New ‘Badu Gili’ Projection Debuts At Sydney Opera House, Themed ‘Healing Spirit’

The 5th chapter of the Badu Gili (‘Water Light’) projection series at the Sydney Opera House debuted just over a month ago, uniting First Nations artists from Australia & Brazil in a new projection themed Healing Spirit.

The artists from Australia are late Bidjigal elder, Aunty Esme Timbery & 2 of her children, Marilyn Russell and Steven Russell while the artist from Brazil is Joseca Mokahesi Yanomami of the Yanomami people, the Amazon basin’s largest Indigenous group.

His artwork is drawings of the remote Yanomami Forest landscapes & spirits while Marilyn & Aunty Esme’s artwork is delicate shellwork with Steven’s being prints & weavings.

Their artworks have been combined & animated by VANDAL, well known for their work on Sydney New Year’s Eve, with a soundscape by James Henry, bringing together Indigenous artists from Bidjigal (Australia) and Yanomami (the Amazon’s largest Indigenous group) for the first time on Australia’s most iconic canvas.

The final projection explores rituals & the bonds of cultural and familial connection forged through art and storytelling.

Opening against an ocean backdrop, the 1st section is a tribute to the life and work of Aunty Esme Timbery by her children. Exploring the deep spiritual connection between a mother, her family & their Country, it represents the enduring passage of artistic practice across generations.

The final section transitions to the forests and rivers of the Yanomami with butterflies, jaguars and the songs of its people, where a shamanic curing ceremony is depicted. The ceremony is a ritual performed when community members fall ill to call upon good spirits to ward off the bad. Illuminating the relationship between the metaphysical and natural worlds, it offers a glimpse into Yanomami cosmology.

Badu Gili: Healing Spirit is held for 6 minutes at the eastern Bennelong (smaller) sails 5 times each night from sunset.

It launched on the 13th of December last year with Badu Gili: LIVE – a night of live music & food.

Badu Gili: Healing Spirit marks the 2nd year of a creative partnership between the Sydney Opera House, & the Cartier Foundation For Contemporary Art.

Apart from the first 2 “chapters” of Badu Gili (debuting in 2017 & 2018), which was a rotating series of artworks, subsequent chapters have been themed, Wonder Woman (2021) & had narratives added, Celestial (2023).

Since Badu Gili’s beginnings in 2017, we’ve welcomed over 650,000 visitors on-site & nearly 3 million online to enjoy this free cultural experience showcasing the work of artists from different corners of the globe, whose creations reflect a deep, generational connection to their respective lands.

Jade McKellar, Sydney Opera House Chief Customer Officer

Healing Spirit is a journey of connectivity & caring through culture. From the fresh water deep in the Amazon rainforest to the crashing saltwater waves at La Perouse, we are all connected. I believe Badu Gili showcases the absolute best of Indigenous art in a growing movement recognising the way in which our stories, art & culture continue to resonate in the most impactful of ways.

Tony Albert, Cartier Foundation For Contemporary Art First Nations Curatorial Fellow

As a family we are so proud & grateful for this opportunity to shine a spotlight on Mum, known as Aunty Esme to the broader community. She taught us the beauty of our heritage & shared with us her incredible talent for shellwork. For us, Badu Gili represents the pinnacle of her artistic career & honours her strength, creativity and the way she continues to inspire us every day. This project brings her children, grandchildren & great grandchildren pride & joy in our culture. We love Mum deeply & we are forever blessed to walk in her footsteps.

Statement Of Marilyn & Steven Russell, Artists & Children of Aunty Esme Timbery

I’m happy to be a part of Badu Gili & excited to be coming to Australia to share my drawings and the stories of the Yanomami people. As Indigenous people we will look each other in the face, get to know one another & share this special work with the community.

Joseca Mokahesi Yanomami, Artist

James P. Simon To Design ‘Dawn Reflection’ In 2025, Artwork Named ‘River Life’

Australia Day In Sydney has revealed James P. Simon has designed this year’s Dawn Reflection projection in consultation with the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council with a work titled River Life.

Born in Wellington, near Dubbo NSW, he belongs to the Wiradjuri – Biripi people & has painted all his life. He grew up around Newtown and Redfern in Sydney, where he has seen many changes over the last 50 years.

Although he completed a 6-month art course, James is largely self-taught continuing to develop his own distinctive style, which mainly involves oils. In 1987, he was awarded a grant from the Aboriginal Arts Council.

