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Bass Coast Shire Council - Robert Smith Collection
Artwork, other - Portrait of Robert Smith 2008, Carmel O'Connor
Oil on linenSigned and dated l.r -
Bass Coast Shire Council - Robert Smith Collection
Artwork, other - [Untitled landscape], Harald Vike
Oil on canvas -
Bass Coast Shire Council - Robert Smith Collection
Artwork, other - Desert Edge 1950's, John Murray Wilson
Oil on board Signed and dated -
Bass Coast Shire Council - Robert Smith Collection
Artwork, other - Untitled [Man carrying Woman], Unknown
Oil on board -
Bass Coast Shire Council - Robert Smith Collection
Artwork, other - Catching the Stars 1999 [From the Art of Eddie Burrup], Elizabeth Durack
Australian 1915 - 2000Oil on canvasInitialled l.r Presented to Robert Smith in 2008 by the artist's daughter, Perpetua and son Michael, with appreciation and affection -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Container - Neats foot oil
Used in the maintenance of leather saddles and harnesses Circa 1900As imported and sold by Holden and FrostMetal container with handle and cork plug Superior Neats foot oilharness oil, equine -
Puffing Billy Railway
Four NSWTD Railway marker Oil lamps
Four NSWTD Railway marker Oil lamps at Nobelius Packing shed Item stamped numbers unknown Oil burning lamps have always been an important part of Australian railway signalling systems and have been used for communication, safety and lighting. It is called a marker lamp and was hung on rolling stock (carriages and wagons) such as the guard’s van to indicate the rear of the train at night. They were also used to indicate the rear of steam locomotive tenders for identification and safety purposes. This type of lamp was introduced to the railways around 1860 and continued to be used for over one hundred years. Oil lamps were phased out on the railways during the late 1960s and early 1970s, when they were replaced by battery lamps. Railway lighting included not only stations but yards, engines, rolling stock, signals, signal-boxes and crossings. There were a number of different types of lamps used for a variety of railway purposes. Historic - New South Wales Transport Department.- Railway Marker Oil LampFour NSWTD Railway marker Oil lamps made of metal and glass Railway lamp, paraffin, metal / glass / fabric, used for attaching to railway rolling stock to mark the end of the train, made by the New South Wales Transport Department, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, 1870-1970 This lamp comprises a hollow cube of metal. One lens at the front transmits light from an interior light source. Fuel was either signal oil or kerosene. The burner inside the lamp used either cotton or felt wicks to create the light source. The lamp has a carry handle for carrying by hand and a bracket with a slot on the back for hanging onto the hook of a locomotive or item of rolling stock. It is marked "NSWTD" which stands for New South Wales Transport Department.NSWTDpuffing billy railway , pbr, four nswtd railway marker oil lamps -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Painting, Kimberley Dunstan, Port Phillip Bay Bicentennial Fleet Departure, 1988
I was born in Guildford W.A. on 12 November 1940 and at an early age took an interest in painting. Over the years (between lapses) I have completed several hundred pieces of work including pencil and crayon sketches, lino cuts, oil colours - and water colours which have been my main focus. As painting has always been a hobby I’ve never bothered with selling my work through an art gallery - but have donated a good deal of work to fundraisers and charity auctions with some paintings attracting large prices, I’ve also sold quite a number (some years ago) via Joels Auctions before they went up-market, others have gone to friends and family. My pleasure has been in completing painting, I’ve never bothered about recovering costs (including framing) but happy when people take an interest in my work - and I know pictures have gone to a happy home – additional pleasure comes when people remind me they love the painting, sometimes I’ve forgotten what they have and other occasions have been able to see them in their homes and loved they way they have fitted-in. Regarding the little painting of the Bicentennial sailing ships – I did it as a quick sketch at the time (1988) when the ships departed Melbourne sailing down Port Phillip Bay - with the view to doing a larger painting which never eventuated and it has remained in my possession until recently when I decided to dispose of my remaining work/s as I have to move and ‘down-size’. As you will appreciate it is a very simple sketch but it captures a notable moment in time and would be very happy if the MTS could find a place for it in their collection. As it happens I spent 9 years in the Royal Australian Navy and feel a close connection to seafarers and would be honoured that you might wish to include the picture in your collection. Marine art, Maritime artKimberley Dunstan, Mission to Seafarers CollectionSmall rectangular oil painting (landscape format) depicting sailing shipsSigntaure of the artist bottom left corner: KHD At the back in black ink: 1988 / Kim Dunstan / Port Phillip Bay / Bicentennial Fleet Departure / From End Of Martin St Brightonbicentennial, 1988, fleet, kim dunstan, kimberley dunstan -
Running Rabbits Military Museum operated by the Upwey Belgrave RSL Sub Branch
Oil Painting HMAS Australia (1), HMAS Australia (1), 26/06/1910
HMAS Australia (1) The largest war ship in the Australian fleet was the first flagship of the Australian fleet in WW1. She was Commissiond and paid for by the Australian Goverment to ensure sdequate protection for the Australasion Pacific Region. She had a crew of 900 "Officers and Crew" and was equipted with four sets of 12 inch breech loading guns,side firing torpedos and fourteen 4 inch guns for surface and air contacts. On the 12 of April 1924 HMAS Australia (1) was with "Full Military Honours" Scuttled 50 km east of Sydney. Only 14 Years old.Framed Oil Paintinghmas australia oil painting pictures -
