Your search returned 53 results
By Page Type
By Tag
- All
- fish (935)
- blog (700)
- fishes of sydney harbour (401)
- Blog (237)
- First Nations (235)
- AMRI (162)
- archives (156)
- insect (126)
- Ichthyology (121)
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (119)
- Fish (91)
- Anthropology (89)
- International collections (81)
- podcast (81)
- wildlife of sydney (79)
- Labridae (77)
- Eureka Prizes (73)
- climate change (72)
- frog (72)
- staff (68)
- geoscience (63)
- Mollusca (60)
- history (58)
- Indonesia (56)
- AMplify (54)
- people (53)
- photography (53)
- shark (53)
- earth sciences (50)
- exhibition (50)
- past exhibitions (50)
- bird (48)
- Gobiidae (45)
- Pomacentridae (44)
- exhibitions (44)
- Serranidae (42)
- death (42)
- lifelong learning (42)
- past exhibition (41)
- Bali (40)
- Earth and Environmental Science (40)
- Syngnathidae (40)
- dangerous australians (40)
- fossils (40)
- Cephalopoda (39)
- invertebrate guide (39)
- Chaetodontidae (38)
- science (38)
- staff profile (38)
- Digivol (37)
-
Point and shoot #1 - Seeing is Believing
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/point-and-shoot-1-seeing-is-believing/Museum photographers Carl Bento and James King on the power and practice of photography. This week, seeing is believing...
-
Photography and filming
https://australian.museum/about/organisation/media-centre/photography-filming/Video and flash photography are permitted in all galleries except Westpac Long Gallery and First Australians galleries.
-
Hide and Seek wins Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year competition in 2018
https://australian.museum/about/organisation/media-centre/hide-and-seek-wins-australian-geographic-nature-photographer-of-the-year-competition-in-2018/A mesmerising image of a school of fish fleeing from predators, ‘Hide and Seek’ by Malaysia-based, British photographer, has won the 2018 Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year.
-
Capturing Nature: Early photography at the Australian Museum 1857 – 1893
https://australian.museum/about/organisation/media-centre/capturing-nature/New exhibition at the Australian Museum reveals Australia’s earliest scientific photography from 1857 to 1893.
-
Frank Hurley in Papua
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/pacific-collection/photographic/frank-hurley-in-papua/Frank Hurley's artistic legacy from a career spanning nearly 60 years places him among the greatest Australian photographers of the twentieth century. His images of Papua from the 1920s are a significant archive of the country's history.
-
Mervyn Bishop
https://australian.museum/learn/first-nations/sydney-elders/mervyn-bishop/The Sydney Elders portrait collection was taken by renowned Aboriginal photographer, Mervyn Bishop.
-
Brewarrina Boy
https://australian.museum/learn/first-nations/sydney-elders/brewarrina-boy/For many Indigenous artists, to take up photography as an art form was often a conscious move to counter this history of the medium.
-
Malpractice
https://australian.museum/learn/first-nations/unfinished-business/unfinished-business-malpractice/You can’t take people’s rights away. This is our rights and our self-worth, our integrity, that people are knocking down.
-
Honorary Pom
https://australian.museum/learn/first-nations/unfinished-business/unfinished-business-honorary-pom/They could tell you how many sheep there were in Australia, they could tell you how many cattle. Yet they couldn’t tell you how many Aboriginals there were, because we weren’t allowed to vote.
-
Japanangka
https://australian.museum/learn/first-nations/unfinished-business/unfinished-business-japanangka/Just because we are black they look at us as one, and we don’t see it. We got our own areas to abide by the laws.
-
Jurassic World by Brickman
Tickets on sale now.
Open until 17 July. -
200 Treasures of the Australian Museum
Permanent exhibition
Open daily
10am - 5pm -
School programs and excursions
Virtual excursions
Educator-led tours