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Federation University Historical Collection
Book, Art/Sculpture Scrap Book, c1880
This book was number R453 in the Ballarat technical Art School library.Green cloth covered scrapbook with photographic images from antiquity glued onto the pages, and handwritten descriptions.ballarat technical art school library, art, sculpture, arch of titus, temple of jerusalem, roman forum, foro romano, colosseum, palatine hill, rupe tarpeia, piazza de popolo, st peter's, rome, arch of constantine, trevi fountain, fontana di trevi, castello s. angelo, tomb of hadrian, ponte s. angelo, augustus caesar, julius caesar, commodus, dacian captine, posidippo, discobulus, discus thrower, the dying gladiator, demosdthenes, sophocles, pudicizia, fortuna, cerene, calliope, erato, enterpes, flora, sala agrippina, sala de'filosoti, pompei, pompei forno, skull, tre fontane, rome, leaning tower of pisa -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture - Artwork, [Masks]
If you can provide information on this artist or artwork please use the link below. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Three dimensional sculpture of masks.art, artwork, sculpture, portraits -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture - Sculpture - welded Metal, 'Organic Form' by Inge King, c1967
Inge KING (26 November 1915 – 23 April 2016) Born Berlin, Germany Arrived Australia 1951 Inge King trained as a wood carver and studied at the Berlin Academy (1937-1939), Royal Academy London (1940), and the Glascow School of Art (1941-1843) . She moved to London in 1847 and began carving organic abstract forms in wood and stone. In 1949-50 she went on a study tour to the United States of America where she was inspired to work in metal . Inge King arrived in Australia in 1951 and she completed several large scale public works. Between 1861 and 1875 Inge King lectured at the Institute of Early Childhood Development, Kew. From 1976 to 1987 she lectured in Sculpture at Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. She was a founding member of the Ceminal Centre Five group, and she actively lobbied architects, governments and State galleries to include modernist sculptures in their plans and displays. In 1991 Inge King joined the first National Trust of Australia (Victoria) Public Art Committee, advising on public art at risk and worthy of Trust classification. The Australian Women's Art Register describes Inge King as having been at the forefront of developing a non figurative vocabulary in Australian Sculpture. Welded bronzed steel sculpture painted black and red. This sculpture by Inge King was purchased in 1967 with funds raised by staff and students of Ballarat Teachers' College, a predecessor institution of Federation University Australia. During this era a collection was made which resulted in an annual purchase or commission of an artwork of note. The Federation University Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007. Signed 'I. King' on the lower steel plate. art, artwork, inge king, king, sculpture, ballarat teachers' college collection, welded metal, metal sculpture -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Charles Douglas Richardson, Tempus fugit, 1900
patinated plastertempus fugit, time flies, sundial, figure, female, charles douglas richardson, c douglas richardson, cd richardson, relief, sculpture -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Ellen José, Boon wurrung Blossom, 2008
The bluestone is laid on crushed yellow ochre sandstone, with the base encircled by indigenous flowering plants. Each rock represents one of the six clans that made up the Boon wurrung. For thousands of years, Boon wurrung women and children congregated in this area during special periods in spring and summer. The area was rich in seafood and had fresh water wells dotted around it. Among the Banksia trees that provided shelter, grew indigenous plants and flowers through which the women made garlands to wear in their hair.boon wurrung, blossom, sculpture, public art, indigenous, bayside indigenous coastal trail, ellen josé, ellen jose, bluestone, sandstone -
Phillip Island and District Historical Society Inc.
Wooden Sculpture, Penguin, ??
