Showing 11539 items matching "unknown"
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Lions Club of Maldon Inc.
Photograph, Unknown Band
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Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Book, The Unknown ANZACS, 2013
Hard cover...376 printed pages...some photographs by Peter Fitzsimons. The real stories of our national legend told through letters of ANZACS who were there.National book library number 878 o 7336 2932 7. First edition published in 2013. Publisher is Hatchet Australia/Griffin Press Adelaide -
Old Castlemaine Schoolboys Association Inc.
Photograph, Reunion Photograph Unknown Year
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Old Castlemaine Schoolboys Association Inc.
Photograph, Newstead State School Grades 5-8 Year Unknown
newstead primary school -
Old Castlemaine Schoolboys Association Inc.
Photograph, Unknown Football Club
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Inverloch Historical Society
001033 - Photograph - 1910 - Powlett Town - Wonthaggi - Tent Town - source unknown
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Inverloch Historical Society
001067 - Photograph - January 1992 - Inverloch - Shell Museum - Stan Sanders and unknown person - from Eileen Henderson
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Inverloch Historical Society
001071 - Photograph - c1992 - Inverloch - Les Dow with fiddle and unknown person - from Eileen Henderson
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Inverloch Historical Society
000905 - Photograph - Inverloch - 1985 - Mrs Kate Green's cottage at 5 A'Beckett St Inverloch - from unknown source
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Inverloch Historical Society
000906 - Photograph - Inverloch - 1985 - Mrs Kate Green's outhouse at 5 A'Beckett St Inverloch - from unknown sourc
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Inverloch Historical Society
000916 - Photograph - 1948 - Inverloch - Miss Inverloch contest - three finalists - Jenny Whitelaw - Hazel Swift - unknown (right) - from Hazel Swift
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Numurkah & District Historical Society
Book - Arithmetic Books, Tables of Interest (year unknown) / Elementary Algebra (1930) / Aritmetical & Mental Calculations (1847) / Arithmetic for Grade 3 (1946)
Hardcovered books (see photo for more details)see photoeducation, school, mathematics, arithmetic, textbooks -
Numurkah & District Historical Society
Book - Readers x 3, The bad red bus (1955) / Seaside Story (year unknown) / Let's Read a Story Bk 3 (1961)
Soft-covered books x 3 (see photo)see photoeducation, school, reading, readers, english -
Numurkah & District Historical Society
Book - Children's Picture Story Book, The Light of the World (year unknown)
Hard-covered book (see photo)see photoeducation, school, picture story, religious education -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Article, Walter Gropius, Exhibition for Unknown Architects, April 1919
Ise Gropius, wife of Walter Gropius, thought this translation of a 1919 article by Walter Gropius would be of interest to Robin Boyd because it touches on Gropius's preoccupation with 'beauty'. A letter by Ise Gropius accompanies this article (item D431.1).The article is corrected in pencil on page 2, in Robin Boyd's hand. -
Brimbank City Council
Reproduction of a painting, Unknown
Reproduction of a painting, scene of Australian landscape -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Mixed media (Item) - Douglas DC-7C Files on Disc, DC-7C Unknown Number
Contains a collection of photos and links to websites connected to the Douglas DC-7C airliner. -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Photograph (Item) - Airserve Photo [in unknown frame] aeroplane VH-DBD twin seater open cockpit
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Photograph - Hawker Hurricane cockpit photographs, Unknown
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Ballarat Tramway Museum
Newspaper, The Courier Ballarat, "Tram's fate unknown", 9/08/1999 12:00:00 AM
Newspaper clipping from The Courier, Ballarat, Monday 9/8/1999 about the return of trams to Ballarat. Article followed the item in the Melbourne Herald Sun, (Reg. Item 1624) on 6/8/1999 about the same subject and quoting Judy Verlin, the Mayor. Judy Verlin appears to duck the issue a bit in the local paper. Says has not seen the latest report. Also quotes Peter Hiscock of Sovereign Hill. Has photograph of Dave O' Neil putting up the pole on tram 40 at St. Aidans Drive."Page 4, The Courier, Ballarat Monday August 9, 1999" in blue ink along top edge.ballarat revival, st aidans drive, feasibility study -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Photograph - Spitfire, Unknown
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Photograph (Item) - Photos & negatives of various aircraft including crash sites - dates various and unknown
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Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Newspaper - C. B. PEDERSEN news clipping April 1935, News clipping 15 April 1935 unknown paper, April 1935 & April 1987
