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For 'love of art': the Museum of Art and Picture Gallery at the Melbourne Public Library 1860-70.


Introduction

DURING THE 1860s, art collections were established at the Melbourne Public Library to educate public taste and instruct the art worker. The Museum of Art was launched in 1861, and the Picture Gallery opened to the public in 1864. When the Public Library Trust was enlarged and the colony's public collections of literature, art and science were unified in 1870, the public art collections were united to form the National Gallery. (1)

This paper discusses the founding of the Museum of Art and the Picture Gallery at the Public Library, and argues that their educational role was paramount. It was believed that by educating the eye, public art collections would elevate popular taste and improve design; and that by cultivating the individual's thoughts, feelings and behaviour, they would instil in·still also in·stil  
tr.v. in·stilled, in·still·ing, in·stills also in·stils
1. To introduce by gradual, persistent efforts; implant: "Morality . . .
 disciplined citizenship and thus shape civil society. Exposure to good art and design would create an aesthetically discerning public, which would stimulate demand for, and consumption of, art products. If, as British art critic Noun 1. art critic - a critic of paintings
critic - a person who is professionally engaged in the analysis and interpretation of works of art
 John Ruskin proposed, high aesthetic standards improved society, it was argued that in Victoria the public first needed to learn how to 'see' art and perceive its meanings. Colonial artists and artisans required correct training, so the level of art production and design could advance. (2)

An Art Museum for the People

There was a 'lamentable apathy' in Victoria towards the fine arts after the gold rushes. Preoccupied with 'bare necessities', most colonists were not yet concerned with acquiring the 'refinements and elegancies' of a mature and stable home. By the late 1850s, support for the fine arts and for a public art museum strengthened. Established artists, such as Thomas Clark Thomas Clark is the name of a number of notable people:
  • Thomas Clark (Unknown – 1835), businessman and political figure in Upper Canada
  • Thomas Clark (1801 - 1867), British chemist
  • Thomas J. Clark (1869-1907), American inventor
  • Thomas H.
, Eugene von Guerard Eugene von Guerard (1811 - 17 April 1901) was an Austrian-born artist active in Australia 1852-1882.

Born in Vienna, von Guerard toured Italy with his father (a painter of miniatures at the court of Emperor Francis I of Austria) from 1826, and between 1830 and 1832 resided
 and Nicholas Chevalier Nicholas Chevalier (9 May 1828 – 15 March 1902) was an Australian artist who was born in St Petersburg, Russia. His father, Louis Chevalier, came from Vaud, Switzerland, and was overseer to the estates of the Prince de Wittgenstein in Russia. , had settled in the colony and were endeavouring to make a living from their art; and journalists like James Smith James Smith is the name of: People named James Smith
Sports figures
  • James Crosbie Smith (1894–1980), English cricketer
  • James Douglas Smith (born 1977), English cricketer
  • James Douglas Smith (born 1940), New Zealand cricketer
 were becoming known as cultural critics A cultural critic is a critic of a given culture, usually as a whole and typically on a radical basis. There is significant overlap with Social Criticism and Social Philosophers Terminology . (3)

From the time the Melbourne Public Library opened in 1856, it was expected that it would eventually house a public art museum. Frederick McCoy Sir Frederick McCoy, FRS, (1817 – 16 May, 1899) was a British palaeontologist and museum administrator, active in Australia. Early life
McCoy was the son of Dr Simon McCoy, M.D.
, professor of natural science at the University of Melbourne
  • AsiaWeek is now discontinued.
Comments:

In 2006, Times Higher Education Supplement ranked the University of Melbourne 22nd in the world. Because of the drop in ranking, University of Melbourne is currently behind four Asian universities - Beijing University,
 and later director of the National Museum, promoted the idea in 1856 when he suggested placing an educational art museum 'in the ground floor of the Public Library'. A year later, Smith advocated forming a national picture gallery like the National Gallery in London. From the beginning, there were opposing views about the public art museum's role, whether it should educate the public taste through the history of art or through original paintings. (4)

The Public Library trustees made the first practical move towards an art museum when in 1858 they applied to the government for land at the rear of the Library for museums of art and science. (5) Even though the public seemed uninterested in the idea, the press urged the government to establish a 'national collection', claiming that the state had a civic responsibility to foster the 'love of Art', for it was the antidote antidote

Remedy to counteract the effects of a poison or toxin. Administered by mouth, intravenously, or sometimes on the skin, it may work by directly neutralizing the poison; causing an opposite effect in the body; binding to the poison to prevent its absorption,
 to 'barbarism'. (6) Tn 1859 Parliament voted two thousand pounds for the purchase of works worthy of a national collection and entrusted the money to the Library trustees, who intended forming a public art museum. It was decided to acquire works that stimulated 'intellectual culture' and elevated taste for 'the pure, the beautiful and true: Casts, busts, medals and gems would be displayed on the ground floor of the Library to illustrate the 'historic development of art', and to instruct the public in the 'chief epochs of mental pre-eminence'. (7)

Redmond Barry Sir Redmond Barry KCMG (June 7 1813 – November 23 1880) was a British colonial judge in Victoria, Australia.

Barry was the son of Major-General Henry Green Barry, of Ballyclough, County Cork and his wife Phoebe.
, president of the trustees and chancellor of the University, carefully elaborated the Museum of Art's educational intention when he directed Hugh Childers Hugh Culling Eardley Childers (25 June 1827 – 29 January 1896) was a British and Australian Liberal statesman of the nineteenth century.

He was born in London and educated at both Oxford and the University of Cambridge, graduating B.A. from the latter in 1850.
 and others about acquiring works in England. Since it was the 'first step' towards forming 'the Public Taste', it was vital to choose works that would arouse 'a craving' for 'refined intellectual entertainment'. Like the selection of books for the Library, a 'respectable mediocrity' was rejected. Victoria would have only the 'choicest examples of Ancient and Modern High Classic Art'. Precise instructions were given for the purchase of reproductions rather than single original pieces. High quality paintings were deemed unaffordable un·af·ford·a·ble  
adj.
Too expensive: medical care that has become unaffordable for many.



un
. Reproductions would best illustrate the history of art and culture, and provide diverse examples from which local artists and artisans could learn. Barry believed that photographs, prints and casts would give the Museum of Art a solid educational foundation. (8)

Placing casts of classical statues or busts or collapse from the effort; - used in phrases expressing determination to do something; as, Oregon or bust, meaning "We will get to Oregon or die trying." s>

See also: bust
 of famous men in close proximity to a library was not a new idea. Barry, McCoy and others who had been to the British Museum British Museum, the national repository in London for treasures in science and art. Located in the Bloomsbury section of the city, it has departments of antiquities, prints and drawings, coins and medals, and ethnography.  or Trinity College, Dublin For other institutions named Trinity College, see .
Trinity is located in the centre of Dublin, Ireland, on College Green opposite the former Irish Houses of Parliament (now a branch of the Bank of Ireland).
, were familiar with the practice. Representing the ideal forms of the ancient world, classical sculptures Classical sculpture refers to the forms of sculpture from Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome and the Hellenized, and Romanized civilizations under their rule or influence from about 500B.C. to fall of Rome in AD 476.  expressed civic virtues
"Civility" redirects here. For the Wikipedia policy regarding civility, see Wikipedia:Civility.


