Showing 3 items
matching heritage study of shepparton
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Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Document, Heritage Tourism in Shepparton
... Heritage study of Shepparton... Shepparton. Greater Shepparton Heritage study of Shepparton 64 page ...A heritage tourism study on the City of Greater Shepparton.64 page document bound with a multi ring black binder. White writing on a brown page with picture of Shepparton Museum in centre. A feasibility study of the City of Greater Shepparton December 2012.greater shepparton, heritage study of shepparton -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Book, Heritage Concepts P/L, Greater Shepparton Heritage Study Stage 11C, June 2017
... Greater Shepparton Heritage Study Stage 11C... for the Greater Shepparton Heritage Study stage 11C and the conclusions... and the methodology for the Greater Shepparton Heritage Study stage 11C ...This report describes the key tasks and the methodology for the Greater Shepparton Heritage Study stage 11C and the conclusions & recommendations that have arisen from its completion.A 4 size, & bound with a photo of a weir on the cover.Prepared for Greater Shepparton City Council by H29cms X 21.5 cmseritage Concepts Pty Ltd -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Ceramic, Small bottle by Ray Molony
Ray MOLONY Born Albury, New South Wales "Notes for Raymond Walter Molony: Raymond Walter Molony grew up in the Dandenongs, and Maffra where he went to school. He attenended Sale Technical School, before studying at R.M.I.T. from where he gained a diploma of pottery and technical teaching qualifications. He taught at Shepparton Technical College leaving there in 1977 to become a full time potter. Ray Molony established the Mud Factory Pottery in Shepparton in 1977 after purchasing, renovating and extending the old Kialla Methodist church, and building a two storey mud brick pottery. Two of Ray and Deirdre Molony's sons, Kevin and Russell, were employed during the 1980s and 1990s. Kevin Molony left due in the early 1990s due to the recession at that time, and Russell Molony followed soon after. Both competent throwers, with Russell making some creative slab work while Ray continuing to decorate the works. Ray Molony continued to produce studio ceramics at the kialla studion until selling the property in 2000, and semi retiring to Miepoll. In 2005 he moved to Pottsville New South Wales." studio potterySmall ceramic bottle with leaf designs in brown glaze made at the Mud Factory Pottery by Ray Molony.ceramics, studio pottery, ray molony, mud factory pottery