Archives Outside

For people who love, use and manage archives

Archives Outside - For people who love, use and manage archives

Penrith Regional Gallery wants your holiday snaps!

From the Penrith Regional Gallery website:

Do you have any interesting old family photos, films or postcards that you would love to include in our trip down holiday lane? We are keen to include a range of images from 1950s-1970s…

Holiday & Memory
16 Nov 2013 – 23 Feb 2014

This exhibition investigates the annual holiday experience of mid-twentieth century Australia. Dark nights, caravans, winding roads and oversized pineapples loom large upon the horizon, summoning memories of romantic sunsets and eerie shadows. Memories of fun in the sun, surf and bush retreats are accompanied by recollections of Vinyl car seats, cries of ‘are we there yet’ dripping ice creams, flies and Aerogard; all typifying that beloved long, hot Australian summer.

Caravan Holiday - Five Children & It

Sound interesting?

Music in the Archives!

While a few might think of the State archives including scripts of plays even fewer would think any music would be held in them. A rare find indeed is some music included in a manuscript play from the 1850s.

Rookwood music 319

The play in which the music was found is Rookwood, or, The Adventures of Dick Turpin and Tom King (NRS 980, [SZ57]). The manuscript play was submitted to the Colonial Secretary on 21 September 1850 by Gustavus Frederick Arabin, a colonial actor who had performed in places such as Hobart, Launceston and Sydney. The play was performed at the Royal Victoria Theatre in Sydney on 13 February 1851 as Rookwood, or, The Adventures of Dick Turpin and Death of Tom King.

Rookwood title 317

The music was found by Senior Archivist Janette Pelosi during her research for a conference on popular entertainments. Janette has researched the plays held by State Records and even a few  of the actors and actresses who played in them.

Another researcher with interests in colonial music is Graeme Skinner, musicologist, historian, and writer. Graeme’s Austral Harmony website includes a biographical register of many of the colonial performers as well as a chronological checklist of colonial compositions. Like many of us Graeme is a Trove aficionado.

Rookwood dramatis personae 318

When Janette found the music she asked Graeme whether it was a colonial piece. The answer is on his website . For those of us who can’t read music the tune is Greensleeves – think of ice cream van music!

Additional information

For more about the manuscript plays see

Everyday street scenes, Sydney

Inspired by a recent Buzzfeed post on everyday street scenes in New York City, we had a look at our collection for some everyday street scenes of Sydney. All photos are from our Flickr photostream

Wexford Street, Sydney 1900 (from the Plague photo albums)

Wexford Street, Sydney (NSW)

Observing the cleanup in Sydney, 1900 (from the Plague photo albums)

Observing the cleanup in Sydney, 1900

Cumberland Place, The Rocks 1901

The Rocks, Sydney

Cambridge Street, The Rocks 1901

Looking south on Cambridge Street, The Rocks (NSW) [Rocks Resumption photographic survey]

The Argyle Cut, The Rocks 1901

The Argyle Cut, The Rocks

Gloucester Street, The Rocks 1901

Gloucester Street looking north from Essex Street, The Rocks (NSW)

George Street, 1910

George Street, Sydney 1910

George Street, n.d

George Street, Sydney

Watching the departure of the Australian Olympic Team on the S.S. “Ormonde”, 1924

Watching the departure of the Australian Olympic Team on the S.S. "Ormonde", 1924

Manly Wharf, 1936

Manly Wharf

Bondi Beach, n.d  Manly n.d. (see comment)

View of southern end of Bondi Beach, Bondi (NSW)

Barrack Street and George Street (DJs), 1950s

Bustling Sydney

Sydney traffic, c.1960

Sydney traffic, c.1960

ok, not everday (and not Sydney) but it is a street

Visit to Wentworth - horses pulled us out

Again, not Sydney, but a nice one to finish on

The lamppost is real

NAIDOC Week 2013

It’s NAIDOC Week this week.

NAIDOC Week celebrations are held across Australia each July to celebrate the history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. NAIDOC is celebrated not only in Indigenous communities, but by Australians from all walks of life.
from the NAIDOC website

Here are just of some of the events we have come across to mark this special occasion.

Old Gardens of New England [Photographic Exhibition]

Glencoe0001

This photographic exhibition has been developed by the Garden History Society Northern New South Wales Sub Branch at Armidale.  The photographs vary from the grandest to the most unusual and come from collections held by the National Trust, University of New England Archives, Historical Societies and individuals.

Why are these garden photographs important? What stories do they tell?

Photographs are an essential source of historical evidence but they also provide aesthetic enjoyment.  They support the written historical word and assist in our interpretation of history.  It is when they are grouped together that we can start seeing the similar patterns emerging.  It is for this reason we organised the photographs into themes such as: design features, work, recreation, settler’s gardens, town gardens, school gardens, public parks, tertiary education grapes and vineyards and homesteads.  We also decided to develop a booklet so that the visitor could take it away and look at the various photographs at later times.

