-in Game (in bundles) Scroll horizontally to view full table What does any of that mean? Well, it means many of the rumours, some of which go back to 2021, were spot on, and also that the Switch 2 is going to outclass the original Switch by a country mile. In terms of power, the Switch 2 is already showing off some big power gains on even comparable and competitive hardware, such as Valve's Steam Deck, though I doubt it'll outclass some of the higher-end (and far more expensive) PC handhelds, such as the Lenovo Legion Go or the AyaNeo Kun, in terms of raw power. It is a much smaller, more portable device than any of those, though, and has the benefit of the Nintendo brand to pull it to success. Yes, the Steam Deck is a very popular console that has sold an estimated 4 million units since its launch in 2022, but compare that to the Switch 1's meteoric 150 million units sold since 2017 and you'll start to see how wide the sales gulf is. We're already seeing lines around the block for the Switch 2's launch, so it's fair to expect the Switch 2 to do well. What's particularly impressive about the new system is the screen: it's a pretty sizeable bump up in multiple ways. Obviously, it's bigger, but it's also denser: the Switch 2 features 279 pixels-per-inch, which will go a long way in making that larger 7.9' screen pop, especially with the increase in resolution from 720p on the OG Switch to 1080p. Plus, it's capable of hitting 120Hz, which is nothing to sneeze at. The Switch OLED plays host to a 60Hz screen, the Steam Deck OLED 90Hz, while the ROG Ally X also sits at 120Hz. Only the Lenovo Legion Go beats the pack with a 144Hz screen, but that console is about twice as thick, heavy, and expensive as the Nintendo Switch 2. Well all know Nintendo consoles tend to sell off the back of solid software, though, so let's take a look at what's coming to the Switch 2. Confirmed Switch 2 Games When it comes to exciting launch line-ups, Nintendo really hit it out of the park with the original Switch, which launched with an upgraded version of the now legendary Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. This time around, for the Switch 2, Nintendo is giving us a brand new Mario Kart game in Mario Kart World. While the game may not tickle the fancy of the most hardcore gamers, it's worth remembering that Mario Kart 8, which launched across the WiiU and the Switch with a Deluxe port, are considered the fourth best selling game of all time. If that's not to your taste, though, there's plenty of other options there for you. Beyond being able to play compatible Switch 1 games and the addition of a few Gamecube games to the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack service, here's a full list of everything confirmed to be coming to the Switch 2 this year. Title Release Date Mario Kart World 5 June, 2025 Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition 5 June, 2025 Fortnite 5 June, 2025 Street Fighter 6 5 June, 2025 Split Fiction 5 June, 2025 Yakuza 0: Director's Cut 5 June, 2025 The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 5 June, 2025 The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 5 June, 2025 Arcade Archives 2: Ridge Racer 5 June, 2025 Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster 5 June, 2025 Civilisation VII 5 June, 2025 Deltarune 5 June, 2025 Fantasy Lift i: The Girl Who Steals Time – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 5 June, 2025 Fast Fusion 5 June, 2025 Hitman: World of Assassination – Signature Edition 5 June, 2025 Hogwarts Legacy 5 June, 2025 Kunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddess 5 June, 2025 Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour 5 June, 2025 Nobunaga's Ambition: Awakening Complete Edition 5 June, 2025 Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S 5 June, 2025 Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 5 June, 2025 Shine Post: Be Your Idol! 5 June, 2025 Sonic X Shadow Generations 5 June, 2025 Suikoden I & II HD Remaster: Gate Rune and Dunan Unification Wars 5 June, 2025 Survival Kids 5 June, 2025 Raidou Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army 19 June, 2025 Tamagotchi Plaza – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 27 June, 2025 Tony Hawks Pro Skater 3 + 4 11 July, 2025 Donkey Kong Bananza 17 July, 2025 Shadow Labyrinth – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 18 July, 2025 Super Mario Party Jamboree – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition + Jamboree TV 24 July, 2025 No Sleep for Kaname Date – From AI: The Somnium Files 25 July, 2025 Wild Hearts S 25 July, 2025 Ys X: Proud Nordics 31 July, 2025 Madden NFL 26 14 August, 2025 Inazuma Eleven: Victory Road 21 August, 2025 Story of Seasons: Grand Bazaar – Nintendo Switch 2 Editions 27 August, 2025 Kirby and the Forgotten Land – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition + Star-Crossed World 28 August, 2025 Star Wars Outlaws 4 September, 2025 Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion 5 September, 2025 Borderlands 4 12 September, 2025 Pokemon Legends: Z-A -Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 16 October, 2025 Dragon Quest I & II HD-2D Remake 30 October, 2025 AFL 26 2025 Drag x Drive 2025 Elden Ring: Tarnished Edition 2025 FUR Squadron Phoenix 2025 Goodnight Universe 2025 Hades II 2025 Hollow Knight: Silksong 2025 Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment 2025 Kirby Air RIders 2025 Marvel Cosmic Invasion 2025 Metroid Prime 4: Beyond – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition 2025 Mouse Work 2025 Obakeidoro 2: Chase & Seek 2025 Professor Layton and the New World of Steam 2025 Reanimal 2025 Two Point Museum 2025 Witchbrook 2025 Yooka-Replaylee 2025 Scroll horizontally to view full table That is quite a bit, and there's already more in the works for 2026—such as From Software's The Duskbloods, a PvPvE souls-style game somehow echoing Bloodborne, Sekiro, Nioh, and The Surge all at once. There'll definitely be more games announced as the weeks and months roll on, so if your favourite Nintendo series isn't represented just yet, there's still hope. New Fire Emblem or Legend of Zelda game, please? Donkey Kong Bonanza | Image: Nintendo Where can you buy the Nintendo Switch 2 In all honesty, it's not clear yet which retailers will have stock left over after pre-orders have been filled. There have been reports across social media of people's pre-orders being cancelled by retailers, which tends to mean they took more pre-orders than Nintendo sent consoles, and could mean we're looking at a lower stock volume at retailers than anticipated and a 'sold out' situation. However, if you want to try your luck, you can try purchase the Switch 2 from any major electronics or games store and hope they restock quickly. God speed.

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