His work, which extensively features commissions, is found in many collections, which has been included in lots of exhibitions & publications. His favourite artists are Picasso, Tom Roberts, Salvador Dali & Albert Namatjira.

At the end of this article is a statement from James P. Simon about River Life.

Australia Day In Sydney‘s Dawn Reflection is held at 5:20am Australian Eastern Daylight Time on the 26th of January on the western sails of the Sydney Opera House.

For Aboriginal people, fishing anywhere on Country, whether it is on the ocean beaches or coastal estuaries or inland rivers & lakes, it has always been about more than simply collecting food. We have this connection to water, with spirit, culture, songlines, our dreaming.

Waterways also form tribal boundaries. Waterways are critical to the culture & wellbeing of Aboriginal communities. Water provides food, medicine, tools, kinship, connection, recreation, stories, songlines & healing. It can be deeply spiritual. A chance for people to connect with their ancestors.

Water is seen as a living entity with its own spirit & it is believed that we have a responsibility to protect and care for it. For our peoples, water is not just a commodity but a language, a community & a source of knowledge and law.

Our Country encompasses land, water, sea and sky & the connections between them. Cultural flows are essential for Our People to continue their spiritual relationship with Country.

James P. Simon, ‘Dawn Reflection’ 2025 – ‘River Life’ Artist

‘Australia Day Live!’ Concert Returns To Its’ Usual Finish Time Of 9:30PM

The Australia Day LIVE! concert has returned to its usual finish time of 9:30pm Australian Eastern Daylight Time according to the event’s website.

The main concert is a television event featuring musical performances of Australian songs from Australian artists. Held from the Southern Forecourt of the Sydney Opera House, the concert is coordinated with fireworks from Circular Quay, city buildings & the Sydney Opera House, the latter also featuring projection mapping while the Sydney Harbour Bridge hosts a light show. Aquatic entertainment & sometimes aerial displays feature around Circular Quay as well, which is rounded out by pre-recorded television packages and live interviews that fill in the remainder of the time of the concert. Sometimes extra performances from other Circular Quay foreshore locations are also held.

While free tickets for the seated area are now sold out, you can still sign up to the waitlist. There is also a competition that closes at 5pm today (16th of January). Also, access to the rest of Circular Quay is not ticketed on the evening so you can watch the fireworks & other aquatic entertainment from there with its capacity of 55,000!

The news comes after Australia Day In Sydney held their media launch yesterday revealing SHEPPARD, Paulini, William Barton, Emma Pask, Ben Lee, James Morrison, Dragon, the New South Wales (NSW) Public Schools Choir, Clarissa Spata & Sync Or Swim will star in a “revitalised” concert with a new stage & the introduction of a focus on dance, which Burn The Floor will provide with their reinvention of ballroom dancing.

Other musicians to feature include Junkyard Beats, Véronique Serret, Cameron Leon, Rruwan Maymuru, Djakapurra Munyarryun, Australian Guitar QuartetCianna & Olivia, David Pritchard Blunt (musical director) & the Australian Pops Orchestra while other dancers to feature include Sundowners & Burrundi Dance Theatre For Performing Arts.

Australia Day LIVE! 2025 will be held at 7:30pm AEDT on the 26th of January, televised on Australian Broadcasting Corporation Television & iView.

Australia Day LIVE! “Revitalised” With New Stage & Dance Focus As Concert Artists Announced For 2025

SHEPPARD, Paulini, William Barton, Emma Pask, Ben Lee, James Morrison, Dragon, the New South Wales (NSW) Public Schools Choir, Burn The Floor, Clarissa Spata & Sync Or Swim will star in a “revitalised” Australia Day LIVE! concert in 2025 on the Southern Forecourt of the Sydney Opera House with a new stage & the introduction of a focus on dance.

Sync Or Swim are a rock band created through the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Television (ABC TV) series, Headliners, whose members all having a lived experience of disability. Clarissa Spata is a soprano while Burn The Floor are dancers who have reinvented ballroom dancing globally & their performance will mark the introduction of dance as a new focus of the concert, which previously focused solely on music, apart from the Circular Quay activities. This is part of why the concert has been “revitalised”. The other reason is because a new innovative stage design will be introduced.

The NSW Public Schools Choir will perform from the Monumental Steps.