Civic virtue
 of goodness, truth and beauty. They were 'instruments of civilisation'. (9) Cultural reformers like Barry assumed that repeated experience of classical art arranged in series, rather than singular works, would cultivate the aesthetic and moral sensibilities of civilised Adj. 1. civilised - having a high state of culture and development both social and technological; "terrorist acts that shocked the civilized world"
civilized

educated - possessing an education (especially having more than average knowledge)
 society. Observing objects that were pure and perfect, Ruskin and his followers followers

see dairy herd.
 argued, enabled people to develop a taste for the good, and thereby strengthen their moral nature. It was no accident that casts of classical statutes stood in the pleasure grounds of the Cremorne Gardens Cremorne Gardens was the name of two pleasure gardens established in England and Australia in the mid 19th century by James Ellis .
  • Cremorne Gardens, London was established in 1846 on the banks of the Thames at Chelsea
, for it was anticipated they would lift the tone of that popular Melbourne resort and induce respectable behaviour. Learning about classical art in the Museum of Art was conceived of as a transformative experience for the individual and society. It contributed to the liberal cultural agenda of producing self-sufficient citizens who were responsible for their own material and moral improvement.' (10)

The Museum of Art

Located in the south wing of the Library's ground floor, the Museum of Art was opened to the public on 24 May 1861. If His Excellency HIS EXCELLENCY. A title given by the constitution of Massachusetts to the governor of that commonwealth. Const. part 2, c. 2, s. 1, art. 1. This title is customarily given to the governors of the other states, whether it be the official designation in their constitutions and laws or not. , Sir Henry BarMy, the governor of Victoria, considered it the foundation of a future 'Museum of the Fine Arts', Barry was unequivocal that the 'primary idea' was 'the establishment of a School of Design'. The Museum's sculpture gallery was educational, intended as much for improving practical knowledge and skills as for refining pure taste. Barkly conceded that it was 'the first step' towards a school where 'the future artificers ARTIFICERS. Persons whose employment or business consists chiefly of bodily labor. Those who are masters of their arts. Cunn. Dict. h.t. Vide Art.  and manufacturers of Victoria may be imbued with purity of taste and correct principles of beauty'. (11)

Though crammed cram  
v. crammed, cram·ming, crams

v.tr.
1. To force, press, or squeeze into an insufficient space; stuff.

2. To fill too tightly.

3.
a. To gorge with food.
 into a restricted space, the sculpture gallery revealed the Museum of Art's educational purpose. Sculptures were grouped chronologically to illustrate the 'historical development of art' from ancient to 'modern times'. The progress of art through consecutive eras was thus made visible. (12) Visitors learned about individual works by reading the written information accompanying each object. The painted label on each pedestal pedestal

In Classical architecture, a support or base for a column, statue, vase, or obelisk. It may be square, octagonal, or circular. A single pedestal may also support a group of columns, or colonnade (see podium).
 identified the sculpture and its provenance prov·e·nance  
n.
1. Place of origin; derivation.

2. Proof of authenticity or of past ownership. Used of art works and antiques.
; a printed card attached to the pedestal explained the object's significance. Not only was the work described in plain English Plain English (sometimes known, more broadly, as plain language) is a communication style that focuses on considering the audience's needs when writing. It recommends avoiding unnecessary words and avoiding jargon, technical terms, and long and ambiguous sentences.  but the card also included 'extracts in different languages' about the work, and references to writers, whether historical or poetic, who had alluded to it.

By adopting the principle of labelled displays used in science and natural history museums, which, Barry recognised, was rarely found in art museums, the sculpture gallery was a visual catalogue. Walking from one sculpture to the next, the visitor physically and mentally moved through a classification of historical time and an interpretation of the collection. The fact that casts, rather than original objects, were exhibited was not important, for significance lay in the historical series. Its very organisation made the sculpture gallery a school of design, where the artist, artisan, or classical scholar Noun 1. classical scholar - a student of ancient Greek and Latin
classicist

humanist - a classical scholar or student of the liberal arts

Latinist - a specialist in the Latin language
 could be self-educating. Providing people with an opportunity to sketch from casts in the gallery, the Museum enabled those already skilled in drawing to continue learning. (13)

No sooner was the Museum of Art opened than suggestions were made for its improvement. Thomas Clark, who conducted a school of design for the Victorian Society of Fine Arts during the 1850s, advocated a formal school in conjunction with the Museum. He argued that a school of art was essential for improving local products, and so that aspiring artists could learn effectively under a 'competent instructor'. Envisaging a more didactic di·dac·tic
adj.
Of or relating to medical teaching by lectures or textbooks as distinguished from clinical demonstration with patients.
 role for the Museum than Barry's idea of self-education in the sculpture gallery, Clark urged the teaching of drawing. Although drawing was a fundamental skill for artist and artisan, there were few opportunities in the colony for adults to learn how to draw or to extend their existing skills. (14)

Despite Clark's belief that structured teaching was imperative, there was little evidence in the early 1860s that the need was pressing. Artists and civic reformers wanted to develop the public's taste, but the market for locally produced art works only gradually emerged in response to an urbanising population's demand for housing and decorative household goods. Demand for art not only required a discerning eye but also the production of high quality works, and a consuming public. While the colony's protective tariff Noun 1. protective tariff - a tariff imposed to protect domestic firms from import competition
tariff, duty - a government tax on imports or exports; "they signed a treaty to lower duties on trade between their countries"
 was expected to expand manufacturing and employment, public exhibitions preparatory to the international expositions aimed to increase local consumption and stimulate the Victorian economy. Displaying the colony's industrial and artistic progress, Melbourne's public exhibitions spurred public demand for domestic goods. Nonetheless, agricultural and mining products dominated Victoria's exhibits at the 1861 Victoria Exhibition and the 1862 London Exhibition. The range of locally manufactured products was more extensive than in the 1854 Exhibition, and fine arts exhibits received awards, but it was evident that the colony's artistic and ornamental production was limited. (15)