Clipper trader shipsFour masted barque entering Port Phillip in 19351935 and 1987 newspaper clippings re C B PEDESEN - the last windjammer at Geelong. Newspaper clipping of the RMS MALOJA aground off Adelaide at Outer Harbour, March 1933. .Reverse " NIL " cargo clipper -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Newspaper - B&W photo of the MACQUARIE (see notes) formerly the MELBOURNE, News clipping unknown newspaper of the MACQUARIE under sail, April 1935 & April 1987
Clipper trader shipsFour masted barque entering Port Phillip in 1935B&W photo of the MACQUARIE (see notes) under sail. Newspaper clipping of the RMS MALOJA aground off Adelaide at Outer Harbour, March 1933. .Reverse " NIL " cargo clipper -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Badge (Item) - RAAF Patch Unknown Unit
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Ararat Gallery TAMA
Functional object, Unknown object, c. 1900s
‘The Art of the Japanese Package’ was an exhibition that toured to 10 Australian and 11 New Zealand public galleries in 1979 and 1980. The touring exhibition comprised 221 objects of traditional Japanese packaging which extended from ceramics, wood and paper to woven fibre containers. At the conclusion of the tour, The Japan Foundation and the Crafts Board of the Australia Council donated the vast majority of the exhibition to the Ararat Gallery for its permanent collection. Combining the natural qualities of bamboo, paper and straw with delicate craftsmanship, these unique objects express Japanese aesthetics as applied through fibre crafts. In Japan, the qualities and traits of natural materials are exploited rather than hidden. The texture of straw, the septa of bamboo are not concealed but lovingly incorporated into the whole. In 1979 Hideyuki Oka, curator of ‘The Art of the Japanese Package’ wrote: “In no way self-conscious or assertive, these wrappings have an artless and obedient air that greatly moves the modern viewer. They are whispered evidence of the Japanese ability to create beauty from the simplest products of nature. They also teach us that wisdom and feeling are especially important in packaging because these qualities, or the lack of them, are almost immediately apparent. What is the use of a package if it shows no feeling?” The descriptions of the featured objects were written by Hideyuki Oka, curator of ‘The Art of the Japanese Package’, 1979.Gift of the Japan-Australia Foundation and the Crafts Board of the Australia Council, 1981japanese art, japanese packaging, tsutsumi, gift giving -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Textile, Frances Burke, Unknown
Frances Burke: Designer of Modern Textiles Australia’s most influential and celebrated textile designer of the mid-20th century, Frances Burke (1904-1994), employed Australian native flora, garden flowers, marine subjects, Indigenous culture and increasingly, abstract motifs in her stunning modern fabrics. A confident, determined designer and businesswoman; Burke made the shift from fine art to design in 1937. While she began by designing dress fabrics for Melbourne’s fashionable Georges Department store, printing them on linen using lino blocks, she was an early adopter of the screen-printing process and during the war years began printing on cotton. Burke’s furnishing fabrics took their place in influential modern buildings Australia-wide through collaborations with leading architects and interior designers. They included Robin Boyd’s 1949 House of Tomorrow, Roy Grounds’ Quamby flats, Guilford Bell’s Royal Hayman Island Resort for Ansett Airlines, and Yuncken, Freeman Brothers, Griffiths and Simpson’s Canberra Civic Centre Theatre. In the post-war period, Burke made regular trips to the United States and Europe, on her return advising homeowners and manufacturers on the latest trends in products, colours and home design in lectures and interviews. At New Design her fabric showroom and interior design consultancy Burke introduced furniture by emerging designers Clement Meadmore and Grant Featherston in the early 1950s and presented local and imported homewares, mostly from the United States. She was enthusiastic about the convenient and comfortable lifestyle experienced by ordinary American women. Her fabrics and advice were regularly featured in Australian Home Beautiful, Australian House and Garden and the newspapers of the day. Some of Burke’s designs had remarkable longevity. Tiger Stripe (1938) for example, continued to be produced in a wide range of colours until 1970 and Crete (1946) remained a popular choice for interiors into the 1960s. Drawing from a rich variety of sources including Indigenous culture in Goanna (c.1954) and Pacific Island tapa cloth designs in Bird and Tree (1940), Burke also looked to Japan in designs such as Plum Blossom (1948) and Zen (1965). She loved exploring the potential of native flora, seen in designs including Waratah (1955) and Flannel Flower (1955), while garden flowers were the source for many other designs including Belladonna (1940), Periwinkle (n.d.) and Rose (1947). Burke’s clever interplay of a single striking printed colour with lively gestural lines revealing the white base fabric, gave her designs a vibrancy that characterised the optimistic post-war era. This can be seen in Burke’s fabrics for Hayman Island including Angel Fish and Seapiece (both 1949) which expressed the freshness and excitement of the luxurious new tropical resort and led to further commissions. Burke’s three decades in business (1937-1970) were an unparalleled success in the story of Australian design. Her fabrics have been collected by the NGA, the Powerhouse Museum, NGV, RMIT Design Archives and Sydney Living Museums in addition to Ararat Gallery TAMA. Written by Nanette Carter and Robyn Oswald-Jacobs. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Textile, Frances Burke, Unknown, 2 pieces, 1939-1950
