Events and festivals Parrtjima − A Festival in Light Parrtjima − A Festival in Light (pronounced
par-chee-ma) subtitled − A Festival in Light, takes place over 10 days each April in the desert outside Alice Springs. The name means "shedding both light and understanding" in the local
Arrernte language, and the festival aims "to celebrate the oldest continuous cultures in the world through the latest technology". It includes light shows, artworks, storytelling, and other manifestations of
Aboriginal Australian culture, are also venues for interactive workshops, Indigenous music and dance, films by Aboriginal filmmakers, and talks. The festival, which has free admission, In 2022, the festival was curated for the fifth time by
Rhoda Roberts. It featured a stretch of light installations; musical acts
Dan Sultan,
BARKAA, and
King Stingray; and a
retrospective of the work of Indigenous filmmaker
Warwick Thornton. In 2023, Roberts once again curated Parrtjima. The festival featured the artwork which women artists of
Mutitjulu had created for the
Uluru Statement from the Heart, led by
Rene Kulitja, as a huge immersive light installation. The theme of the festival is "Listen with the heart", and musicians performing at the festival include
Richard Frankland and
JK-47.
Other events The town's focal point, the
Todd Mall, hosts a number of Aboriginal art galleries and community events. Alice Springs' desert lifestyle has inspired several unique events, such as the Alice Desert Festival, the Red Centre NATS, Blacken Open Air music festival, the
Camel Cup, the
Henley-on-Todd Regatta, the
Beanie Festival, and the
Finke Desert Race. The Finke Desert Race is a "there and back" challenge from Alice Springs to
Aputula (Finke) Community, covering a round trip.
Arts and entertainment Galleries and museums Alice Springs is home to many local and Aboriginal art galleries. features some of the most important natural history and archival materials tied to the history and culture of the region. The Strehlow Archives, containing the work of
Carl Strehlow, also contain materials linked to the Arrernte people of Central Australia. The
Araluen Centre for Arts and Entertainment presents world-class ballets and orchestras, as well as local performances. The Women's Museum of Australia (formerly
National Pioneer Women's Hall of Fame) is located in the grounds of Old Alice Springs Gaol in the Heritage Precinct. Here women's stories from across Australia are presented with the lives of outback women as well as stories from the Old Gaol and Labour Prison. Objects include a large "Signature" quilt with signatures of over 300 women first in their field and a 4.2 m long Aviatrix tapestry celebrating the high flying lives of Australia's women aviators. The town has some excellent small museums. The extensive collection at the Old Timer's Traeger Museum on the North Stuart Highway includes artefacts from the town's early Afghan and German residents, traditional Aboriginal artefacts and objects which show the early fusion of European and Aboriginal cultures, such as a
spinifex-handled glass-bladed knife. Included in the collection are
soapstone carvings by Arrernte artist
Erlikilyika.
Library, archives, and other collections Alice Springs is home to the
Alice Springs Public Library, also known as the Nevil Shute Memorial Library. The library, in addition to its general borrowable collections (including e-resources), is also home to two special, not-for-loan, collections. These are the Alice Springs Collection and the Akaltye Atheme Collection, both of which specifically collect Central Australian content, including Aboriginal language resources (from around 16 local languages) and cultural heritage information. The Alice Springs Collection also holds a significant digital collection, including PDF copies of the
Centralian Advocate from 1947 to 2015, and over 6000 images, primarily from the Central Australian Historical Images Collection.
Library & Archives NT also has offices in Alice Springs, located at Minerals House on Hartley Street, which holds archival collections relating to Central Australia, including
Tennant Creek. Collections held here include community collections and government archives.
AIATSIS Central Australia provides access to the major online repositories held by the
Canberra-based
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, including family history, photographs, and other publications and artefacts. Other collecting institutions, excluding schools, include: • Arid Zone Research Institute (AZRI) Library •
Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education Library, Desert Peoples Centre Campus Library •
Central Land Council Library •
Charles Darwin University Library • NT Department of Health Library •
Strehlow Research Centre Library
Outdoors Leisure and entertainment activities include hiking in the nearby
MacDonnell Ranges and driving the four-wheel-drive tracks at
Finke Gorge National Park.
Parks and gardens The
Alice Springs Desert Park was created to educate visitors about the many facets of the surrounding desert environment. The arid climate botanic garden,
Olive Pink Botanic Garden, is a short distance from the town centre. They were named after anthropologist, naturalist and artist
Olive Pink, who lived in the town for almost 30 years and died in 1975. She was well known locally and referred to by all as Miss Pink. The
Alice Springs Reptile Centre is located in the town centre.