It was also announced the concert will, once again, be hosted by Australia Day In Sydney creative director, John Foreman with Jeremy Fernandez & for the 1st time, ABC Classic Breakfast host, Megan Burslem.

Other musicians to feature include Junkyard Beats, Véronique Serret, Cameron Leon, Rruwan Maymuru, Djakapurra Munyarryun, Australian Guitar Quartet, Cianna & Olivia, David Pritchard Blunt (musical director) & the Australian Pops Orchestra while other dancers to feature include Sundowners & Burrundi Dance Theatre For Performing Arts.

Free tickets for Australia Day LIVE! are available here from 10am Australian Eastern Daylight Time, today (Wednesday the 15th of January). They are expected to sell out quickly as the capacity is just in the thousands.

If you miss out on a ticket, you can still watch the fireworks, projections, lights, aerial & on-water action from Circular Quay, with its capacity of 55,000.

For those who are unable to make it to Circular Quay, Australia Day LIVE! will be broadcast live on ABC TV & iView from 7:30pm.

Meanwhile, during Harbourfest‘s Ferrython, representatives from NSW Police, Fire and Rescue NSW, Ambulance NSW & the NSW State Emergency Service will this year be onboard the 4 ferries, probably an emergency agency per ferry for extra competition!

Free tickets for Ferrython are available here from 10am Australian Eastern Daylight Time, today (Wednesday the 15th of January). They are expected to sell out quickly as the capacity is just in the thousands.

Australia Day In Sydney is held on the 26th of January.

Sydney locals & visitors want to spend Australia Day in a way that’s meaningful to them. This program allows them to do just that. The other great thing about this program is that it’s all free so families dealing with the cost-of-living crisis can have a fun & meaningful day out without blowing the budget.

John Graham, NSW Tourism & Jobs Minister

A deep respect for Aboriginal culture is infused into everything that we undertake as part of our programming for Australia Day In Sydney & we’re committed to continually evolving the program to ensure it is appropriate, respectful and reflects modern Australia.

Yvonne Weldon, Australia Day Council Of NSW Chair

The line-up this year is the best yet featuring iconic Australian band Dragon, Ben Lee, Paulini & SHEPPARD. We look forward to seeing Circular Quay & the Sydney Opera House forecourt come alive with tens of thousands joining together, sharing the cultural landscape, enjoying this unforgettable Australia Day LIVE concert & epic fireworks display.

William Barton, ‘Australia Day LIVE!’ Co-Creative Director

‘Vivid Sydney’ 2025 – ‘Dream’ Local Business Program Applications Now Open!

Since the 2nd of December 2024, applications have been open for Vivid Sydney 2025 – Dream‘s local business program!

There are 3 tiers:

  1. Business showcase
  2. Lights On Sydney Harbour
  3. Light Up My Building

Tier 1 is only open to businesses that operate between 6pm & 11pm & that operate within this area:

Vivid Sydney Local Business Program Tier 1 Area
Image: Vivid Sydney

Lights On Sydney Harbour sees a maximum of 40 cruise businesses (priority given to ones who operate on more Vivid nights), at their own cost, install a shoe-box sized 4th generation (4G) modem powered with a standard Australian mains connection & good 4G reception securely on their vessel. A reputable and qualified lighting supplier is then procured & financed to develop & deliver an external vessel static wash lighting treatment up to 160LBG pixels utilising RGB or RGBW colour mixing, whose design is approved by Vivid Sydney & who then provide the professional installation of a lighting controller box.

Light Up My Building sees businesses illuminating their prominent buildings at their own cost, using free lighting controllers provided by Destination New South Wales.

If successful, Vivid Sydney will, to their audience promote your business, which will receive access to Vivid Sydney Local Business Program assets including a digital toolkit & professionally installed A2 window decals (150 Tier 1 businesses max) & 1 metre diameter height adjustable (max 1.8 metres) transparent round pre-programmed light emitting diode screen (60 Tier 1 businesses max), the power of which is supplied by the business. The decals & screen will be given preference to businesses on or near the Vivid Light Walk with suitable windows & prominent, highly visible screen installation locations respectively.

Businesses can only apply for 1 tier. An information webinar will be held in February with application evaluations being made from March.

Applications can be made here until 5pm AEST on Friday the 11th of April 2025. All applicants will be notified of their application outcome by the next working week. Being successful in an application for a food business does not mean you are part of Vivid Food. Expressions of interest to be part of Vivid Food closed on the 27th of September last year.