When Barry represented Victoria at the 1862 London Exhibition, he acquired works for the Museum of Art, including casts and educational material from the South Kensington Museum South Kensington Museum: see Victoria and Albert Museum. , an 'illustrative series' of ceramics, and an educational series from the Science and Art Department. It is no wonder that within a short time of its opening the Museum required more space. Augustus Tulk, the librarian, hoped that the north wing extension to the Library would provide a 'Studio and Library' for the art books and photographs, and a 'new room for a Sculpture Gallery' and the 'apparatus and series of works for a School of Art'. It would then be feasible to establish a formal art school like those connected with the South Kensington Museum. On the other hand, the Argus argued that the Library and Museum of Art's popularity and success in providing the 'operative classes' with the means for 'self-education' and 'rational enjoyment' justified 'a Hall of Art'. (16)

A Public Art Gallery

Recognition given to colonial artists at the Exhibitions, greater public interest in art exhibitions and informed criticism in the press gathered support for a public picture gallery. In 1863 Parliament voted one thousand pounds for a 'National Gallery', and the government appointed a Board, later replaced by the Fine Arts Commission, to determine the 'best mode of expending' the money. (17)

From 1863 until the Commission presented its final report in 1865, public debate over the role of a public art gallery, which erupted over whether the Commission should acquire original contemporary works or copies of masterpieces, stirred people's interest in seeing pictures. Central to the dispute was the purpose of the proposed National Picture Gallery. If formed to give the public an idea about some of the world's greatest paintings, then a gallery of copies would suffice. However, if it served the 'higher purpose' of educating the people about art, original works were needed, so it could be a 'school of art in itself, and a means of art education for the future'. (18)

The Commission decided that the public gallery should acquire contemporary art, rather than be a school of historical paintings. It would contain works of 'original genius', portraying 'what is congenial con·gen·ial  
adj.
1. Having the same tastes, habits, or temperament; sympathetic.

2. Of a pleasant disposition; friendly and sociable: a congenial host.

3.
 to the feelings and habit of thought of the present age', and exclude works that people could not readily understand. 'Modern' European art would 'more correctly' guide 'public taste' and 'better' instruct youthful minds than historical works. Sir Charles Eastlake
For the 19th century English painter, see Sir Charles Lock Eastlake.


Charles Locke Eastlake (1836 – 1906) was a British architect and furniture designer.
, director of the National Gallery in London, was asked to select appropriate pictures, and prize money was reserved for the colonial artist whose painting was selected for the collection after a public competition. (19)

The Commission's first priority was improving the 'taste of the general mass of society'. However, acknowledging the need for a school of art, it also acquired copies of 'pictures in European National Collections' to illustrate the history of art. Having 'choice works' by 'contemporary artists' and copies of selective historical works, the art collection would be as 'attractive to the general public' as it would be 'instructive' for students of painting. Emphasising the collection's educational intent, the Commission recommended associating it with the 'central and convenient' Public Library, so people would have access to the Library's art books and the Museum of Art's 'casts and moulds'. Having the 'same liberality' as the Library, the National Picture Gallery would be free and open to all the people, even in the evenings. Since the collection was public property, the people's vigilance VIGILANCE. Proper attention in proper time.
     2. The law requires a man who has a claim to enforce it in proper time, while the adverse party has it in his power to defend himself; and if by his neglect to do so, he cannot afterwards establish such claim, the
 would protect it from theft and damage. Dispelling fears that the pictures belonged only to the people of Melbourne, the Commission planned to diffuse the 'improving, refining, and elevating influences' of art throughout the community by lending works for exhibition in country towns, and by a public exhibition of art borrowed from private collections.

The north wing of the Library was completed in December 1864. No longer crowded together, the casts of statuary stat·u·ar·y  
n. pl. stat·u·ar·ies
1. Statues considered as a group.

2. The art of making statues.

3. A sculptor.

adj.
Of, relating to, or suitable for a statue.
 in the Museum of Art were rearranged on the ground floor. The paintings selected by Eastlake, Chevalier's prize winning The Buffalo Ranges, and the works of other colonial artists were exhibited in a temporary picture gallery in the north wing of the first floor of the Library. The Fine Arts Commission Exhibition was enormously popular. For five weeks from 24 December 1864, over twenty-six thousand people visited the Exhibition, approximately 4 per cent of the colony's total population but about one person in every six who lived in Melbourne. Thereafter, the Commission's acquisitions remained at the Library in the custody of the trustees, and in 1870 the new National Gallery assumed formal responsibility for the collection. (20)

Public interest in seeing original paintings was stimulated by the Intercolonial In`ter`co`lo´ni`al

a. 1. Between or among colonies; pertaining to the intercourse or mutual relations of colonies; as, intercolonial trade s>.
 Exhibition, which was held in a new Exhibition Building erected on the Library's site from October 1866 to February 1867. The picture collection was moved from the Picture Gallery for temporary exhibition in the ornamental arts section of the Exhibition. Although drawn to their 'old favourites' from 'the picture gallery in the Public Library', visitors did not 'linger for long' in the Fine Arts Room, for they were distracted by the bewildering be·wil·der  
tr.v. be·wil·dered, be·wil·der·ing, be·wil·ders
1. To confuse or befuddle, especially with numerous conflicting situations, objects, or statements. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2.
 number, variety and beauty of objects in the Exhibition. Almost half the total population of Victoria visited the Exhibition. Such a large display of art works, mostly by colonial artists, broadened public interest in art. The publicity given to their work buoyed local artists, and the opportunity to compare and evaluate the works of colonial artists boosted art criticism. Above all, the Exhibition engendered enthusiasm for improving colonial manufactures and fostering new industries, which gave impetus to the Museum of Art's educational role. (21)

The Exhibition Building promised more space for the art collections. However, it was quickly realised that the temporary 'superstructure' of 'wood, glass and ironworks' was neither fireproof fire·proof  
adj.
Impervious or resistant to damage by fire.

tr.v. fire·proofed, fire·proof·ing, fire·proofs
To make fireproof.

Verb 1.
 nor appropriate for housing 'treasures of art or delicate specimens and preparations of a perishable per·ish·a·ble  
adj.
Subject to decay, spoilage, or destruction.

n.
Something, especially foodstuff, subject to decay or spoilage. Often used in the plural.
 nature'. (22) From 1867 the art collections remained in the temporary Picture Gallery on the south side of the Library. Paintings were no longer 'crowded together' or subject to the deleterious deleterious adj. harmful.  effect of sunlight, as they were in the Reading Room, but people complained that the paintings were deadened dead·en  
v. dead·ened, dead·en·ing, dead·ens

v.tr.
1. To render less intense, sensitive, or vigorous:
 by the 'dirty greyish green' colour of the walls. Rather than being exhibited in a 'lightsome gallery', the 'casts from antique sculpture' were placed beneath the Library in the 'dim vaults' that had served as refreshment rooms for the Exhibition, which limited public access and undermined their educational effectiveness. It was not until 1875, after mounting evidence that the art collections were being damaged by heat, dust and smoke, that the government finally built a new National Picture Gallery to preserve the works of art. (23)

The School of Design

After the Intercolonial Exhibition, a formal school of design was established in association with the Museum of Art to instruct skilled workers and 'young mechanics' in the 'practical' manufacture of art. Access to a 'comprehensive collection' of industrial arts industrial arts
n. (used with a sing. verb)
A subject of study aimed at developing the manual and technical skills required to work with tools and machinery.