Frances Burke: Designer of Modern Textiles Australia’s most influential and celebrated textile designer of the mid-20th century, Frances Burke (1904-1994), employed Australian native flora, garden flowers, marine subjects, Indigenous culture and increasingly, abstract motifs in her stunning modern fabrics. A confident, determined designer and businesswoman; Burke made the shift from fine art to design in 1937. While she began by designing dress fabrics for Melbourne’s fashionable Georges Department store, printing them on linen using lino blocks, she was an early adopter of the screen-printing process and during the war years began printing on cotton. Burke’s furnishing fabrics took their place in influential modern buildings Australia-wide through collaborations with leading architects and interior designers. They included Robin Boyd’s 1949 House of Tomorrow, Roy Grounds’ Quamby flats, Guilford Bell’s Royal Hayman Island Resort for Ansett Airlines, and Yuncken, Freeman Brothers, Griffiths and Simpson’s Canberra Civic Centre Theatre. In the post-war period, Burke made regular trips to the United States and Europe, on her return advising homeowners and manufacturers on the latest trends in products, colours and home design in lectures and interviews. At New Design her fabric showroom and interior design consultancy Burke introduced furniture by emerging designers Clement Meadmore and Grant Featherston in the early 1950s and presented local and imported homewares, mostly from the United States. She was enthusiastic about the convenient and comfortable lifestyle experienced by ordinary American women. Her fabrics and advice were regularly featured in Australian Home Beautiful, Australian House and Garden and the newspapers of the day. Some of Burke’s designs had remarkable longevity. Tiger Stripe (1938) for example, continued to be produced in a wide range of colours until 1970 and Crete (1946) remained a popular choice for interiors into the 1960s. Drawing from a rich variety of sources including Indigenous culture in Goanna (c.1954) and Pacific Island tapa cloth designs in Bird and Tree (1940), Burke also looked to Japan in designs such as Plum Blossom (1948) and Zen (1965). She loved exploring the potential of native flora, seen in designs including Waratah (1955) and Flannel Flower (1955), while garden flowers were the source for many other designs including Belladonna (1940), Periwinkle (n.d.) and Rose (1947). Burke’s clever interplay of a single striking printed colour with lively gestural lines revealing the white base fabric, gave her designs a vibrancy that characterised the optimistic post-war era. This can be seen in Burke’s fabrics for Hayman Island including Angel Fish and Seapiece (both 1949) which expressed the freshness and excitement of the luxurious new tropical resort and led to further commissions. Burke’s three decades in business (1937-1970) were an unparalleled success in the story of Australian design. Her fabrics have been collected by the NGA, the Powerhouse Museum, NGV, RMIT Design Archives and Sydney Living Museums in addition to Ararat Gallery TAMA. Written by Nanette Carter and Robyn Oswald-Jacobs. -
Young Christian Workers (YCW Australia) Archive and Research Centre
YCW Flag, Unknown Flag, 1957
This canvas pennant was produced by an international JOC and given to participants on the 'pilgrimage' to Rome in 1957 for the first gathering of the International Young Christian Workers. YCWs from various nations exchanged pennants in Rome, gathered as souvenirs of the event.This is a rare piece, collected by Bill Armstrong, AO who was one of the young workers who visited Rome in 1957. When situated along side the pennants of other participating nations, it symbolises the internationalism of the YCW movement.Small white pennant with red cross featuring a stalk of wheat. Design repeats on the reverse.On the left edge of the pennant are the letters 'JOC'. Letters repeat on the right edge on the reverse. -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Mr Jim Greenwood (Engine Driver at 3 Jacks Mine) on the right and his Unknown friend -- Studio Portrait
Portrait of two gentlemen in suites seated in Cane Chairs. Jim Greenwood right (Engine Driver at 3 Jacks Mine) and his friend.A Sepia Photograph of two (2) seated males in cane chairs by a table, both dressed in suits, both with short haircuts.Herbert's Studio St (the rest is missing) in gold print on rear, in hand written script: Uncle Jim Greenwood right and his friend Engine drive at 3 Jack's Mine Stawellstawell, greenwood