Vivid Sydney 2025 – Dream is to be held between Friday the 23rd of May & Saturday the 14th of June.

Win A Trip To ‘Australia Day In Sydney’ 2025!

Australia Day In Sydney is giving you the chance to win a trip to their 2025 edition, valued at AUD$8000, over 2 nights with 3 other guests of your choice.

The prize includes:

To enter, you need to tell them in 25 English words or less what is your ‘Only In Australia’ moment as well as provide your 1st & last name, e-mail address, mobile phone number, birth date and postcode & read and accept the terms & conditions & Destination New South Wales’ (NSW) privacy policy. You must be 18 or over to enter.

You must also agree to receive marketing communications from Destination NSW & confirm you can travel to Sydney on Saturday the 25th of January 2025.

The competition opened at 9am Australian Eastern Daylight Time (AEDT) on the 8th of January & closes at 5pm AEDT on Thursday the 16th of January.

The most enthusiastic, creative & original entry will win.

Click here to enter.

Winners will be announced on Australia Day In Sydney’s Facebook & Instagram pages on the 17th of January.

Destination NSW To Coordinate ‘Australia Day In Sydney’ As NSW Australia Day Council Indigenous-Majority For 1st Time Ever

The 2025 & any future editions of Australia Day In Sydney will be coordinated by Destination New South Wales (NSW) with the advice of the Australia Day Council of NSW, which has reduced in membership from 6 members to just 3 in the past few months, leading to the 1st ever Indigenous-majority Council.

Destination NSW is the NSW Government’s tourism & major events agency. They already have produced the signature Australia Day In Sydney event, Australia Day LIVE! since 2016 as well as flagship Sydney Spectacular, Vivid Sydney, which they have owned & managed as well since the agency’s inception in 2011.

The NSW Government’s Premier’s Department was the former coordinator of Australia Day In Sydney since 2013.

Destination NSW will work in collaboration & with the advice of the Australia Day Council Of NSW to coordinate the Sydney events, just as the Premier’s Department did.

The Australia Day Council of NSW was established by the NSW Government in 1981 & was the sole coordinator until 2013 before taking on a purely advisory role. In 2024, the Council was reduced from 6 members to just 3 in a single go sometime since mid-October last year, after having 7 members last edition. As far as we can tell, the largest the Council ever got was a peak of 18 members between 2002 & 2003. It has slowly reduced in size since, stabilising at around 14 members in the early 2010’s roughly when Barry O’Farrell was NSW Premier, before resuming the decline. This current decline is on par with recent declines.

Councillors were appointed by the NSW Premier, currently Chris Minns. In the past month, appointments and also ultimately the day’s coordination are now the NSW Minister For Jobs & Tourism’s responsibility. The current holder of that role is John Graham.

1 councillor we can confirm resigned. The other 2 including the former chair advised the NSW Government that they weren’t seeking reappointment. Australia Day In Sydney has confirmed new Council members will be announced soon with the Council remaining committed to representing the diverse interests of the community.

The 3 remaining councillors are Yvonne Weldon in the role as chair (previously deputy chair since 2020) & Greg Daniel and Faye McMillan. Yvonne Weldon & Faye McMillian are Indigenous members, meaning this is the 1st ever Indigenous-majority Council by 2-1.

Yvonne Weldon is well known as the Deputy Chairperson of the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council, featuring prominently at Sydney New Year’s Eve & Australia Day In Sydney events in that role. She is also a City Of Sydney councillor. Maintaining strong ties to her homelands of Cowra & the Riverina areas of NSW, she is a proud Wiradjuri woman whilst also keeping a strong passion for improving everyone’s lives through health, education, research, evaluation and the rights of children and Aboriginal people, the latter whose communities she is committed to change positively. She has been on the Australia Day Council Of NSW since 2019.

Greg Daniel is the National Practice Leader for SR7, which he founded in 2008. It is widely recognised as Australia’s leading social media intelligence and research firm & became a division of KPMG in 2014. He has been on the Australia Day Council of NSW since 2012.

Faye McMillan is Australia’s first registered Aboriginal pharmacist. She is a Doctor Of Health Science & is the director of the Djirruwang Program at Charles Sturt University. She seeks to use her own lived experiences to make a difference & share the transformative opportunities that education can provide by researching into nation building, mental health and Indigenous female leaders. She has been on the Australia Day Council Of NSW since 2019.