P0589 Tingha Sam Becketts Hut

A sense of belonging

The arrival of the female in New England and the subsequent establishment of the garden introduced the principle of permanency, a sense of belonging and a sense of place.  In the exhibition you will see a photograph of a simple miner’s timber hut without any garden apart from timber for heating and cooking.  This compares with the miner’s hut at Hillgrove, east of Armidale where Mrs McWatter and her husband stand on the front verandah with pot plants in the background.  Another factor at work in Hillgrove is the fact that Mr Tonkin, the school principal for twenty years and his wife conducted a nursery.  He made many trips to Sydney to obtain trees for the town which included pines.

Tonkin 35mm 06

The photographs demonstrate a diversity of values.  One of the most critical factors in early garden design was the establishment of an English type garden in an Australian setting.  These gardens featured exotic trees not only from the British Isles but also the American continent and the Asian region.  There was little place for the Australian native tree or shrub in gardens designed to create a memories of the English or Scottish landscape.

A1473 No09 Page 6 2 Heavy Frost

Pastoral gardens

Early pastoral employment records of properties held at the University of New England Archives refer to workers including gardeners, particularly Germans for vineyards  and Chinese for vegetable gardens.  At different times of the year, other workers were employed to maintain the garden.  Consequently we see a number of fine gardens at the various New England Homesteads.  Bearing in mind the garden not only provided a place of beauty but also supplied fresh vegetables and fruit to the station kitchen.

DP Kings Plains collection 004

One of the most fascinating examples of change in values is the way that hospitals were once surrounded by magnificent gardens.  In the past, health administrators saw the importance of the garden as part of the healing process and this is evident in the photograph of the Glen Innes Hospital.  Sadly modern urban hospitals are surrounded by large car parks with little therapeutic value there.

The exhibition

In the exhibition you will see love heart gardens, horses and cattle moved into positions for the photo, the grand Tertiary Education gardens at Armidale and the bush school gardens created as a result of Arbor Days.  Many memories will be stirred by the exhibition and all are welcome to attend. Promotional photos include a small selection of the total exhibition. These include regional properties such as Saumarez, Palmerston and Gostwyck as well as urban gardens from public and private settings.

Event: Historic Gardens of New England Photographic Exhibition & talks.

Date 

Tuesday 2nd July 6.30pm – Opening night.

Curators Bill Oates & Graham Wilson will speak at 6.30pm

Cost:$10 includes light refreshments – please book for catering purposes but pay at the door

Where

Australian Institute of Architects in Tusculum, 3 Manning Street, Potts Point

Duration of exhibition

The exhibition runs for the month of July

 

Archival storage as Art

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Last year we were visited by photographer Angela Welyczko who was photographing archival storage areas in the Sydney region.  Her work is now on display at the Robin Gibson Gallery as part of the New Talent exhibition.

Storage Space: Inside the Archive explores collecting and storing at a public and institutional level. The work encompasses both the archive and the stored collection, showing the differences and revealing the complexities, idiosyncrasies and reasons for being. Within this investigation, the study of the archive becomes a device for a broader study of the human condition, specifically, our fear of mortality, our human bias, and our fear of loss.
View the exhibition online

Dates
The New Talent exhibition runs from 1-26 June

Open
Tuesday to Saturday 11am to 6pm

Address
278 Liverpool Street Darlinghurst
Sydney NSW 2010 Australia

Call for Nominations – NSW Premier’s History Awards 2013

The State Library of NSW has announced the opening of nominations
for the NSW Premier’s History Awards 2013.

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According to NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell:

“Fostering of scholarship in literature and history is central to civil society. Knowledge of who we are and where we have come from creates a richer, more tolerant and more confident society.

The winners will be presented at an awards ceremony in September 2013.

Administered by the State Library of NSW, in association with Arts NSW, the NSWPremier’s History Awards offers prizes in five categories:

  • Australian History Prize
  • General History Prize
  • New South Wales Community and Regional History Prize
  • Young People’s History Prize
  • Multimedia History Prize

Total prize money in 2013 is $75,000 – $15,000 for each category.
All works nominated for the NSW Premier’s History Awards 2013 must be
published, produced or made publicly available between 1 April 2012 and
31 March 2013.

Nominations may be made by authors or by their authorised
representative: agent, publisher, professional theatre company, film
distributor, production company, or broadcasting company or corporation.
Nomination forms and guidelines for the awards are available from
www.sl.nsw.gov.au/awards.

Nominations close: 5pm, Friday 28 June 2013

For more information please contact: Kate Butler, Awards Coordinator, State Library of NSW (02) 9273 1582 or kbutler@sl.nsw.gov.au.