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Victorian Harness Racing Heritage Collection at Lord's Raceway Bendigo
Document - Record, Harness Horse, Claridge
Stephen Spark compiled horses performance records starting in 1983 on his typewriter. Claridge raced from 1965 (5yo) through to 1969 then raced in US from 1969 until 1973 (13yo). Career: 48 wins 36 seconds 29 thirds 233 starts.Typed document in black and red ink.harness racing, australasian harness racing, horse career, performance records, bendigo harness racing club, bhrc, claridge, g gubbins, geoff gubbins, m allan, mr allen, malcolm allen -
Merri-bek City Council
Painting - Oil on canvas, Graeme Drendel, Happy Families - Timberoo, 1990
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Merri-bek City Council
Print - Digital image, Marshall White, Strip 1, 1987
Marshall White is a former Merri-bek resident and artist. He completed a Fine Art diploma at the National Gallery Art School in 1973. After a severe motorcycle accident left him with quadriplegia in 1977, he returned to university, earning a Master in Painting from what is now the Victorian College of the Arts. White is considered a pioneer of digital art in Victoria. He taught art to inmates at Pentridge Prison, which provided him with access to early computers. Using a Commodore Amiga, Marshall pushed the boundaries of digital art. Strip 1 represents an early contribution to what was, at the time, an emergent art form. Inspired by William Blake and Arthur Boyd, White’s work delves into psychological spaces, addressing themes such as the apocalypse and White’s distain of religion. White's work exemplifies resilience and the transformative power of creativity in the face of challenges.Purchased -
Merri-bek City Council
Painting - Oil on canvas, Graeme Drendel, The Search Party, 1995
Local artist Graeme Drendel often depicts isolated individuals against stark Australian landscapes. Even when portrayed in group settings, Drendel’s figures exude solitude and introspection. Their expressions and attire hint at larger, obscured narratives, which the viewer is left to unravel or imagine. His paintings seamlessly blend the ordinary with the surreal, which creates a sense of uneasiness or forboding. Viewers grapple with the challenge of deciphering these compositions. -
Merri-bek City Council
Painting - Liquid nails and spray enamel on canvas, Brian McKinnon, Scars, 2008
Uncle Brian McKinnon (b. 1957 – d. 2023) was a Geelong-based artist and descendent of the Amangu and Wongai people of Western Australia. He created powerful mixed media works that explore his campaign for Aboriginal rights and his childhood experiences growing up in Western Australia. Scars is a deeply personal and political work that reflects on some of the ways in which Aboriginal people have historically been discriminated against and marginalised because of the colour of their skin and cultural practices. Originally exhibited with two other paintings, it was also made in honour of the artist’s children and their struggle to maintain positive self-esteem. Uncle Brian McKinnon said his children inherited keloids from their ancestors: ‘These keloids look like body scars. In this work, I have placed them in the past and the presence of their ancestors through the act of beautifying the marks, which reflect the landscape and the identity of the person wearing the beautification marks. Although the marks on my children are not so beautiful and they are ostracised because of them, this made me think of racist policies and of course the referendum and when my people were seen for the first time as being human.’ -
Merri-bek City Council
Painting - Liquid nails and spray enamel on canvas, Brian McKinnon, Scars, 2008
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Merri-bek City Council
Painting - Liquid nails and spray enamel on canvas, Brian McKinnon, Scars, 2008
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Merri-bek City Council
Painting, Maritza Beretta, Shimmering Pattern, 1998
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Merri-bek City Council
Painting - Oil on canvas, Jarmila Hava, Armchair, 2000
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Merri-bek City Council
Mixed media, Antonella Calvano, Untitled (house), Undated
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Merri-bek City Council
Painting - Oil on canvas, Noel Counihan, Tête, 1969
Born in Melbourne in 1913, Noel Counihan was a social realist painter, printmaker and cartoonist, and a passionate social campaigner. The namesake of Merri-bek City Council’s Counihan Gallery, his experiences of unemployment and poverty during the 1930s, and his lifelong involvement in protest movements, inspired his powerful and prolific images of the working class. Donated by the De Fazio family -
Merri-bek City Council
Print - Lithograph, Noel Counihan, A Metal Pourer, 1948
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Merri-bek City Council
Work on paper - Ink and wash on paper, Noel Counihan, Anti-War Cartoon, c. 1950
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Merri-bek City Council
Braille paper on cardboard on MDF, Mandy Gunn, Ways of Seeing, 2001
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Merri-bek City Council