Maker and time of this sculpture is unknown.Wooden Sculpture of a penguin.penguin, wooden sculpture of penguin, glenda gilder -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, 'Spirit of ANZAC' by Wallace Anderson, 19/03/2016
Photograph of a sculpture of an ANZAC sculpture.anzac, soldier, sculpture, geelong -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Margaret Baskerville, Edith Cavell, c. 1926
Edith Cavell was an English nurse based in Belgium who had been killed by German officers for conspiring to help in the escape of allied soldiers. This work is a plaster maquette of a large memorial marble bust by Margaret Baskerville that is located at Kings Domain on Birdwood Avenue, Melbourne. Although commissioned in 1917, the memorial was not completed until 1926 due to both the difficulty of obtaining Carrara marble from Italy after the war and the increasing number of Baskerville’s other commissions.Margaret Baskerville, Edith Cavell c. 1926, plaster, 82 x 49 x 28 cm. Bayside Art and Heritage Collection. Donated by Charles Douglas Richardson, 1931.plasteredith cavell, bust, sculpture, nurse, world war i, margaret baskerville, melbourne, berkendael medical institute, red cross, brussels, plaster -
Wangaratta Art Gallery
Sculpture, Mandy Gunn, Fireball, 2013
Wangaratta Art Gallery Collection. Gift of the Artist.A spherical sculpture made from black inner tubesmandy gunn, sculpture, recycled -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Folio, Bruno Simon, Tatura Dreams
Folio of artwork/sculpture by Bruno Simon, Dunera internee 1941-1943, 8th Employment Company A.M.F 1943-1945Black card folio containing a white folder, a buff coloured folder with an inscription, 1 photocopy of a newspaper clipping and 26 white A4 sheets. Each sheet shows a black and white picture of a sculpture.To Philipp and Tilly from Bruno, Bergamo 27-7-1976 (On folder)artwork, sculpture, dunera, bruno simon -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture - Sculpture - Metal, 'Untitled' by Neale McSwain, 1986
Neale McSWAIN Neale McSwain studied at Ballarat College of Advanced Education (now Federation University) in 1986. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Red painted steel sculpture.art, artwork, neale mcswain, sculpture, ballarat college of advanced education -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture, Hiro Kuwahara, 'Falcon' by Hiro Kuwahara, 1988
Hiro KUWAHARA Hiro Kuwahara was an artist in residence at Gippsland Institute of Art in 1988. The role was sponsored by the Coal Corporation of VictoriaSculpture of a bird made of claySignature incised on backbird, sculpture, coal corporation of victoria, hiro kuwahara, artist in residence -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Sculpture: Angela NAGEL, Angela Nagel, Last on the Island, 2012
With an interest in 'Collective Unconscious' Nagel aims to explore the human condition, and our impact on the natural world / This figure embodies human and animal traits with semi-autobiographical references to investigate concepts relating to identity and home / Nagel focuses on the extinct, the pest, the endangered and the introduced as a way to reveal her concerns of humanity as creator and destroyer / In this sculpture a koala headed figure is in the pose of the martyr St. Sebastion / With no arms, there is an inability to protest or fight. This work is by a local contemporary artist and encompasses contemporary themes / This work was a finalist in the Nillumbik Prize 2012.Ceramic - sculpture human and animal like (koala) armless figure depicted standing in a similiar stance to that of a classical sculpture / Blue and white body with a yellow face / Made from porcelain with oxide, clear glaze and undergaze.nagel, sculpture, porcelain, animal, ceramic, classical -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture, 'Mascot Two and Mascot Three' by Trevor Wren, 1994
Trevor WREN (1952- ) A graduate of the Bachelor of Art (Visual Art), and Graduate Diploma of Visual Arts at the Gippsland Centre of Art and Design (GCAD). This work was purchased as part of the Gippsland Campus Art Enhancement Project, 1996Sculpture by Trevor Wrenartwork, artist, sculpture, trevor wren, gippsland campus, alumni -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Faustas Sadauskas, The Beacon, 2003
Public art commission located at Progress Park on the Black Rock Foreshore.Inscribed with text that is an extract from a verse sung by Lithuanian displaced persons sailing to Australia having fled their homeland after Russian occupation following World War II. The text is in an ancient Runic typeface, translated in English, reads: "Faustas Sadauskas created Beacon two thousand [and] four years / Let the Blowing Wind Who Taketh the Ship Away Take Me Away".beacon, sculpture, faustas sadauskas, bayside coastal trail, marble, public art, black rock, foreshore, beach road, progress park, ship, rudder -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Slide, Robin Boyd, 1965
