Cancelled, Reinstated, Now Historic: Sabsabi and Dagostino to Make Venice History
Khaled Sabsabi and Michael Dagostino have secured a rare double presence at the Venice Biennale, capping a turbulent journey from cancellation to reinstatement.
All articles published by The Daily Perspective from 28 February to 29 March 2026.
Khaled Sabsabi and Michael Dagostino have secured a rare double presence at the Venice Biennale, capping a turbulent journey from cancellation to reinstatement.
A new report shows the time needed to save a home deposit has blown out significantly, raising fresh questions about housing affordability policy.
A senior Kurdish official warns 23 Australian children and 11 women held in a Syrian camp risk radicalisation if not repatriated.
Samsung's Galaxy S26 Ultra launches with a built-in privacy screen that controls light at the pixel level, blocking side-on views of your display.
A Maylands couple say they have been 'bled dry' by a failed home construction, left with a defect-riddled property that remains unfinished.
Medical and education records from thousands of Australian children will be tracked for years to evaluate the Albanese government's social media age ban.
With February sea temperatures tracking above average for a third consecutive year, Australia's Great Barrier Reef faces compounding threats that local management alone cannot address.
The North Queensland Cowboys and Hull Kingston Rovers have joined forces in Las Vegas preparations, with Nine holding exclusive footage of the two clubs' coaches working in tandem.
Australia has directed families of embassy staff in Israel and Lebanon to leave, with voluntary departures also offered at posts in Jordan, Qatar and the UAE.
WA Police have found Kenneth Giles' abandoned Nissan Patrol near Hackett Creek, 40km from Mullewa, but the fugitive remains missing after seven weeks.
The WA government faces court proceedings over the Wittenoom blue asbestos disaster, reigniting long-running debate over state responsibility for industrial harm.
The Sydney Morning Herald's daily cartoon roundup is a reminder that satirical illustration still cuts through where analysis often cannot.
Political cartoons distil complex power dynamics into a single image. Their continued relevance in Australian public life deserves serious attention.
WA Premier Roger Cook says he found fatal crash footage released by a court too confronting to watch. The real question is why that became the headline.
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Evelyn Araluen has won Victoria's richest literary prize for The Rot, a poetry collection judges called 'formally bold and emotionally exacting'.
FSANZ has recalled Pinkfong Seasoned Seaweed Flakes sold in NSW and ACT after plastic contamination was confirmed in the 40-gram product.
Melbourne researchers have developed an online tool to identify children at genuine risk of speech disorders, reducing unnecessary therapy for issues most kids outgrow.
Nearly 300 Queensland prisoners potentially exposed to HIV and hepatitis C as the state rejects calls for a prison needle and syringe programme.
A school bus drove past a packed Redbank Plains stop in Ipswich, leaving more than a dozen students stranded. An investigation is now underway into the incident.
Trump's lengthy State of the Union struck a triumphant tone, but the gap between assertion and evidence carries real consequences for allies like Australia.
A Federal Court lawsuit alleges NT Police failed in their duty of care to a 44-year-old Aboriginal woman who died in custody at Tennant Creek Watch House.
A Monash University trial is testing testosterone cream on women aged 35 to 50, filling a gap where no approved treatment currently exists in Australia.
Bunbury detectives are investigating after a man was found dead with a throat wound on a property in WA's south. No charges have been laid.
China's ambassador to Australia has made a rare public intervention on student visa policy, arguing both nations stand to gain from greater flows of students and scholars.
Three Adelaide schools were locked down after a drama teacher's wooden prop gun was mistaken for a real firearm. Police found no offence committed.
Trump's State of the Union address signalled key shifts in US foreign and domestic policy. Here's what Canberra should be watching.
A hoax bomb threat linked to the CCP's campaign against Shen Yun forced Albanese to evacuate The Lodge, raising fresh concerns about foreign interference in Australia.
A newly released video of four-year-old Gus Lamont reveals he may have been wearing a distinctive grey felt hat when he vanished 150 days ago.
The RSL has condemned delays in resolving Afghanistan war crimes allegations, warning the stalled process is sapping morale and smearing honourable veterans.