From arts outsider to national treasure, underestimated by some and revered by others, Ken’s work, career, and involvement in public life gives us an almost visual manual to modern Australian history – the vivid 80s, the bicentenary, our relationship with Japan, the world expo, Sydney Olympics, and now… an inspiration to a generation of young new artists across many disciplines: painting, sculpture, music and fashion — his work an oasis of colour, beauty and peace in a turbulent confused world. The Art Gallery of NSW has just acquired its first painting by Ken Done, called Sunday. He made it when he was 42. He is now 84. It is the first time that any state gallery has acquired a work by Ken. Given his extraordinary accomplishments in the arts over five decades, the question is: why did the recognition take so long? And who decides what art is anyway?
The founder of Sydney based production house In Films, Ivan O’Mahoney is a critically acclaimed television producer and documentary director. His work received several Rose D’Ors, AACTAs and Walkleys, as well as the Golden Nymph, Prix Europa and Robert F Kennedy Journalism Award. Ivan holds degrees in journalism and international law, and has produced for major networks – HBO, BBC, ARTE, CNN, PBS, C4 & ABC. Titles include Baghdad High (prod&dir), The Queen & Zak Grieve (prod&dir), Firestarter – The Story of Bangarra (prod), Folau (prod), and his latest project Unbreakable: the Jelena Dokic Story (prod&co-dir).