Above the Australia Day Council of NSW, which coordinates Sydney & NSW events, is the National Australia Day Council, who coordinates over all of Australia. They currently have a council of 9 people, chaired by Australia Day In Sydney creative director, John Foreman, all appointed by the Australian Prime Minister, currently Anthony Albanese. 3 members are Indigenous.

Australia Day In Sydney, as it has always been, is not a single event but rather an umbrella term for multiple independent events, all coordinated by Destination NSW on the advice of the Australia Day Council of NSW. Sydney Spectaculars recognises Australia Day LIVE! (since 2019), Dawn Reflection (since 2021) & Harbourfest (since 2022 in various forms) as the main events in Sydney under that umbrella term.

The program of Sydney events for the 2025 edition will be unveiled within the next week with all 3 events mentioned in the previous sentence already confirmed as returning.

Australia Day In Sydney 2025 is held on the 26th of January.

Opinion

Whilst the Australia Day Council of NSW would still have significant influence on what is on the Sydney event program, it would not be a surprise if the focus of the day gradually shifts over the years from a celebration of Australia to a promotion of Sydney. The fact the Premier’s Department is no longer coordinating the Sydney events probably signals that the Premier Of NSW is beginning a subtle transition away from the controversial date, which for the Indigenous people of the country is one that marks invasion, which also commenced in the place now known as Sydney. It’s a symbolic gesturing that the Premier is wiping his hands clean of organising Australia Day around NSW, at least on the current date, leaving it to a Minister.

This minister, the Minister For Jobs & Tourism, will have to be very cautious that if Destination NSW takes its tourism marketing role to heart with the Sydney event program that they do not go overboard & try to present such a sparkling rosy image of Sydney that they do not, whether accidentally or deliberately, acknowledge what happened to the Indigenous people from that date in 1788. Australia Day In Sydney isn’t an event program that potential international tourists would be interested in but potential domestic tourists from around Australia to NSW would be so there would still be cause to attempt marketing but Australians should already know enough history to know that Sydney on that date in 1788 wasn’t one without consequence and make their future travel plans accordingly & even if they know just enough, researching the history in more depth, particularly from an Indigenous perspective, would help in fulfilling the Indigenous peoples’ wish for them to have the full truth told to them about that date & the consequences of that date’s events until the present day including & especially on the 26th of January.

Notable is the fact it is now the 1st Indigenous-majority Council. This should be a strong counter to any spick & sparkle tourism marketing from Destination NSW but it raises questions of the future of the day in New South Wales. It sends a strong signal that Australia Day in New South Wales & Sydney, the birthplace of that anniversary, is currently no longer a day to be celebrated. As the reduced Council settles in with an Indigenous majority, it is possible that from the next edition, a stronger transition will begin, though no doubt still slowly and subtly to avoid media-driven controversies, from a day of celebration to a day of mourning. After the transition finishes, it would be a fine guess that the only events on the program would be Dawn Reflection, WugulOra Morning Ceremony & the Yabun Festival with a stronger focus on the consequences of the landing at Sydney Cove on 26 January 1788. No doubt it wouldn’t be called Australia Day by then. Day Of Mourning is the likeliest with its reference back to 1938. Invasion/Survival Day, whilst still being used by the Indigenous community, wouldn’t resonate as much with non-Indigenous people. If this happened, Sydney Spectaculars would review giving Dawn Reflection a flagship Sydney Spectacular status given the day would formally transition from celebration to mourning in NSW.

This leads to the final question, with the states/territories holding the power to determine public holidays, will the NSW Government mark a new date for Australia Day & rename the current Australia Day to Day Of Mourning, treating it akin to ANZAC Day? After all, if the purpose of a Council is to, well, council – a 2-1 Indigenous majority on the Australia Day Council Of NSW suggests a renaming/dating recommendation could be made.

Back when we designated Australia Day LIVE! a flagship Sydney Spectacular in 2019, we discussed the date & its implications for the future. Firstly, any date between the 20th January & 7th February would be ruled out as the latter is the date the colony of NSW was formally created while the former is when the 1st Fleet was in visual sight from land. Changing the date to these dates just brings everyone back to square one.