Noun 1.
, Barry argued, would assist art workers who were 'gifted with a quick eye', a 'schooled habit of observation', and 'a hand obedient to the direction of well-grounded judgement'. Ultimately, a student's 'personal success' would refine the 'taste of the general public'. (24)

As was the practice in European art galleries, Victorian artists and students enhanced their skills by systematically copying from the casts of ancient sculpture and works of the masters exhibited in the Museum of Art and the Picture Gallery. Some, like Sophie Cox from Brighton, wanted to draw from the paintings in the morning light. Others, like architect P. Mathews, wished to sketch in the sculpture room in the evenings because 'business and appointments' prevented them visiting during the day. Professional artists, such as Thomas Carrington of Melbourne Punch, improved their skills 'in drawing the human figure' by sketching 'from the models in the Statuary Room'; while A. Cooke copied paintings to make engravings for the illustrated press. (25) In the 'new School of Design', it was expected that people would enrich and refine existing knowledge and skills, rather than be instructed in new skills or techniques. In the presence of elegant and useful objects, art practitioners would form 'palpable ideas' about the art works they wanted 'to fashion into shape'. (26) When the Museum of Art's school of design opened in June 1867, the trustees were inundated in·un·date  
tr.v. in·un·dat·ed, in·un·dat·ing, in·un·dates
1. To cover with water, especially floodwaters.

2.
 with requests for the 'privilege' of sketching in the school each morning. Many were teachers in the Common Schools who were keen to advance their skills in a profession where 'knowledge of drawing' was 'a necessary accomplishment'. Others were art workers. Some like glass painters J. L. Lyon and J. M. McNichol were eager to gain admission, but regretted that business prevented their attendance during the day. (27)

Practising artists continued to sketch and paint in the Picture Gallery, but were frustrated frus·trate  
tr.v. frus·trat·ed, frus·trat·ing, frus·trates
1.
a. To prevent from accomplishing a purpose or fulfilling a desire; thwart:
 by having to pack up at noon, so soon after mixing tints and 'without using them up'. In an effort to encourage students and alleviate disadvantage, individuals were often granted extended time or flexible hours in the galleries. After all, Barry reflected, he had 'seen persons painting in the Galleries in Europe at all hours of the day'. (28) By the beginning of 1868, formal regulations were established. People wishing to 'paint, draw or model in the School of Design in connection with the Museum of Art' had to make a formal application and provide two referees. Once admitted, students signed a daily register and were permitted to work in the 'Gallery from nine to one' and in the 'School of Design from nine to four'. (29)

When it was suggested the public should not be excluded from the Picture Gallery during the 'best hours of the day, as far as light is concerned', and that copying should be confined con·fine  
v. con·fined, con·fin·ing, con·fines

v.tr.
1. To keep within bounds; restrict: Please confine your remarks to the issues at hand. See Synonyms at limit.
 to one whole day during the working week, rather than 'a few hours each day', the students objected. Forming a cohesive group, they argued that since most of them were teachers and their only free day was Saturday, such a change would exclude them. (30) For the 'art workman WORKMAN. One who labors, one who is employed to do business for another.
     2. The obligations of a workman are to perform the work he has undertaken to do; to do it in proper time; to do it well to employ the things furnished him according to his contract.
, the manufacturer and tradesman', the more contentious issue was lack of access to the collections during the early morning and evening, when they were not at work. The fact that the School of Design was closed to the very people for whom it was established made it a sham False; without substance.

A sham Pleading is one that is good in form but is so clearly false in fact that it does not raise any genuine issue.
, one 'Art Student' declaimed. It existed for those few 'members of the higher class, who study art for an accomplishment, and to occupy their too much leisure'. (31)

Having gained the daytime hours that suited them, students lobbied the trustees for evening hours and for the appointment of a teacher of painting and drawing. Demand for access to the galleries at night was so great that prospective students were even prepared to contribute to the cost of lighting. Initially, students were content to instruct one another, for they argued that the self-reliant 'art workman' could 'do without a teacher'. (32) By 1868 students' confidence in their ability to instruct themselves had waned. They urged the trustees to acquire funds for an art teacher, to open the galleries at night, and to move the 'School of Design' to a better location. Public response to the students' demands was ambivalent. Although the Argus was 'hopeful' that it would attract more students to the Museum, Melbourne Punch disapproved of the students' 'cheek', and opposed spending public money so a few could 'acquire an education in a non-essential art at the expense of the rest'. The Evening Star feared that without a teacher the Museum's art school would 'degenerate into a place of resort for young and objectless men to spend a pleasant hour in'. (33)

The trustees lacked the authority to create a salaried position, but expected the government would fund a salary, and so advertised for a drawing master. Many of the colony's artists applied for the position, including von Guerard, Louis Buvelot Abram Louis Buvelot (March 3, 1814 - 30 May 1888) was a Swiss-born painter who emigrated to Australia.

His father, François Simeon Buvelot, was a postal official who had married Jeanne Louise Heizer, a school teacher.
 and Oswald Rose Campbell. (34) However, the parliamentary deadlock See deadly embrace.

(parallel, programming) deadlock - A situation where two or more processes are unable to proceed because each is waiting for one of the others to do something.
 over the government's grant to Lady Darling prevented the Estimates being passed, and the trustees were forced to postpone the appointment. In the interim, students were asked if they were prepared to pay for tuition, but few could afford the 'requisite sum'. (35) Since it was 'premature' to appoint a teacher, von Guerard was offered the position as an honorarium HONORARIUM. A recompense for services rendered. It is usually applied only to the recompense given to persons whose business is connected with science; as the fee paid to counsel.
     2.
, which he declined because lack of a stipend sti·pend  
n.
A fixed and regular payment, such as a salary for services rendered or an allowance.