Colour slide in a mount. Miraggio (seated figure) sculpture by Pino Conte at Sidney Myer Music Bowl, MelbourneMade in Australia / 23 / JAN 65M / Myer Music Bowl Sculpture: (Handwritten)melbourne, slide -
Duldig Studio museum + sculpture garden
Sculpture, Karl Duldig, Mask by Karl Duldig 1921, 1921
Karl Duldig carved this marble sculpture of a mask in the Vienna Kunstgewerbeschule (School of Applied Arts) in 1921. His teacher, Anton Hanak, the Professor of Sculpture at the School, encouraged him to carve directly into the stone. It was an accomplished work for the 19 year-old student and was selected by Hanak to represent the students of the School at the Deutschen Gewerbeschau (German Applied Art exhibition) in Munich in 1922, an early accolade for the young artist. The sculpture and another Kneeling Nude were reproduced in the journal Deustche Kunst and Dekoration in 1923-24 in an article on the Hanak-Klasse. In 2011 Mask was exhibited in the National Gallery of Victoria exhibition Vienna: Art and Design. The sculpture is one of ten substantial sculptures in marble and stone, and a larger group terracotta sculptures and masks, portrait busts and small stone sculptures created by Karl Duldig in Vienna that are held in the Museum collection. These art works are complemented by an archive of contemporary documents including letters, photographs, documents and ephemera. In 1938 Duldig’s Viennese sculptures were sent to Paris in 1938 for a proposed exhibition, and were hidden in Paris by Slawa Duldig’s sister Rella, throughout the Second World War, and arrived in Australia post-war over 5 decades. Karl Duldig was a student of the Kunstgewerbeschule from 1921 until 1925, and then attended the Akademie Der Bildenden Künste (Academy of Fine Arts) from 1929 until 1933. He was accepted into the Professor Josef Mullner’s “Meisterschule” at the Academy of Fine Arts from 1929 until 1933. His teacher at the Kunstgwerebeschule was Austria’s foremost contemporary sculptor Anton Hanak, and he was a formative influence on Duldig’s work. Hanak had been a member of Viennese Secession, and worked with Josef Hoffman on architectural commissions prior to the First World War. Hanak shared both his love of the expressive quality of materials and a humanist vision with his students. Various writers have written about Duldig’s interest in masks. His interest may have been stimulated by his classical education, the Greek and Roman antiquities in the Kunsthistoriches Museum in Vienna, or the ethnological collections in Vienna’s Museum of Ethnology (now known as the Weltmuseum). The mask was a motif explored by expressionist and cubist artists whose work was exhibited at the Vienna Secession. Duldig would have been familiar with the psychological investigations of the neurologist and founder of psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud, who established his practice in Vienna. In the Duldig Studio library, Duldig’s keen interest in the arts of a myriad of visual cultures is apparent. Of particular note are two well-thumbed copies Rudolf Utzinger’s, Masken, published by Ernst Wasmuth in Berlin in 1923, depicting masks from around the world. It is likely that a multitude of influences were at play. Slawa Duldig also worked with this motif, and also carved a smaller mask in Salzburg marble as well as a remarkable mask in clay, and these are held in the collection. Ann Carew 2016The Mask has national and international aesthetic significance. It is one of the earliest works by Karl Duldig in the Studio collection, and is a subject that he would continue to explore throughout his working life. The sculpture demonstrates a high degree of technical skill and mastery at an early age. It is evidence of Duldig’s engagement with the art of his peers during this period – the mask is a motif that inspired contemporary expressionist and cubist artists. It also demonstrates his interests in portraiture, human psychology, and the creation of identity and transformation of personalities. The Mask also provides an important link to the studio practice in the Vienna Kunstgwerbeschule, the teaching of Anton Hanak, and the program of international art exhibitions in Europe during the period. It is also of historical significance: the story of its survival and eventual recovery provides a counterpoint to the story of the Nazis’ confiscation of art during the Second World War. Ann Carew 2016Carving in Salzburg Marble. Holes for eyes and mouth cut through the block. Highly polished finish at front contrasting with rough finish at back and stylised curled hair. Marble base separate (75 x 275 x 198, wt 9000) and added later by artist. Karl Duldig 1921 incised on back -
Bendigo Art Gallery
