Surry Hills Festival September 27 2014.
Whats on instore and surronding.




Gary Heery
Sept 27th 12.30pm in store.
He shot the Material Girl before she owned a thing, now photographer Gary Heery shares his stories about the iconic shots of his carrer with us at Published Art as part of , and his story, with us as part of Surry Hills Festival 2014.
Gary Heery is a prominent Sydney-based photographer, well known for his ability to capture the true essence of his photographic subjects. He lived and worked in North America for fifteen years, shooting for record covers and magazines such as Life and Rolling Stone. His work has appeared in major exhibitions and in a number of photography books, including Zoo (Knoph), Grandiflora (Viking) and Twins (Lantern).
Join us at 12.30pm Saturday September 27th for a Q&A as Gary Heery talks us through the sessions you wished you were a fly on the wall for and explains a little of how he got to be one of the worlds famous iconic photographers and live to tell the tale!




Louise Olsen: Dinosaur Designs
online from Sept 17th.
Our guest Curator for Curated Creative this September is Dinosaur Designs, Creative Director and Co-founder, Louise Olsen. Louise shares the books that inspire her and ignite her own creative flame.
This year saw Dinosaur Designs expand their empire of beautiful and covetable homewares and jewellry to the UK, with stores already throughout Australia and The US.




Phillippa Carnemolla
Sept 01-Sept 30th instore.
Phillippa Carnemolla is an industrial designer, jeweller and PhD scholar based in Sydney, Australia. Her work is inspired by the geometry of nature.
Her range of fine jewellery incorporates 22k gold, sterling silver, copper, diamonds, topaz and other precious gemstones and reflect the mapping of nature across the plant, animal and mineral domains.
This latest exhibition titled Naturally Connected has been curated from her ongoing works investigating the interconnectedness of all life – this time focusing on the life of bees. Since her 2012 Residency at the Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney, Phillippa has continued to create sculpture and jewellery celebrating universal geometries that link all life forms – and her pieces are often a merging of Australian native plant with animal.