[Middle English stipendie, from Old French, from Latin st
 would diminish his status as a 'Professor of Art'. (36)

Of the thirty to forty students enrolled in the Museum of Art's school of design, only eight attended regularly. The Age observed that talented and diligent students worked in an undirected, 'haphazard style', to the detriment of their education. Only a 'competent master' and an alteration in the hours would increase student numbers and improve their work. The Argus maintained that the school's broad educational role was 'refining the feelings and educating the tastes of the great mass of the people'. Therefore, a highly 'cultivated, enlarged and purified' mind was needed to 'direct the hand' of the student, rather than a mere 'teacher of the practical art'. (37)

It was not until 1869, after the political crisis was resolved, that Parliament voted the substantial sum of four hundred pounds for the salary of a 'Drawing-master, with fees'. The position was advertised, but the government cautioned it was 'undesirable' to appoint a teacher before an Act was passed to unify the national collections and enlarge the Board of Trustees board of trustees Politics The posse of thugs who oversee an institution's administration. See Board of directors. . (38) No appointment was made until the National Gallery was established in 1870, when the position was re-advertised, together with the position of painting master. (39)

By comparison with the local schools of design established in connection with the Technological Commission during 1869, the Museum of Art's school of design seemed 'unproductive'. Even though it had 'all the advantages of State support; an immense collection of models and four hundred pounds voted by Parliament to expend ex·pend  
tr.v. ex·pend·ed, ex·pend·ing, ex·pends
1. To lay out; spend: expending tax revenues on government operations. See Synonyms at spend.

2.
 on teaching, it was less effective in educating the practical art worker. (40) The trustees acknowledged that without a teacher students had derived little benefit from 'their exertions' in the Museum of Art. In April 1870, the newly formed National Gallery committee decided to establish two distinct schools of art, a school of design and a school of painting, under the supervision of different masters. (41)

The Picture Gallery

In Victoria by the late 1860s, there was growing conviction that for art to flourish the people needed to learn how to look at pictures, and students required formal instruction in art theory and practice. Giving people 'the eye' to 'see' art and facilitating their ability to make art were the fundamental educational roles of public art collections.

The way visitors looked at the paintings in the Library's Picture Gallery, the Argus proclaimed in 1868, showed that public taste, 'if such a thing exists at all; was not yet cultured. What caught the eye of 'the great mass' of the visitors had nothing to do with 'true principles of taste' or informed judgement about the merits or defects of the works. Unfamiliar with the language of art and aesthetics, and lacking knowledge of art history, most visitors to the Picture Gallery did not share the meanings that the 'one in a thousand' person of cultivated taste perceived. Nevertheless, visitors were not intimidated in·tim·i·date  
tr.v. in·tim·i·dat·ed, in·tim·i·dat·ing, in·tim·i·dates
1. To make timid; fill with fear.

2. To coerce or inhibit by or as if by threats.
 by, but gained confidence in, the company of the 'great mass' of so-called uncultivated taste, and made the art works familiar by relating them to their known world. In Victoria, the 'uncultured' were not necessarily confined to the working classes, nor was economic position a clear marker of whether a person had a cultivated mind or cultured taste. Frederick McCubbin Frederick McCubbin (25 February, 1855 – 20 December, 1917) was an Australian painter who was prominent in the famous Heidelberg School, one of the most important periods in Australia's visual arts history. , the baker's son who became one of Australia's best known and loved artists, was certainly not the only visitor who, though familiar with decorative art decorative art
n.
1. Art produced or intended primarily for utility, including jewelry, furniture, and other crafts.

2. Any of the art forms, such as pottery, weaving, or jewelry making, used to create such art.
, had 'never been in a gallery before and had only seen an occasional picture'. (42)

In the civic space of the Picture Gallery, people as well as pictures were on display. Free to observe other people as they looked and talked about the art works, some visitors flaunted their knowledge of art, while others listened and even learned some conventions for talking about art. It gave those with a 'true' appreciation of art an occasion to condescendingly con·de·scend·ing  
adj.
Displaying a patronizingly superior attitude: "The independent investor's desire to play individual stocks may well worry some market veterans, but that smacks a little of Wall Street's usual
 dismiss other visitors for their ignorance and poor taste. The Argus was aghast to overhear o·ver·hear  
v. o·ver·heard , o·ver·hear·ing, o·ver·hears

v.tr.
To hear (speech or someone speaking) without the speaker's awareness or intent.

v.intr.
 'a well-dressed individual; who examined 'the exquisite chromo-lithographs' with 'quite a cognoscente-like appearance', remark '"Holloa! This is some of John Chinaman's work'; and give vent Verb 1. give vent - give expression or utterance to; "She vented her anger"; "The graduates gave vent to cheers"
vent, ventilate

evince, express, show - give expression to; "She showed her disappointment"
 to the most high-flown admiration in the presence of Baxter's execrable daubs'. (43)

By the late 1860s, public 'taste for works of art' was reflected in strong consumer demand for reproductions. It was predicted that with increasing wealth, growth of a 'leisure-class' and 'formation of family residences' demand for original works would multiply. Evidence of this desire for art, especially for seeing paintings, was shown by the Library's outstandingly successful Loan Exhibition of 'Works of Art, Ornamental and Decorative Art', which was held in the 'Great Hall of the Institution' from March to June 1869. People flocked to see the 'art treasures' and press coverage was extensive. Many of the sixty thousand visitors to the Exhibition, about a third of Melbourne's population, came in the evenings, particularly on Saturday nights when admission was cheap at six pence. (44) No matter that critics considered the exhibits uneven in quality, Victorians were so enthusiastic about seeing art that the public art exhibition idea was quickly adopted in the country, and popular exhibitions were held in Geelong, Ballarat and Sandhurst. (45)

Visitors to these and other art exhibitions were invariably in·var·i·a·ble  
adj.
Not changing or subject to change; constant.



in·vari·a·bil
 represented as a respectable, respectful and orderly crowd. Men and women, occasionally accompanied by children, leisurely strolled through the Gallery, gazing at the paintings and conferring with companions. Seated in the central space, they discussed the exhibits or, in solitude, stared at a single work. (46) Between the visitor's eye and the picture on the wall, however, there was little to help people grasp the significance that the art works were arranged to represent. Unlike the Museum of Art, in the Gallery people were not guided to understand the collections' meanings by a chronological narrative or instructive labelling or a catalogue.

