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  • 2 months ago | watoday.com.au | Liam Pieper |Cameron Woodhead

    Exponential Interactive, Inc d/b/a VDX.tvCookie duration: 90 (days). Data collected and processed: IP addresses, Device identifiers, Probabilistic identifiers, Browsing and interaction data, Non-precise location data, Users’ profiles, Privacy choicesmoreCookie duration resets each session. View details | Privacy policyConsentCookie duration: 365 (days).

  • 2 months ago | theage.com.au | Liam Pieper |Cameron Woodhead

    By Liam Pieper and Cameron Woodhead January 29, 2025 — 1.06pm, register or subscribe to save articles for later. Save articles for laterAdd articles to your saved list and come back to them any time.

  • Mar 29, 2024 | theage.com.au | Liam Pieper

    By Liam Pieper March 30, 2024 — 12.00am, register or subscribe to save articles for later. Save articles for laterAdd articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. I remember the first time I saw it, on an idle Tuesday afternoon at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) when I was killing time between lectures as a uni student with depression and literary pretensions. This, incidentally, is the optimal possible situation to first lay eyes on the Sad Sheep. Anguish (c.

  • Mar 29, 2024 | smh.com.au | Liam Pieper

    I remember the first time I saw it, on an idle Tuesday afternoon at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) when I was killing time between lectures as a uni student with depression and literary pretensions. This, incidentally, is the optimal possible situation to first lay eyes on the Sad Sheep. I was transfixed by the painting and could not have taken another step if I tried. My mind, which moments ago had been a roiling mess of anxiety and Bright Eyes lyrics, grew still.

  • Mar 14, 2024 | killyourdarlings.com.au | Liam Pieper

    The night of his cancellation, Oli does not sleep. He is unable to stop reading the posts calling for him to be stripped of prizes, fellowships, his honorary doctorate. That he could handle; it was nothing new, there had always been critics. Since Neanderthals first started carving tchotchkes out of their enemies’ skulls, there had been creatives and a class dedicated to hating them.

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