Showing 10 items
matching billilla
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Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Photograph, Billilla, before the 1918 cyclone, c. 1918
billilla, manison, brighton, halifax street, rose garden, weatherly, cyclone -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Painting - oil on board, Marjorie Currie, Billilla, 1968
billilla, brighton, historic house, house, mansion, gardens, marjorie currie, smith and johnson, walter richmond butler, weatherly -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Photograph - type C photograph, Newmark Aerial Photography, Billilla, Halifax Street, Brighton, 1996
brighton, historic house, aerial, photograph, newmark aerial photography, streets, billilla, weatherly, william weatherly, smith and johnson, walter richmond butler, halifax street -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Photograph - sepia photograph, Disastrous effects of the cyclone, 1918
On 2nd February 1918, Brighton experienced the most extreme cyclone to hit a major Australian city, as recorded by the Commonwealth Bureau of Meteorology. With wind speeds estimated at 320 km/h and resulting in the deaths of two people, the event caused tremendous destruction in Brighton.cyclone, brighton, methodist church, hawthorn road, grant's hay & corn store, wells street, wellington street, billilla, weatherly, halifax street, tornado, colonel kendall -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Print - lithograph, Deborah Tate, Once a week, 2010
Created at Billilla Mansion when Deborah Tate was a Bayside Artist in Residence in 2009-10.Deborah Tate, Once a week 2010, lithograph. Bayside City Council Art and Heritage Collection. Donated by the artist, 2010lithographdeborah tate, lithograph, billilla, billilla mansion, artist in residence, rubbish bin, bayside artist in residence -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Photograph, Tess Milne, The porch, 2010
Tess Milne was a Bayside Artist in Residence at Billilla in 2009-2010 when she made this work, 'The porch', which is from a series called 'Suburbia'.Tess Milne, The porch 2010, photograph, 79 x 100 cm. Bayside City Council Art and Heritage Collection. Donated by the artist, 2013house, suburbia, porch, tess milne, bayside artist in residence, billilla -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Print - lithograph, Deborah Tate, Girl talk, 2009
Created at Billilla Mansion when Deborah Tate was an Bayside Artist in Residence in 2009-10.Deborah Tate, Girl talk 2009, lithograph, 27 x 25 cm. Bayside City Council Art and Heritage Collection. Donated by the artist, 2010lithographdeborah tate, lithograph, billilla, billilla mansion, artist in residence, bayside artist in residence, girl talk, school children -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Print - lithograph, Deborah Tate, Boy talk, 2009
Created at Billilla Mansion when Deborah Tate was a Bayside Artist in Residence in 2009-10.Deborah Tate, Boy talk 2009, lithograph, 29.5 x 21.3 cm. Bayside City Council Art and Heritage Collection. Donated by the artist, 2010lithographdeborah tate, lithograph, billilla, billilla mansion, artist in residence, bayside artist in residence, boy talk, school children -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Painting - oil on canvas, Konrad A. Müller-Kurzwelly, An autumn evening, 1888
oil on canvassunset, river, tree, landscape, konrad a. müller-kurzwelly, european, autumn, leaves, rocks, painting, billilla, weatherly, violet weatherly -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Article, Kerrie O'Brien, Want to peek inside Melbourne’s finest mansions and buildings? This is your chance, 30 June 2022
Open House 2022: "Like many Melburnians, Ying-Lan Dann has long been fascinated by the Mission to Seafarers, in Docklands. When she was invited to create a work in response to a building as part of this year’s Open House Melbourne, she knew immediately which it would be. Taking a peek behind the closed doors of some of Melbourne’s finest and most interesting buildings is a core premise of the weekend event, now in its 15th year. During that time, the program has grown from half a dozen buildings to a 200-plus strong list that extends to Ballarat and Bendigo. “[It’s] much more expansive and citizen-led,” says Fleur Watson, Open House Melbourne’s executive director. “As a public festival, it has always had a spirit of generosity, this gesture of opening up and allowing visitors to come and look and experience things.” Swinging open their doors at the end of the month will be some of the city’s finest mansions, including Villa Alba in Kew and Brighton’s Billilla, the Cairo flats in Fitzroy, the newly renovated Jewish Museum designed by Kerstin Thompson, the Melbourne Quakers Centre, the Albanian Mosque in Carlton North and many more. Considering how to approach the event this year, held remotely for the past two, Watson decided to explore beyond the traditional, with associate professor and director of curatorial practice at Monash University Tara McDowell. The two have co-curated an exhibition of works to run concurrently with the Open House program, called Take Hold of the Clouds. That’s where Dann’s work, Circular Temporalities, comes in, one of seven commissions around town in which local and international artists respond to chosen buildings or sites. A lecturer in interior design at RMIT as well as an artist, she is interested in time and finding different mediums to show things in flux and, having grown up on Phillip Island, she often uses water as a theme. When she started spending time at the Mission, Dann found there was an oculus at the top of the dome, known as the Norla Dome. She thought about how that small but significant opening related to where sailors spent so many months of the year, the sky being the only thing they would see much of the time, stars guiding the way in times gone by, and of the recent stories she’d heard about sailors being trapped at sea during COVID. Built in the Arts and Craft style between 1916 and 1919 and designed by architect Walter Butler, the Mission includes a chapel, clubroom, Chaplain’s house, a small cottage and the Norla Dome, which was apparently inspired by the Pantheon. The Mission was funded by the government and the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild, who Dann was also intrigued by. “One of the things those women identified is that life at sea is very dangerous [and they] wanted to give them a space of sanctuary and support,” she says, adding that for many years, the dome was used as a gymnasium. Her work inside the dome includes a 35-minute loop film, recorded from the ferry during the crossing from Queenscliff to Sorrento. The horizon takes up about a third of the shot and moves as the waves rise and fall, mirroring the journeys made by the sailors who found refuge at the mission over the years; it will be projected onto a gauze-like fabric, allowing glimpses of the building behind. Dann also plans to activate the site over the course of the weekend and will read a poem by Justin Clemens.The articles gives an insight of the création of the artwork by Ying-Lan Dann. digital copy of an article with photographs published in the Ageopen house melbourne, 2022, ying-lan dann, take hold of the clouds, norla dome, exhibition, the age, cultural events