The absence of overt interpretation implied that people were able to educate themselves about individual works, and that the experience of seeing art was sufficient to elevate their taste. The press assumed an active responsibility for culturally equipping the visitor to see and understand the significance of each new work as it entered the collection. Art critics, especially Smith, advised people how to 'see' a picture: where to stand, how to look, and what to look for. The fact that the picture collection was established incrementally gave people the chance to gradually learn about individual works, instead of being bewildered or discouraged by seeing a vast collection of pictures. (47)

The policy of collecting contemporary art, which was deliberately chosen so that the people could learn about art through seeing familiar subjects, meant that works in a single-room gallery were hung randomly or according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 size, instead of chronologically or within schools or periods of art. For the Argus, the lack of visible order in the Picture Gallery, with its 'ill-arranged' and 'heterogeneous confusion; was perplexing per·plex  
tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es
1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate.
, and stopped people from learning about the qualities of individual works and their relationship to other works. To be educational, the pictures needed to be 'seen apart' or in 'suitable company'. (48) Nevertheless, the moderate size of the picture collection, its familiar subject matter, and exhibition in a single room encouraged people of all classes to self-confidently return to see their favourite pictures. If the Gallery lacked explicit didactic instruction, it did not detract from detract from
verb 1. lessen, reduce, diminish, lower, take away from, derogate, devaluate << OPPOSITE enhance

verb 2.
 its increasing popularity as a place for 'intelligent recreation'. (49)

Conclusion

The Museum of Art and the Picture Gallery at the Public Library were formed to cultivate public taste, instil the values of civil society, enhance skill in art production, and increase the demand for, and quality of, local art products. If there was uncertainty about whether the 'left wing of the Library' was a 'fine arts gallery or a school of design; the role of the public art museum was clarified in 1870. (50) The National Gallery was principally a public gallery of contemporary paintings. The Museum of Art's educational casts were relegated to the Gallery's Schools of Design and Painting for instructing art students, and art works valued for their educational purpose, rather than solely their visual appeal, were placed in a separate study room. No longer cultivating public taste and knowledge of art through the elevating and civilising influence of classical sculpture, the Gallery revered the original painting and fostered a love of art through the display of popular taste.

Notes

(1) This paper draws on the following histories of the National Gallery: Leonard B. Cox, The National Gallery of Victoria, 1861-1968: A Search for a Collection, Melbourne, National Gallery of Victoria, [1968], pp. 11-38; Christine Downer down·er
n.
A depressant or sedative drug, such as a barbiturate or tranquilizer.
 and Jennifer Phipps, Victorian Vision: 1834 Onwards on·ward  
adj.
Moving or tending forward.

adv. also on·wards
In a direction or toward a position that is ahead in space or time; forward.

Adv. 1.
. Images and Records from the National Gallery of Victoria and the State Library of Victoria, Melbourne, National Gallery of Victoria, 1985; Ann Galbally, The Collections of the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1987, pp. 9-33; and Ann Galbally and Alison Inglis, with Christine Downer and Terence Lane, The First Collections: The Public Library and the National Gallery of Victoria in the 1850s and 1860s, Melbourne, University Melbourne, University of

Public university in Melbourne, Austl. Founded as a liberal arts college in 1853, in subsequent decades it added schools or faculties of agriculture, architecture, commerce, dentistry, education, engineering, law, medicine, music, and veterinary
 of Melbourne Museum The Melbourne Museum is located in the Carlton Gardens in Melbourne, Australia. It shares these gardens with the Royal Exhibition Building. It is the largest museum in the Southern Hemisphere.  of Art, 1992.

(2) Brandon Taylor, Art for the Nation: Exhibitions and the London Public, 1747-2001, New Brunswick, New Jersey This article is about the city in New Jersey. For the Canadian province, see New Brunswick.
New Brunswick, also known as "the Healthcare City"[2] or "Hub City",[3] is a city and the county seat of the County of Middlesex, New Jersey, USA.
, Rutgers University Press Rutgers University Press is a nonprofit academic publishing house, operating in Piscataway, New Jersey under the auspices of Rutgers University. The press was founded in 1936, and since that time has grown in size and in the scope of its publishing program. , 1999, p. 77; and Tony Bennett

For other people named Tony Bennett, see Tony Bennett (disambiguation).


Tony Bennett (born Anthony Dominick Benedetto on August 3 1926) is an American singer of popular music, standards and jazz who is widely considered to be one of
, The Birth of the Museum: History, Theory, Politics, London, Routledge, 1995, p. 165.

(3) Examiner, and Melbourne Weekly Times, 21 May 1859; Bernard Smith This article is about Bernard Smith the seventeenth-century organ maker. For Bernard Smith the Australian art historian, see Bernard William Smith.

"Father" Bernard Smith (c. 1630 - 1708) was a German-born master organ maker in England in the late seventeenth century.
 with Terry Smith, Australian Painting, 1788-1900, 3d ed., Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1990, pp. 58-59; and Lurline Stuart, James Stuart, James, 1713–88, English architect, archaeologist, and painter. After working his way to Rome in 1742, Stuart accompanied Nicholas Revett on an archaeological expedition to Naples.  Smith: The Making of a Colonial Culture, Sydney, Allen & Unwin, 1989, pp. 85-88, p. 113.

(4) [Redmond Barry], Report of the Trustees of the Melbourne Public Library. Presented to His Excellency Major-General Macarthur, Acting Governor-General and Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of Victoria and Its Dependencies, on the Occasion of Opening the Library, on Monday, the 11th Day of February, 1856, N.p., [1856]; Frederick McCoy, On the Formation of Museums in Victoria, Melbourne, Goodhugh & Hough n. 1. Same as Hock, a joint.
v. t. 1. Same as Hock, to hamstring.
[

imp. & p. p. os> Houghed

r>;

p. pr. & vb. n. os> Houghing.]

n. 1. An adz; a hoe.
v. t. 1. To cut with a hoe.
, 1857, p. 4, p. 20; and Argus, 5 December 1857.

(5) VPRS VPRS Voice Portal Reference System
VPRS Velocity Position Reference System
VPRS Virtual Private Routing Services
VPRS Virtual Print Room Services
VPRS Velocity/Positioning Recording System
 5501, unit 1. J. H. Rusden to R. Barry, 21 February, 21 September 1860. Public Record Office Victoria (PROV PROV Province
PROV Proverbs
PROV Provisional
PROV Provençal (language of France)
Prov Providence, Rhode Island
PROV Provision/Provisioning
); and Edmund La Touche Armstrong, The Book of the Public Library, Museums, and National Gallery of Victoria, 1856-1906, Melbourne, The Trustees of the Public Library, Museums, and National Gallery, 1906, p. 7, pp. 11-12.

(6) Examiner, and Melbourne Weekly Times, 20 November 1858, 21 May 1859.

(7) [Redmond Barry], Address of the Trustees of the Melbourne Public Library Presented to His Excellency Sir Henry Barkly Sir Henry Barkly GCMG KCB FRS (24 February 1815 – 20 October 1898) was a British politician and patron of the sciences.