Sculpture, Charles RICHARDSON, Original model for the Gold Jubilee Memorial Statue, Bendigo, Circa 1905
Inscribed inside sculpture cavity "Douglas Richardson"sculpture, bronze, plaster, bendigo, gold mining, gold panning, central goldfields -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture, Frances Deutsher, 'make COMPASSION the fashion' by Frances Deutsher, 2015
Artist's Statement: The conflict of 1914 -1918 was dubbed ‘the war to end all wars’. In contradiction to the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 for ‘renunciation of war’, the twentieth century can be viewed as the bloodiest in history with no fewer than 59 conflicts occurring globally. My work honours the innocents, the children of war, who have experienced loss and grief in its extreme; who have witnessed slaughter on a scale I cannot imagine. The work asks that we, the privileged and scar free, embrace the imperative for Peace…putting our money where our mouth is…promoting COMPASSION as the fashion EVERY year. Please take a badge frances deutsher, lucato peace prize, sculpture, fashion -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture, unk
This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.art, artwork, sculpture, available -
Wyndham Art Gallery (Wyndham City Council)
Sculpture, Penelope Davis, Sea Change Series, 2017 - 2019
Penelope Davis was born and lives in Melbourne. Davis is primarily known as a post-photographic artist creating photographs without a camera. Using complicated sculptural techniques, Davis makes silicone moulds then resin casts of the now absent objects. Finally light is passed through the casts to expose photographic paper that is developed and printed. The result is an indexical trace of an object many steps removed from its origin. In doing so, the works record not only an image but a process - a chain of transformations and inversions - akin to the processes of photography itself but one that recasts photography in a new light. More recently Davis has been creating jellyfish forms from a collage of components in a similar way. Taking the detritus of contemporary technologies and combining these with organic source material such as leaves and seaweed, Davis makes casts in silicone, then uses these casts themselves as forms. The artist hand sews these ‘skins’ together to create delicate hybrid forms that resemble jellyfish. These works reflect on, and embody, a painstaking attempt to recuperate an appreciation for the natural world, our symbiotic relationship with it, and the necessity of our shared future. 9 x suspended silicone jellyfish sculpturesaustralian art, sculpture, female artist, climate art -
Wangaratta Art Gallery
Sculpture, Anderson Hunt, Idle Hands
Wangaratta Art Gallery CollectionA sculpture of a pair of hands made from red gum and steel.anderson hunt, sculpture, hands -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Margaret Baskerville, Sir Thomas Bent, c. 1911
This work is a plaster maquette of a large bronze statue of politician and land speculator Sir Thomas Bent by Margaret Baskerville that is located on the corner of Bay Street and Nepean Highway, Brighton.Margaret Baskerville, Sir Thomas Bent c.1911, patinated plaster, 55 x 49 x 49 cm. Bayside City Council Art and Heritage Collection. Donated by Charles Douglas Richardson, 1931.patinated plaster thomas bent, politician, mayor, premier, bust, sculpture, margaret baskerville, land speculator, speaker, local government, councillor, member of lower house, portrait -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Plan - Immigration sculpture, Beacon Cove, Orchard Design Studio, Mark Weichart, 1998
Mirvac, Beacon Cove developers, commissioned this sculpture. Orchard Design Studio contacted PMH&PS for 19th Century migrant ship names, to be handcarved into jarrah portion of sculpture, and for approval of 20th century ship names for the steel section. In return we requested a copy of these plans.Presentation plans (two sheets) for sculpture at Beacon Cove, designed by Orchard Design Studio of Pakenham. One in full colour, one a photocopy only. Subject: immigration.Photocopy signed by the artist, Mark Weichart.piers and wharves - station pier, immigration, transport - shipping, arts and entertainment - visual arts, mark weichart, mirvac, sculpture, orchard design studio -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture, Judith Neuwiller, 'Flame Tree' by Judith Neuwiller, 1996
Judith NEUWILLER (later Judith AMBrOSE) Judith Neuwiller graduated with a Bachelor of Art (Visual Art), and Graduate Diploma of Visual Arts at the Gippsland Centre of Art and Design in 1987, and a Post Graduate Diploma of Fine Art. Victorian College of the Arts in 1988. Painted timber sculpture.gippsland campus, churchill, judith neuwiller, alumni, sculpture, gcad, gippsland centre of art and design -
