Mentioned by Style Magazines
A Hit List Of Brisbane’s Best Japanese Restaurants
"Sushi Edo Newmarket is one of the many Sushi Edo restaurants scattered throughout Brisbane. The plates start from $3.80 each, with options such as nigiri, aburi, gunkan, small and larger rolls, rice paper rolls, and hand rolls. Otherwise, families can order from the sides menu, a la carte menu, sashimi menu, udon menu, or salad selection."
"This is a highly crowded place due to immense varieties of stuff available. The park is a prime spot where your should surely make a visitand. Be sure this place is on your list and you get to enter here as early as possible before you miss out on things due to the crowd."
"Another one of the many Sushi Train restaurants in Brisbane; Sushi Train Springwood has a little something for every member of the family to enjoy. The venue is located in the Chatswood Central Shopping Centre and serves an extensive menu consisting of fresh nigiri, rolls, ships, ramen, and more, with vegetarian options also available. If you’re still hungry after the meal, enjoy either a jelly, mousse, cheesecake, gelato, caramel custard, cream puffs, or chocolate fondant for dessert."
"Sushi Edo has a few destinations across Brisbane, including a spot at the Barracks on Petrie Terrace. The plates start from $3.80 and include nigiri, aburi, gunkan, smaller and larger rolls, hand rolls, and rice paper rolls. Otherwise, parents and children can choose from a selection of side dishes, the a la carte menu, and more."
"The MisoHapi sushi and ramen bar in West End has a funky interior and great food. There’s a sushi train that kids will love, as well as great bento box lunches and delicious ramen."
"Sushi Train Aspley has a similar offering to the other Sushi Train restaurants throughout Brisbane City and the surrounding suburbs. Families can sit back and enjoy popular dishes such as salmon nigiri, aburi duck, chicken and avocado rolls, California rolls, tuna salad rolls, egg salad ship, and various types of dumplings. Vegetarian options are also available."
"First of all, I would like to note that New Chinese Garden does the best vegan Chinese food in the whole of Greater Brisbane. They have a huge vegan menu from which you can order all of the amazing dishes with vegan beef, chicken, duck, prawn or fish. Favorites include salt and pepper ‘prawns’, ‘duck’ in plum sauce and ‘chickn’ corn soup."
"629 Brunswick St New Farm, Brisbane, Queensland 4005 Australia+61 7 3358 6555[email protected]http://edwinacorlette.com. Since opening in 2008, Edwina Corlette has shown a commitment to the long-term promotion of a select group of contemporary artists from Australia and the Asia Pacific region, whose practices employ a range of mediums including painting, sculpture, installation and digital art. Located on Brunswick Street in Brisbane, the gallery offers a diverse, annual curatorial program of solo and group exhibitions, artist talks, collaborations and offsite projects including participation in art fairs, and is recognised as one of Brisbane’s leading contemporary art spaces showcasing emerging and mid-career artists."
"Situated in Stanley Place on the South Bank of the Brisbane River, the Queensland Art Gallery is the state’s major visual arts institution, housing more than 15,000 Australian and international paintings, sculptures and decorative art. It’s worth letting a Volunteer Guide share their knowledge and take you on a 30-40 minute tour of the gallery to get some perspective of the huge range of works that make up the expanding collection. Address: South Bank, Stanley Place, Cultural Precinct, Brisbane, 4101Telephone: +61 7 3840 7303.Opening times:"
"Lovers of arts and culture will want to have the Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA) top of their list of things to do in Brisbane. Not only is it the largest museum of art in Australia, but it is also one of the preeminent institutions in the Asia-Pacific, contributing a range of compelling modern and traditional art experiences that will move and astonish you. The main building is the Queensland Art Gallery (QAG), established within the Queensland Cultural Centre in South Bank."
"These two galleries at South Bank, jointly referred to as QAGOMA, form the centerpiece of Brisbane's cultural precinct. Holding more than 17,000 artworks by national and international artists, QAGOMA has a particular focus on contemporary Asian and Pacific art. Recent exhibitions include a collection of painted car hoods from a Western Desert community known as the Kayili artists and a selection of video art by Indigenous Australians."
"A hidden gem of Brisbane that many locals don’t seem to know, the QUT Art Museum is located on the edge of the City Botanical Garden and is an intimate university gallery showcasing rotating internally curated exhibitions, commissioned projects and touring exhibitions of modern and contemporary works by Australian artists. Always thought-provoking, entry is typically free and visiting only takes around an hour. If you make it here, you should combine it with a visit to their sister gallery nearby in the stately Old Government House dedicated to the works of Australia’s pre-eminent landscape artist, William Robinson."
"Queensland University of Technology’s Art Museum is located at the Gardens Point campus and shows off a range of modern and contemporary art. They display a diverse suite of in-house curated exhibitions drawn from the university’s own art collection, commissioned art projects and touring exhibitions. The exhibitions are generally technology enabled or in relation to future tech and innovation."
"This fine collection of 2000 plus contemporary works encompasses sculpture, painting and decorative arts and as such has a strong showing of Australian art from the 1960’s onwards."