Barkly was born in Monteagle, Rossshire, Scotland. He trained for commerce and follwed a business career before commencing his political career.
, Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of Victoria, on the Opening of the Queen's Reading Room, on Tuesday May 24th, 1859, Being the Birthday of Her Most Gracious Majesty, Queen Victoria, with the Reply of His Excellency the Governor, N.p., [1859].

(8) VPRS 4730, unit 1. Barry to [the Trustees], 29 April 1859, Barry to H. Childers, 16 May 1859; VPRS 4366, unit 1. Barry to C. J. La Trobe La Trobe may refer to:
  • Charles La Trobe (1801 - 1875), the first lieutenant-governor of the state of Victoria, Australia.
Places named after Charles La Trobe:
  • La Trobe University, Victoria
  • Latrobe Valley, Victoria
, 16 May 1859, PROV; and Argus, 9 November 1861.

(9) Argus, 5 December 1857; and Ann Galbally, Redmond Barry; An Anglo-Irish Australian, Melbourne, Melbourne University Press, 1995, pp. 111-12, p. 131.

(10) Tony Bennett, 'Speaking to the Eyes: Museums, Legibility leg·i·ble  
adj.
1. Possible to read or decipher: legible handwriting.

2. Plainly discernible; apparent: legible weaknesses in character and disposition.
 and the Social Order" in Sharon Macdonald, ed., The Politics of Display: Museums, Science, Culture, London, Routledge, 1998, pp. 30-31; Didier Maleuvre, Museum Memories: History, Technology, Art, Stanford, Stanford University Stanford University, at Stanford, Calif.; coeducational; chartered 1885, opened 1891 as Leland Stanford Junior Univ. (still the legal name). The original campus was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. David Starr Jordan was its first president.  Press, 1999, p. 10; and Michael J. Ettema, 'History Museums and the Culture of Materialism materialism, in philosophy, a widely held system of thought that explains the nature of the world as entirely dependent on matter, the fundamental and final reality beyond which nothing need be sought. ; in Jo Blatti, ed., Past Meets Present: Essays about Historical Interpretation and Public Audiences, Washington, Smithsonian Institution Smithsonian Institution, research and education center, at Washington, D.C.; founded 1846 under terms of the will of James Smithson of London, who in 1829 bequeathed his fortune to the United States to create an establishment for the "increase and diffusion of  Press, 1987, pp. 66-68.

(11) [Redmond Barry], Address of the Trustees of the Melbourne Public Library, Presented to His Excellency Sir Henry Barkly, K.C.B., Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of Victoria on the Opening of the Museum of Art, on Friday, May 24th 1861, Being the Birthday of Her Most Gracious Majesty, Queen Victoria, with His Excellency's Reply, N.p., [1861].

(12) VPRS 4730, unit 1. Barry, memorandum, [1860], PROV; and Report of the Trustees of the Public Library, Museums, and National Gallery of Victoria, Victorian Parliamentary Papers (VPP VPP Voluntary Protection Program (OSHA)
VPP Velocity Prediction Program (to predict sail boat performance)
VPP Virtual Presence Protocol
VPP Volts Peak to Peak
VPP Virtual Presence Post
), 1871, vol. 2, no. 13, p. 24.

(13) MS 8380, box 599. Barry to R. E. C. Waters, March 1861. Barry Papers. La Trobe Australian Manuscripts Collection (La Trobe MSS MSS - maximum segment size ), State Library of Victoria (SLV SLV
abbr.
standard launch vehicle
); and Bennett, Birth of the Museum, p. 44, pp. 167-71.

(14) VPRS 5831, unit 1. T. Clark to G. Verdon, 20 August 1861. PROV; and Victorian Society of Fine Arts, The School of Design, N.p., [1857].

(15) Examiner, and Melbourne Weekly Times, 28 September, 30 November 1861; Illustrated Melbourne Post, 15 November 1862; Victorian Exhibition, 1861. London International Exhibition, 1862: First Report of the Exhibition Commissioners, VPP, 1860-61, vol. 3, no. 62, pp. 8-15; and Graeme Davison, 'The Culture of the International Exhibitions; in David Dunstan, ed., Victorian Icon: The Royal Exhibition Building Melbourne, Melbourne, Exhibition Trustees in association with Australian Scholarly Publishing, 1996, pp. 11-18.

(16) MS 8380, box 599. Barry to A. Tulk, 9 February 1862. Barry Papers. La Trobe MSS, SLV; VPRS 4366, unit 2. J. Palmer to J. O'Shanassy, 20 August 1862, Tulk to the Trustees, 27 August 1862, PROV; and Argus, 1 August 1862.

(17) VPRS 4730, unit 1. [Fine Arts Commission], Minutes of a Preliminary Meeting of the Board ... 29th August, 1863, Melbourne, John Ferres, [1863], and Appointment of the Commission of Enquiry as to the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Victoria, 2 October 1863. PROV. See also MS 7855, box 1199/2. Fine Arts Commission. Papers, 1863-67. La Trobe MSS, SLV.

(18) Argus, 23 September 1863; Second Progress Report of the Commission on the Fine Arts, VPP, 1864-65, vol. 4, no. 58; VPRS 4730, unit 1. Fine Arts Commission Papers, 1863. PROV; and MS 8380, box 599. Barry to Waters, 25 December 1863. Barry Papers. La Trobe MSS, SLV.

(19) Second Progress Report, pp. 6-8, 14-16; and VPRS 5839, unit 1. Barry to C. Eastlake, 25 March 1864. PROV.

(20) Second Progress Report, pp. 6-19; Statistics of the Colony of Victoria, 1865, VPP, First Session 1867, vol. 3, no. 12a, p. 7; and Report of the Trustees, pp. 66-68.

(21) Illustrated Melbourne Post, 27 November 1866, 25 February 1867; Armstrong, p. 20; J. G. Knight, 'Introduction', in Intercolonial Exhibition, Melbourne, 1866-67, Official Record ..., Melbourne, Blundell & Co., 1867, p. xix, p. xxxvii; and Downer and Phipps, p. 32.

(22) Age, 16 April 1867.

(23) Argus, 24 April, 27 November 1867; Australasian, 20 July 1867; 'Our Art Gallery', Colonial Monthly, vol. 2, June 1868, p. 308; Report of the Trustees ... 1875, VPP, 1876, vol. 2, no. 4, p. 37; Armstrong, p. 36; and [Barry, Redmond], Catalogue of the Oil Paintings in the Public Library, Museums and National Gallery of Victoria, 1875, Melbourne, Stillwell & Knight, 1875, pp. 15-18.

(24) [Redmond Barry], Catalogues of the Objects of Ceramic Art This article is about artwork made out of clay. For ceramic materials and uses in general, see Ceramic.