Secondly, possible new dates for Australia Day: January the 1st. It was when the colonies federated in 1901 to form Australia. Whilst there is precedent for celebrations on that date, notably the Centenary Of Federation in 2001, it is right after a big night for Australians – New Year’s Eve plus it is an existing public holiday, New Year’s Day. Whilst this would be an improvement in terms of controversy, it wouldn’t solve the problem. The Indigenous population did not have full citizen/subject rights until the late 1960’s so this date just represents the consequences Europeans brought to them as becoming more permanent as 6 colonies combined into 1 federated Commonwealth.

Next, there is the 3rd of March 1986. The date the Australia Act 1986 commenced, which granted Australia the complete right to legislate without needing the United Kingdom. It began at precisely 4pm Australian Eastern Daylight Time. Adding this date would give Australians an extra public holiday. This date is all but a complete improvement on January the 1st. The fact that the Monarch Of Australia is currently King Charles III is the only damper on this date.

The best date though is actually one that we do not know the date of yet – the day when formal Australian recognition of the Indigenous culture & reconciliation between the Indigenous peoples and Australia occurs. This still has to be realised to this day especially after 2023’s referendum. It should be pointed that whilst the United Kingdom and since 1986, Australia, always considered the Indigenous population as one of them (that is, British subjects or Australian citizens, despite the Indigenous population not having full citizen/subject rights until the late 1960’s), the Indigenous peoples were & are still ‘separate’ despite living in the same locations or sharing multiple ‘citizenships’ & cultures. Reconciliation is the formal act of uniting our peoples – most obviously, by a treaty. The day that happens a new national day will be born. Another date that would add an extra public holiday. It may even have a new name entirely…

…as long as it doesn’t happen between the 20th of January and the 7th of February and/or on an existing public holiday.

‘Airshows Downunder Shellharbour’ 2026 Dates Confirmed

Airshows Downunder Shellharbour dates for their 2026 edition have been confirmed.

The dates are Friday 13th of March to Sunday the 15th of March.

It is likely the Friday will be a schools & careers open day while the weekend will be the main air show days, as has been the case in recent years.

Held every 2 years, Airshows Downunder Shellharbour features a flying program, mostly of historic aircraft, both civilian & military, whilst modern Royal Australian Air Force aircraft also conduct handling displays. To top it off, Australia’s best aerobatics pilots showcase their skills in jaw-dropping displays full of stunt manoeuvres. There may also be a German World War 2 air raid sometime throughout the day.

Outside of the flying program, there are carnival rides, classic vehicles, markets, civilian & military exhibitors, helicopter joy flights, a drone racing tournament & static aircraft displays.

Located at Shellharbour Airport, home to the Historic Aircraft Restoration Society Museum, this flagship Sydney Spectacular, the only one actually fully not in Sydney, showcases a neat summary of the world’s aviation history in a single day, all within half an hour’s distance of locations of significant events in aviation history by Lawrence Hargrave & Sir Charles Kingsford Smith.

‘Australia Day Live!’ Concert Extended By An Hour To Finish At 10:30PM

The Australia Day LIVE! concert has a new finish time of 10:30pm Australian Eastern Daylight Time – an hour longer than recent previous editions – according to the event’s website.

As far as we are aware, this excludes the hour-long pre-show entertainment portion of the program, which begins normally at 6:30pm AEDT.

The main concert is a television event featuring musical performances of Australian songs from Australian artists. Held from the Southern Forecourt of the Sydney Opera House, the concert is coordinated with fireworks from Circular Quay, city buildings & the Sydney Opera House, the latter also featuring projection mapping while the Sydney Harbour Bridge hosts a light show. Aquatic entertainment & sometimes aerial displays feature around Circular Quay as well, which is rounded out by pre-recorded television packages and live interviews that fill in the remainder of the time of the concert. Sometimes extra performances from other Circular Quay foreshore locations are also held.

All previous editions had a main show duration of 2 hours, except the inaugural edition in 2015 which went 1.5 hours. It now seems, based on the website, the main concert has been expanded to 3 hours duration. What the extra hour will feature is unknown. Normally the concert finishes with a major 15-minute fireworks display over Circular Quay at 9:15pm AEDT, having fired mini fireworks displays throughout the remainder of the concert after sunset. Will this major display now be at 10:15pm AEDT?

If you want to attend the live concert, limited free tickets for the seated area will be made available in about a fortnight. If you miss out on a ticket, access to the rest of Circular Quay is not ticketed on the evening so you can watch the fireworks & other aquatic entertainment!

