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Jessica Bolton navigates the parallel tracks documenting Robyn Davidson’s astonishing journey.

Joanna Gilmour explores the extraordinary life of Australian female aviator Nancy Bird Walton AO OBE

Two professionals; Australian surfer Layne Beachley and photographer Petrina Hicks, combine their strengths to achieve a remarkable portrait.

This issue features Vanity Fair, Nancy Bird Walton, William Barak, Sidney Kidman, Benjamin Duterrau's portraits of the Indigenous peoples of Tasmania, and more.

Sarah Engledow plays wingman to Leila Jeffreys.

Emma Kindred looks at the career of Joan Ross, whose work subverts colonial imagery and its legacy with the clash of fluorescent yellow.

Charting a path from cockatiel to finch, Annette Twyman explores her family portraits and stories.

The design concepts behind the new National Portrait Gallery building in Canberra.

Elspeth Pitt chats with Archibald Prize-winning artist Yvette Coppersmith about performance, coincidences and the intersection of art and life.

Christopher Chapman delights in the intimacy of Robert Mapplethorpe's photography

Barbara Blackman reflects on her experiences as a life model.

At just 7.8 x 6.2 cm, the daguerreotype of Thomas Sutcliffe Mort and his wife Theresa is one of the smallest works in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery.

The exhibition Depth of Field displays a selection of portrait photographs that reflect the strength and diversity of Australian achievement.
![[Self-portrait], 1996 [Self-portrait], 1996](/files/5/e/2/e/i2030-slq.jpg)
The exhibition Reveries: Photography and mortality is a powerful display which brings together images that depict the last phase of people's lives.

Family affections are preserved in a fine selection of intimate portraits.

Sarah Engledow lauds the very civil service of Dame Helen Blaxland.