Showing 18442 items
matching box
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (Series) - Overhaul Instructions D-C Pile Voltage Regulator Control Box Type 1002 Model 1
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (Item) - Operating And Service Instructions D-C Carbon Pile Voltage Regulator Control Box Type 1305, Model 1
T.O. No. 03-1-6 Chapter 90 Part A -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (Item) - Operating And Service Instructions D-C Pile Voltage Regulator Control Box Type 1260, Model 1
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Dassault Mystere 20 Control Box [Intertechnique] Overhaul Manual
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Leisure object (Item) - Leather Card Box Complete With Two Sets Of Playing Cards And Six Dice
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Memorabilia (Item) - Presentation Box of 5 soap tablets Fontaine To RAF Officers Station Castle Bromwich by Toro Soap Co Ltd, Presentation Soaps in box
The Officers RAF Kirkham -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Photograph (Item) - Box of black and White photos around pre WWII - RAF Pt Cook and Qantas Miscellaneous Historic
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Document (Item) - Photo Copies of Various Technical Aviation Journals, Bulletins, Engines , Etc , Ex Kevin Kerle Collection. Box No.1
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Document (Item) - Photocopies Of Various Technical Aviation Journals , Bulletins And Engines Ex Kevin Kerle Collection Box 2
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Eclipse Service Manual No.91 A-C Carbon Pile Generator Control Box
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Allied Bendix Aerospace Dual Relay Box Part No 10-609455-1 PW Part No PWA-791032A Component Maintenance Manual
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Drawing (Item) - Bell Helicopter 47-750-091 No Title Box
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Drawing (Item) - Simplex Manufacturing Company A630303 Switch Box Manufacturing Detail Helicopter Spray System
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Drawing (Item) - Decca Radar Limited Circuit Diagram for A/A Gear Box B/RL/SKA/6520
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Drawing (Item) - Decca Radar Limited Circuit Diagram for Lat / Long Gear Box B/RL/SKA/6519
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Document (item) - Australian Defence Specification DEF (AUST) 6119A Liners, Box, Water - Vapourproof Of Water Proof 1987 Draft No.1
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Equipment - Kevin Kerle Collection, Tin of Circuit Breakers, Servo Accelerometer, Plastic Box of Turner Bank Bubble Indicators, Plastic Container of Resistors, Tail of Plastic Bomb, Ball Bearing, Artificial Horizon x2, Sealed Gyroscope x2, Sealed Attitude Gyroscope , Compass Ball, Artificial Horizon Ball, Pitot Tube Static Probe, Minature Transmitter, Cable Pulleys, Bank Indicator, Static Probes, Warning Indicator Lights, Wind Range Chart, Nach Number Computer, Engine Tags, Paint Samples, F111 Electronic Parts, Ikara Wing Cross Section
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - BLACK BOX, JANICE PETERSON WITHAM, 2005
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - RAAF Transformer Box Manual, Royal Australian Air Force Transformer Box Type 1M.3016 ( Abadie)
RAAF -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - RAAF Power Junction Box Manual, Royal Australian Air Force Power Junction Box DR41 Series
RAAF -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - RAAF manuals on - non-return valves, valve box, cap assembly, mixer valve, springed rod, manual control unit, pressure switch, cold air unit
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Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Work on paper - pastel, Margaret Baskerville, Bathing box by beach, 1912
pastelbeach, coast, bathing box, margaret baskerville, bayside, port phillip bay, jetty, ship, bush -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Model (Item) - Supermarine Spitfire scale 1:56 -in perspex box
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Ararat Gallery TAMA
Functional object, Box, lidded, 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
Functional object, Box, lidded, 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
Functional object, Box, lidded, 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
Functional object, Box, lidded, 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
Clothing, Wig Box and Stand
The Lady Barbara Grimwade Costume Collection is comprised of Lady Barbara Grimwade's personal apparel and includes 145 pieces of clothing, 10 hats, 19 handbags, 66 pairs of shoes and assorted accessories of gloves, belts and scarves. In its breadth, this significant acquisition ranges from the mundane to the memorable, therefore giving a balanced representation of one person's taste. Following Lady Barbara Grimwade’s death in March 1990, Ararat Gallery formally accepted the generous gift of clothing and accessories donated by Lady Grimwade's son, Mr Angus K Grimwade, on 28 August 1991. Subsequent smaller donations in 1995 enhanced the collection. Lady Grimwade's Scottish forebears, the Gaerloch Campbells, first settled in Australia in 1861 in the Ararat-Beaufort district. Her great great grandfather, Mr Henry Campbell, died on the voyage to Australia. His widow, Jane, with 10 of her 13 children, farmed and grazed land, firstly at Stockyard Hill then at Fiery Creek, near Buangor, before leaving the shire in 1873. Lady Grimwade held a privileged position in Melbourne society. As the wife of Sir Andrew Grimwade, a prominent businessman, Chairman of several boards and a Trustee of various committees, Lady Grimwade met with royalty, heads of state, politicians, corporate directors, and horse and cattle breeders. Excerpt from 'Hot Pink Summers' catalogue essay, Helen Jackson, 1995. -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Archive (Item) - Box WP1 Prowse Collection See details under Description, Box WP1 Prowse Collection
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Ararat Gallery TAMA
Moira Doropoulos, Prayers for all Humanity: Book 1 + box, 1988