Peter Munro | The Sydney Morning Herald

We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later.

Advertisement

Journalist

Peter Munro is a journalist for the Sydney Morning Herald.

Where to eat and drink in far north Queensland

Where to eat and drink in far north Queensland

Peter Munro thinks big for a short food-filled stay in the tropical north.

  • by Peter Munro
David Griggs finds fun among the paint fumes at Campbelltown Arts Centre

David Griggs finds fun among the paint fumes at Campbelltown Arts Centre

The two-bedroom condominium in the Philippines that artist David Griggs calls home, overlooks a train station and shopping mall. The apartment is small with shoddy ventilation. Paint fumes from his adjoining studio give him dizzy spells and crazed dreams. "You get immune to it but it's not healthy," he says.

  • by Peter Munro
Thousand Lakes Lodge, Tasmania review: Abandoned for years, this is now an intimate retreat

Thousand Lakes Lodge, Tasmania review: Abandoned for years, this is now an intimate retreat

It's hard to imagine this stunning lodge was left abandoned for years - except for a lone Tasmanian Devil.

  • by Peter Munro
The Preatures' new album Girlhood: finding new confidence on home soil in Sydney

The Preatures' new album Girlhood: finding new confidence on home soil in Sydney

As the Preatures release the follow-up to their hit debut album, we pay a visit to the inner-city studio where their music comes to life.

  • by Peter Munro
Jewish refugee music and theatre comes out of the shadows in Sydney

Jewish refugee music and theatre comes out of the shadows in Sydney

The event is part of a three-year British Arts & Humanities Research Council project to uncover and revive hidden or lost works by Jewish refugees.

  • by Peter Munro
Advertisement
Rockstar scientist David Reilly takes the axe to quantum physics

Rockstar scientist David Reilly takes the axe to quantum physics

Of the five electric guitars owned by experimental quantum physicist David Reilly, he likes this one the best. The mustard-yellow Fender Telecaster has two pickups, a maple fretboard and country-rock twang. When he's not in the laboratory pondering the mysteries of life, the universe and everything, he likes to lay down tracks on his axe at home, alone. "It's a fantastic way of switching off."

  • by Peter Munro
iPhone photography reveals Australians see more than selfies on their screens

iPhone photography reveals Australians see more than selfies on their screens

"It's about having that keenness to be a bit fresh," says Christopher Armstrong.

  • by Peter Munro
Landscape artist Bec Juniper sees the softer side to rugged Australian terrain

Landscape artist Bec Juniper sees the softer side to rugged Australian terrain

Staring from a great height at the endless plains, red-dirt roads and mining pits cut like open wounds across Western Australia, artist Bec Juniper sees something surprising. This rugged, bullish land seems strangely soft and feminine to her.

  • by Peter Munro
Archibald Prize circus comes to a close for Art Gallery of NSW head packer Steve Peters

Archibald Prize circus comes to a close for Art Gallery of NSW head packer Steve Peters

The paintings arrive at the Art Gallery of NSW's loading dock via courier vans, trucks, maxi taxis, midsize SUVs and on a skateboard. Artist Patrick Hromas lugs a large portrait of his godmother in his arms from St James Station, his forehead dripping great gobs of sweat in the winter sun. It's his first time in the Archibald Prize. "I'm not a big fan of big heads," he says.

  • by Peter Munro
Why are so many more Australians ending up with only a car roof over their heads?

Why are so many more Australians ending up with only a car roof over their heads?

For thousands of Australians, home is a Holden or a Toyota parked in a dimly-lit street, and the number is growing. What's forcing them to take such drastic action?

  • by Peter Munro