Sport Alice Springs has a high rate of participation in many different sports, including
Australian rules, baseball, basketball, boxing,
cricket,
football, golf, hockey,
rugby and tennis. Australian rules is a particularly popular sport in Alice Springs in terms of both participation and as a
spectator sport. The
Central Australian Football League formed in 1947 has several teams. The sport is particularly popular in Indigenous communities. The local stadium,
Traeger Park, has a 10,000 seat capacity and was designed to host (pre-season)
AFL and was the home to the
Northern Territory Thunder until 2019. In 2004, an AFL pre-season Regional Challenge match between
Collingwood Football Club and
Port Adelaide Football Club attracted a capacity sell-out crowd.
Association football is popular among the younger community. A high number of children play the game. It is also played frequently by amateur adults in different divisions. There is also an all-African league in Alice Springs. Both codes of Rugby are played in Alice Springs.
Rugby union, managed by the Central Australian Rugby Union Association (CARU) is played in conjunction with the Northern Territory Rugby Union calendar which runs during Darwin's dry season. The Central Australian Rugby Union administers a four team competition based in Alice Springs with matches played between October and March at ANZAC Oval. The First Central Australian Club Competition commenced in 1986. There are four senior teams; Dingo Cubs Rugby Union, Kiwi Warriors Rugby Union, Eagles Rugby Union and Devils Rugby Union.
Rugby league has been a part of the local sporting scene since 1963. The Australian Rugby League has held a number of pre-season games in Alice Springs, at ANZAC Oval. The local competition is the
Central Australian Rugby League and sanctions both Junior and Senior Rugby League matches. The season usually kicks off around March/April and runs through to Late August. There are four senior teams in Alice Springs: Wests, Memo, United and Vikings. Matches are held during the winter months at ANZAC oval on Saturday afternoons. Cricket is a popular sport in Alice Springs and is primarily played at Traeger Park. The
Imparja Cup Cricket Carnival first was played in 1994 and attracts Indigenous teams from all across Australia. The four main clubs are Federal Demons CC, Rovers CC, RSL Works CC and Wests CC. Organized baseball has been played in Alice Springs since the mid-1950s. Currently under the national organisation of the
Australian Baseball Federation, the Alice Springs Baseball Association organises baseball competitions for youth players aged 5 to 18 and an adult competition played at Jim McConville Park and on Lyel Kempster Field at Traeger Park. As part of the worldwide
Little League network, Alice Springs players and compete in the Australian National Little League competitions. The
Alice Springs Golf Course, an 18-hole championship layout golf course designed by the architects Thomson Wolveridge, was opened in 1985 by a challenge match between top professionals Greg Norman and Johnny Miller. The course record of 64 is held jointly by, amateur members, Leigh Shacklady and Kerryn Heaver, beating professional Stuart Appleby's 65. Adam Scott won the Australian Boys Amateur Championship held there in 1997. The Traeger Park sporting complex also hosts tennis, baseball, boxing, swimming,
canoe polo, hockey, basketball, squash, badminton, gymnastics and skateboarding. A unique sporting event, held annually, is the
Henley-on-Todd Regatta, also known as the
Todd River Race. It is a sand river race with bottomless boats and it remains the only dry river
regatta in the world. Another unusual sporting event is the
Camel Cup. The annual Camel Cup is held in July at Blatherskite Park, part of the Central Australian Show Society grounds. It is a full day event featuring a series of races using
camels instead of horses. Every year, on the Queen's Birthday long weekend, the annual
Finke Desert Race is held. It is a gruelling off-road race that runs from Alice Springs to the Finke community, then back again the next day. The total length of the race is roughly . It attracts spectators, who camp along the whole length of the track, and roughly 500 competitors, buggies and bikes, every year, making it the biggest sporting event in the Alice Springs calendar. Drag racing is held at the
Alice Springs Inland Dragway which in June 2013 hosted a round of the national Aeroflow Sportsman Drag Racing Championship. In September 2017 12 people were injured when burning fuel sprayed from a drag-racing car onto a crowd of spectators at the Red CentreNATS competition. Alice Springs is also home to the
Arunga Park Speedway, a 402-metre
dirt oval speedway. The speedway runs from August to March and caters to cars,
solos and
sidecars. Located just off the Stuart Highway on the northern edge of the town, Arunga Park hosted the
Australian Sidecar Championship in 1985 and the
Australian Solo Championship in
1991. == Crime ==