FEATURE

Biennale of Sydney X DAAR x Think+DO Tank Foundation - Day Four

Thank you for joining Think+DO Tank Foundation, Biennale of Sydney and DAAR. Your presence was a generous and meaningful show of connection, curiosity, and care. We are deeply grateful to everyone who came together to sit, listen, reflect, and contribute to the spirit of the hasira (حصیرة).

These gatherings are part of haṣīra (حصیرة): Framing and Unframing, presented by Think+DO Tank in partnership with DAAR (Decolonising Architecture Art Research) as part of the Biennale of Sydney 2026. Together we are exploring how hosting, dialogue, and collective reflection can create space for grief, refusal, joy, and co-struggle.

Gathering on the hasira (حصیرة) created a space for thoughtful exchange and shared presence. The conversations, reflections, and moments of listening that unfolded helped shape a temporary room without walls — a place where different experiences, geographies, and perspectives could meet. Your willingness to engage openly and respectfully is what makes this community possible.

Photo credits to Benjamin TigerLa - My Tiger Productions

Day Three - Riverside - Parramatta

Paul Ramsay Foundation's Life's Lottery Podcast features TDTF Community House

Paul Ramsay Foundation's Life's Lottery Podcast features TDTF Community House

In this episode of The Paul Ramsay Foundation’s podcast series, “Life’s Lottery”, take a trip into the Think+DO Tank Foundation’s Community House in Fairfield and hear how our Community Connectors and Creative Educators work to build holistic, people-centred practices that promote creativity, wellbeing, social connectedness, joy and the conditions for equity.

The Great Digital Divide - TDTF advocates for digital inclusion in Western Sydney

The Great Digital Divide - TDTF advocates for digital inclusion in Western Sydney

Inequities in internet access existed before the COVID-19 pandemic, but its onslaught has only exacerbated the gap. Monica Crouch talks to the people trying to close it.

Monica Crouch follows the story of inequities in digital connectivity, capacity and devices and hardware in Western Sydney in conversation with Wester’ly members, Jane Stratton, CEO, Think+DO Tank Foundation and Claire Thomas, Manager of School and Community Engagement for Jesuit Social Services.