Wangaratta Art Gallery
Sculpture, Rose Wedler, Gentle Giant 1, 2013
Wangaratta Art Gallery CollectionA sculpture of a steel gum tree silhouette on a stained red gum base.rose wedler, sculpture, gum tree -
Wangaratta Art Gallery
Sculpture, Rose Wedler, Gentle Giant 2, 2013
Wangaratta Art Gallery CollectionA sculpture of a steel gum tree silhouette on a stained red gum base.rose wedler, sculpture, gum tree -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Guy Boyd, The swimmer, 1988
bronzesculpture, swimmer, female, figure, guy boyd, public art, bayside, bayside city council, australian bicentennial project, guy martin à beckett boyd, bronze, city of sandringham, indigenous resource garden, bluff road, sandringham -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Margaret Baskerville, Sir Thomas Bent, 1913
Arguably Margaret Baskerville’s most famous work, the bronze statue of politician and land speculator Sir Thomas Bent was Baskerville’s first public commission and a significant turning point in her career. Originally located in the centre of the Nepean Highway, in Brighton, it became somewhat of signpost for many Melbournians until it was relocated to the corner of Bay Street in 1980.The statue of Sir Thomas Bent is of historic and social significance to the State of Victoria. The statue is historically significant for commemorating Bent's long, active and infamous political career in Victoria. He was responsible for many important speculative ventures both within his electorate and in the wider context of Victoria. Although not without thought for personal gain, Bent was a committed advocate of public utilities, railways, roads, tramways and gasworks. The statue is historically significant as the first large public commission given to a woman sculptor in Victoria. This work helped the sculptor, Margaret Baskerville, preserve her name as Victoria's first professional woman sculptor. The statue is socially significant as testimony to the late nineteenth century land boom and the financial and political corruption and scandals that accompanied it. https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/12614bronze and granite thomas bent, politician, mayor, premier, bust, sculpture, margaret baskerville, speaker, member of parliament, member of lower house, local government, councillor, brighton, public art, bayside -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture, Thomas, Kylie, 'Cultural Dedication' by Kylie Thomas, 1993
Kylie THOMAS (14 May 1973 - ) Born Creswick, Victoria A graduate of the Bachelor of Arts (Visual Arts) (1993) and Diploma of Visual Arts (1995) from Federation University (then University of Ballarat) Kylie Thomas continued her art practice after studying under distinguished sculptors Peter Blizzard and Adrian Mauriks. This work was acquired from her graduate folio. Soon after completing her studies Kylie Thomas became an artist in residence at Ballarat Grammar School building a public sculpture for the grounds conceived by one of her selected students as part of the program. She became the youngest exhibiting applicant to be awarded the City of Port Phillip, Rupert Bunny Foundation artist in residence program. After moving to Mallacoota she was absorbed into the community as a visual artist, actor, playwright and assistant publicist. Her commissioned public artwork and sculptures as part of residences collections were all lost in the 2019 bushfires that decimated Mallacoota. Moving back to her hometown of Creswick Kylie Thomas completed a Diploma in Education qualifying as a secondary teacher, always continuing her art practice while teaching. Needing to work again, but with no desire to teach, Kylie Thomas studied Building Design and Architectural Drafting, homing in on other areas which could link back to her artistic practice. Working in this field for a short time she moved to Melbourne where she exhibited paintings and sculpture installations as part of The Melbourne Fringe Festival. She also worked in set design, and as a stage manager and theatre actor. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.This work is a spiritual totem created in the tradition of the bricoleur, dedicated to bygone cultures, lost technology and mystery referencing nature, humanity and technology. Humanity to use technology with and for nature. The materials are symbolic, the use of bone, Perspex, computer parts, found and crafted objects constructed in a resulting harmony creating a symbiotic relationship. Tapping the 4th dimension that could lift off into space and come back again, with a feeling of weightlessness, awe and suspension captured. A sculpture which stands on a white pedestal with perspex cover. 'Cultural Dedication' is the final work in a series of sculptures influenced by the ancient cultures of Egypt. art, artwork, kylie thomas, sculpture, alumni