Ceramics and ceramic art in the art world means artwork made out of clay bodies and fired into the hardened ceramic form.
 and School of Design at the Melbourne Public Library, Melbourne, John Ferres, [1867], p. 4, pp. 19-21; and [Public Library of Victoria], Introduction to the School of Design, N.p., [1867], in SLV, 'Newspaper Cuttings Relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 the Public Library, Museum and National Gallery of Victoria, 1861-1948', vol. 17.

(25) VPRS 5831, unit 1. S. Cox to Barry, 18 September 1865; VPRS 5839, unit 3. P. Mathews to Barry, 29 November 1865; VPRS 5486, units 3, I. T. Carrington to Barry, 24 January 1867, A. Cooke to the Trustees, 21 June 1867. PROV.

(26) Introduction to the School of Design.

(27) VPRS 5839, unit. P. Drummond to the Trustees, 15 July 1867, J. L. Lyon and J. McNichol to the Trustees, 5 September 1867. PROV.

(28) VPRS 5839, unit 1. W. Rosche to Barry, with Barry to Tulk on reverse, 19 July 1867, Lyon and McNichol to the Trustees, 5 September 1867; VPRS 5863, unit 1. Tulk to Lyon and McNichol, 4, 12 September 1867. PROV.

(29) VPRS 5839, unit 2. Students of the School of Design to Tulk, 7 December 1867; VPRS 5863, unit 1. 'Form of Application'. PROV; and MSF MSF Manufacturing, Science, and Finance (Union)  12855, vol. 13a. Trustees of the Public Library. Minutes, 29 January 1868. Records of the State Library of Victoria, 1870-1965. La Trobe MSS, SLV.

(30) Argus, 7 December 1867; and VPRS 5839, unit 2. Students to Tulk, 7 December 1867, PROV.

(31) Age, 14 September 1868.

(32) VPRS 5839, unit 1. J. McNichol to the Trustees, 1 July 1867. PROV; and Age, 14 September 1868.

(33) Argus, 18 February 1868; Melbourne Punch, February 1868; and Evening Star, 1, 6 February 1868.

(34) VPRS 804, unit 1. Barry to Tulk, 21 September 1868; VPRS 1074, unit 5. E. von Guerard to the Trustees, 25 February 1868, and O. R. Campbell to the Trustees, 14 February 1868; VPRS 5839, unit 2. L. Buvelot to the Trustees, 28 May 1868. PROV; MSF 12855, vol. 13a. Trustees. Minutes, 4 June 1868, SLV Records. La Trobe MSS, SLV.

(35) VPRS 5839, unit 2. Students to the Trustees, June 1868, PROV; and Raymond Wright. A People's Counsel: A History of the Parliament of Victoria, 1856-1900, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1992, pp. 78-80.

(36) Argus, 5 August 1868; VPRS 4366, unit 3. Tulk to von Guerard, 16 September 1868, Barry to Tulk, 21 September 1868, von Guerard to Tulk, 18, 29 September 1868; VPRS 804, unit 1. Tulk to von Guerard, 21 September 1868. PROV.

(37) Age, 13 November 1868; and Argus, 30 December 1868.

(38) Victorian Parliamentary Debates Parliamentary Debate is an academic debate event. Most university level institutions in English speaking nations sponsor parliamentary debate teams, but the format is currently spreading to the high school level as well. , vol. 7 (1869), p. 137; VPRS 5528, unit 2. W. H. Odgers to Barry, 11 March 1869. PROV; MSF 12855, vol. 13a. Trustees. Minutes, 8 March 1869. SLV Records. La Trobe MSS, SLV; and Argus, 10 March 1869.

(39) VPRS 1074, unit 5. Applications folder. PROV; and Report of the Trustees.

(40) Daily Telegraph, 20 July 1869; and see Technological Commission, Victoria, Reports and Papers Published by the Technological Commission, Melbourne, Mason, Firth firth or frith, Scottish term applied to an arm of the sea, usually an estuary or strait. For Firth of Clyde, see Clyde; for Firth of Forth, see Forth. , & McCutcheon, 1870.

(41) Report of the Trustees, p. 69, pp. 93-94; and VPRS 5839, unit 4. Barry to C. Duffy, 21 April 1870. PROV.

(42) Argus, 30 December 1868; and MS 10302, msb 193. Frederick McCubbin. Autobiographical Reminiscences, [c.1910]. La Trobe MSS, SLV; and see Pierre Bourdieu Pierre Bourdieu (August 1, 1930 – January 23, 2002) was an acclaimed French sociologist whose work employed methods drawn from a wide range of disciplines: from philosophy and literary theory to sociology and anthropology.  and Main Darbel, with Dominiques Schnapper schnap·per  
n.
A porgy (Chrysophrys guttulatus) of Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand, having a large bony protuberance on the nape when fully grown and prized as a sport fish and food fish. Also called snapper.
, The Love of Art: European Art Museums and Their Public, trans Caroline Beattie and Nick Merriman, Cambridge, Polity Press, 1997, pp. 44-55.

(43) Argus, 30 December 1868; and Bennett, Birth of the Museum, p. 169.

(44) Argus, 5 August 1868, 30 March 1869; [Redmond Barry], Preface to Catalogue of the Works of Art, Ornamental and Decorative Art Exhibited by the Trustees of the Melbourne Public Library and Museum in March, April and May 1869, Melbourne, Mason, Firth & Co., 1869; Report of the Trustees, p. 68; Herald, 29 March 1869; Age, 21 June 1869; and Downer and Phipps, pp. 38-39.

(45) Leader, 3 July 1869; Age, 22 July 1869; and Argus, 22, 31 July 1869.

(46) For example, Australasian News for Home Readers, 25 January 1865; see also Illustrated Australian News, 14 June 1875; and Australasian Sketcher, 22 December 1877.

(47) Argus, 30 December 1868; and Stuart, pp. 113-118.

(48) Argus, 27 November 1867, 30 December 1868; and 'Our Art Gallery', p. 308.

(49) [John Hunter John Hunter may refer to:
  • John Hunter (architect) (1932-2005), British architect and conservationist
  • John Hunter (Canadian politician), Canadian politician
  • John Hunter (New South Wales) (1737-1821), Governor of New South Wales
 Kerr]. Glimpses of Life in Victoria, by 'A Resident'. 1876, Melbourne, Melbourne University Press, Miegunyah Press, 1996, p. 260; and Statistics of the Colony of Victoria, 1862-70.

(50) Australasian, 7 October 1867.

(51) Ann Galbally, 'The Lost Museum: Redmond Barry and Melbourne's Musee des Copies', Australian Journal of Art, vol. 7, 1988, pp. 28-49; Argus, 10 February 1870; and Galbally et al., pp. 66-68, p. 80.
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