Artists for the upcoming concert have not yet been announced.

Australia Day LIVE! 2025 will be held at 7:30pm AEDT on the 26th of January, televised on Australian Broadcasting Corporation Television & iView.

Last Boat Finishes ‘Sydney-Hobart Yacht Race’ After ‘LawConnect’ Takes Line Honours

The last competing boat in the Sydney-Hobart Yacht Race 2024, Salt Lines, a Shipwright 70, finished at 10:04:13am Australian Eastern Daylight Time (AEDT) on January the 1st (New Year’s Day) in 74th position bringing the 79th edition of The Great Race South to a close after LawConnect, a custom Juan K 100, took its 3rd line honours victory at 02:35:13am AEDT on December the 28th last year, beating Celestial V70, a Volvo Open 70, by 2 hours, 35 minutes and 13 seconds & 20 nautical miles (37 kilometres).

It was the 31-metre yacht’s 2nd consecutive victory& 3rd ever with her maiden record-breaking victory under the name Perpetual LOYAL. She didn’t break the race record this year, which is currently a finishing date/time of December 27th at 10:15:24pm AEDT & held by Comanche, a VPLP Verdier 100, since 2017, who had to retire on the 1st night of the 2024 race due to mainsail damage.

All but 5 of the 21-person crew of LawConnect in 2023 were the same last year plus they had an additional crew member.

Due to the tragedy on the opening night, the informal trophy giving ceremony held when the winning line honours-yacht docks was dispensed with, with just the handing over, by the Vice-Commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club Of Australia, David Jacobs, of a banner declaring LawConnect as line honours winners taking place instead. Skipper, Christian Beck, was unable to attend, having rushed off the yacht immediately upon docking due to a strong bout of food poisoning, so the banner was received by the yacht’s sailing master, Tony Mutter, who presented it to the rest of the crew. The banner was then unfurled before being hoisted on the stern of LawConnect.

LawConnect: 2024 Sydney-Hobart Yacht Race Line Honours Winner (crew pictured except skipper, Christian Beck)
Photograph: Salty Dingo

The trophy was formally given at the Prizegiving at the Hotel Grand Chancellor’s Federation Concert Hall on the afternoon of the 31st of December by the Tasmanian Governor, Her Excellency The Honourable Barbara Baker. Christian Beck was again unable to attend, being represented by Dylan Clarke, his pit man. He was presented with the John H. Illingworth Challenge Cup & Cannon, a Rolex Yacht Master Timepiece & a replica of the Cup.

Meanwhile, in the e-race on Virtual Regatta, French user, PassTaga-PredictWind.com [ALTA] finished on the 28th of December at 10:10:53pm AEDT to win out of a field of 55,896 skippers, winning in front of 2nd place user, Jelavoile – TORC/YWCN, also of France, by 14 seconds.

Other Race News

The below news is from 4:12pm AEDT 31st of December 2024 to the end of the race at 10:04:13am AEDT on January the 1st.

Fika, a Najad 1490, was declared winner of the double-handed handicap category of Performance Handicap System (PHS) after fellow competitor, Blue Moon, an Adams 16.4, crossed the finish line at 11:23:01pm on the 31st of December (New Year’s Eve) in 72nd on line honours at a speed of 4.5 knots (8.3km/h).

With a handicap of 0.9983, Blue Moon was ranked 3rd on the double-handed PHS category with a corrected finish time & speed of 11:09:43pm at 4.8 knots (8.9km/h) while Fika‘s corrected finish date, time & speed was the 31st of December at 3:45:40pm at 5.1 knots (9.5km/h) having a handicap of 1.15 & finishing 68th on line honours at 11:44:56pm on the 30th of December at 5.9 knots (10.9km/h).

Blue Moon was sailed by Tasmanian father and son, Ken and Tristan Gourlay while Fika was sailed by Queensland mother and daughter, Annette Hesselmans & Sophie Snijders.

In 2nd place in the double-handed PHS category was Rumchaser, a J122e. With a handicap of 0.9925, they received a corrected time of 05:24:11pm, having finished 69th on line honours at 6:20:35pm on the 31st of December at 5 knots (9km/h).

The 3 other yachts in the double-handed PHS category retired. They were a Northshore 370 named Sailor Moon (auto pilot issues), a Nautor Swan 38 named Celeste (running rigging damage) & a Class 40 named Lord Jiminy (injured crew member).