Footscray Community Arts
The Happy Man, Heath Lander, 2006
MEDIUM: Oil on canvas -
Footscray Community Arts
Deface, Penelope Long, 2006
MEDIUM: Oil on linen -
Footscray Community Arts
Blue Couple, Tamsin Molesworth, 2005
MEDIUM: Oil on canvas -
Footscray Community Arts
Lovers III, John Murphy, 2006
MEDIUM: Oil on paper -
Footscray Community Arts
Moon Age Day Dream, Bill Nicholson, 2000
MEDIUM: Oil on linen -
Footscray Community Arts
What Happen, Adam Sime, 2006
MEDIUM: Oil on linen -
Footscray Community Arts
They say, Christine White, 2004
MEDIUM: Oil on silk -
Footscray Community Arts
Untitled, Eric Onus, (estimated); 1970
MEDIUM: Oil on canvas -
Morongo Old Collegians
Portrait, Miss Dulcie Brookshaw
Portait of the third Principal of Morongo Girls College, GeelongColoured Oil PaintingMiss Dulcie Brookshaw - Principal/Head Mistresseducation, school, morongo, geelong, girls, principal -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Container - Salad Oil Bottle, A. C. Parkin & Co - Carlton, pre 1917
A. C. Parkin & Co, Carlton: manufacturers of grocers' sundries, spice merchants and general importers. A. C. Parkin had their warehouse on the corner of Rathdowne and Herbert Street North CarltonSalad oil bottleA. C. Parkin & Co, Carltonsalad oil, bottle, parkin, household object -
Running Rabbits Military Museum operated by the Upwey Belgrave RSL Sub Branch
Medicine
Vial of Castor oilequipment, ww1, army -
Horsham Regional Art Gallery
Painting, Julia RITSON, Untitled 9810, 1998
Gift of the Department of Infrastructure, 2002diptych, oil on canvas -
Horsham Regional Art Gallery
Painting, Julia RITSON, Untitled 9937, 1999
Gift of the Department of Infrastructure, 2002diptych, oil on canvas -
Horsham Regional Art Gallery
Painting, Wes WALTERS, Untitled, 1988
Gift of the artist, 1999oil and graphite on canvas -
Horsham Regional Art Gallery
Painting, Di BRESCIANI, Keep on singing that song, 1995
Gift of the artist, 1995oil on Belgian linen -
Horsham Regional Art Gallery
Painting, Robert DICKERSON, Redfern landscape, n.d
Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Mack Jost, 1992.oil on composition boardSigned, lower rightrobert dickerson, the antipodeans, redfern -
Horsham Regional Art Gallery
Painting, Frederick McCUBBIN, Horses (sketch for The old stone crusher, 1911), c. 1911
Gift of Mack Jost, 1986oil on canvas board -
Horsham Regional Art Gallery
Painting, White camp, n.d
Mack Jost Bequest, 2001oil on paper on board -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Memorabilia - Realia, 1930-1940
A Willoughby – Linseed Oilstawell -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Painting: Penelope AITKEN (b.1967 Melb. AUS), Penelope Aitken, Mapping Mass & Void 10, 2008
Penelope Aitken lives and works in Melbourne, Australia. She makes paintings and installations about relationships: between people, between things and between people and things. Recurring subjects include friendship, genealogy, romantic liaisons, and cross-cultural exchange as well as gardening, craft and landscape design. 'I am interested in the social, psychological and aesthetic motives behind organisation, belonging and displacement and I often make work that investigates such arrangements.' She has held regular solo exhibitions since 1995 and has been represented in group exhibitions since 1989. These have included shows in public and commercial galleries, artist run spaces, outdoor projects and festivals in Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, Brisbane, Bundaberg, Kuala Lumpur, Taipei, Tokyo and Famagusta, Northern Cyprus. Aitken has previously worked at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art and at Asialink at the University of Melbourne. From 2006 - 2009 she was a board member of the Melbourne artist run gallery, West Space and she has also curated and coordinated numerous exhibitions and written and edited catalogues, articles and essays. She holds a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Education (Visual Arts) both from The University of Melbourne and completed her Masters of Fine Art at the Victorian College of the Arts in 2004. In 1997 Aitken was selected to be a studio artist for two years at Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces, Melbourne and in 2000 she undertook an Australia Council Studio at the Taipei National University of the Arts, Taiwan. More recently she spent two months in 2007 at the Laughing Waters Residency, Birrarung, in Eltham, Victoria. There she began her current interest in the rocks used in the landscape designs of Gordon Ford. Paintings of Ford's rocks made since 2007 as well as glacial erratics, meteors, and other natural and displaced rocks were exhibited in March 2011 at the Light Factory Gallery in Eltham in a show called My History of here, and Second Nature, one work from this exhibition, was awarded first prize at Eltham Masterworks 2011. Other work made about rocks in nature and culture include: the project, A dark archive, as well as in two installations: You seem so settled for one that doesn't belong held at West Space in 2009 and Gathering these things to remind me of home shown in 2010 at the Bundaberg Regional Art Gallery, Queensland. In July and August 2007 Aitken undertook an arts recidency at Birrarung, a house and garden designed by Gordon Ford and managed as the Laughing Waters Artist in Residence Program by the Shire of Nillumbik Victoria. The rocks depicted in the painting 'Mapping Mass & Void 10' are all taken from the garden at Birrarung. Aitken has made reference to those rocks and the way in which Ford thought of the rocks as individuals that need to be handled and placed with consideration to show off their best aspects.oil and acrylic on linen ek prac 2015 -
Latrobe Regional Gallery
Painting, VERHEESEN, Ludouicus, Fransicus (Franz) b. 1928, Holland d.1983, Latrobe Valley, VIC, Aus, Untitled, 1967
Oil on composition boardSigned 'F. Verheesen 67', underlined in felt tipped pen - lower right corner