Oil on board, Maree Clarke, Fresh Water Shield (connection to country), 2007, 2007
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Merri-bek City Council
Acrylic on watercolour paper, Mandy Nicholson, Cultural Map of Melbourne, 2003
Primarily a painter, Mandy Nicholson also produces ceramics, carvings, murals, prints, designs and children’s clothing. Born in 1975, Nicholson was raised in Healesville and belongs to the Wurundjeri-willam (Woiwurrung language) clan of the Kulin Nation. Mandy’s paintings often represent important cultural rituals and are executed in her distinct graphic style using the traditional motifs of her people blended with contemporary interpretation. Cultural Map of Melbourne shows significant sites across Melbourne. These include scar trees, corroboree trees, stone quarries, bush tucker sites, significant rivers, fresh water wells and traditional campsites. -
Merri-bek City Council
Acrylic on watercolour paper, Mandy Nicholson, Birrarung dragonflies in the rain, 2006
Primarily a painter, Mandy Nicholson also produces ceramics, carvings, murals, prints, designs and children’s clothing. Born in 1975, Nicholson was raised in Healesville and belongs to the Wurundjeri-willam (Woiwurrung language) clan of the Kulin Nation. Mandy’s paintings often represent important cultural rituals and are executed in her distinct graphic style. She uses the traditional motifs of her people blended with contemporary interpretation. -
Merri-bek City Council
Type C photograph, cabbages, birch tree plantation, Claire Watson, Epiphyte 1, 2008
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Merri-bek City Council
Shredded book pages woven on cotton, ribbon, Mandy Gunn, Wuthering Heights Unfolds, 2009
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Merri-bek City Council
Hand printed linocut and oil paint on canvas, Angela Cavalieri, Montagna di Memorie (Mountain of Memories), 2007
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Merri-bek City Council
Lithograph (printed by A.R. McClintock), Noel Counihan, A worker resting, 1948
Donated by Elizabeth Batt -
Merri-bek City Council
Lithograph (printed by A.R. McClintock), Noel Counihan, Furnaceman, 1948
Donated by Elizabeth Batt -
Merri-bek City Council
Relief etching printed in 1 colour from 1 copper plate over lithograph printed in 1 colour from 1 aluminium plate, Emily Floyd, It’s Time (Again), 2007
Emily Floyd is a Melbourne-based artist who works across sculpture, printmaking and public installation. In It’s Time (Again), Floyd graphically presents Gough Whitlam’s election speech, delivered before he became Prime Minster in 1972. Floyd’s training as a graphic designer is evident in the way in which the text’s presentation ties form to meaning. For example, the circular arrangement of the words resembles a vinyl record to be played again and again, implying the speech is worth revisiting. The circular arrangement also references other forms of timekeeping, such as the growth rings of a tree; the face of a clock; the cyclical nature of time, with its diurnal, lunar, seasonal and annual cycles. Floyd's work implies that social and political issues are cyclical in nature. It emphasises the necessity, once again, for proactive measures to ensure a quality, human-centered existence for everyone. -
Merri-bek City Council
Lithograph, John Wolseley, After the Fire - Leaf Surge, 2003
British born artist John Wolseley relocated to Australia in 1976, where he travelled extensively through the outback mainly recording the natural history of remote north Australia in large, minutely detailed paintings. Since 2009, he has travelled to Darwin annually to continue his exploration of the Top End, visiting Arnhem Land and Daly River to work with Indigenous artists to research and capture the detail and essence of particular landscapes. His works reflect how landscape can be thought of as fields of energy in which plant forms move or dance with rhythmic life. After The Fire - Leaf Surge represents the vibrant regrowth of new foliage emerging from a landscape recently ravaged by fire. -
Merri-bek City Council
Mixed media, Thomas de Kessler, The Valley of Ancestral Spirits, 2001
Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Diana de Kessler in memory of Thomas de Kessler -
Merri-bek City Council
Mixed media, Thomas de Kessler, Give Us Work, Not Promises, 1998
Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Diana de Kessler in memory of Thomas de Kessler -
Merri-bek City Council
Pen, ink and white acrylic, Thomas de Kessler, Untitled (five people in a field), 1998
Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Diana de Kessler in memory of Thomas de Kessler -
Merri-bek City Council
Charcoal and ink on coloured paper, Thomas de Kessler, Portrait of Mr. T de Kessler, 1971
Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Diana de Kessler in memory of Thomas de Kessler -
Merri-bek City Council
Linocut, Thomas de Kessler, Untitled (Man with clasped hands), 1961
Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Diana de Kessler in memory of Thomas de Kessler -
Merri-bek City Council
Pen and ink and white acrylic, Thomas de Kessler, The Blind, 2001
Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Diana de Kessler in memory of Thomas de Kessler