This study examines the art practices and management of the National Art Galleries of Australia and New Zealand in the period between the wars, 1918-1939.It does so in part to account for the pervading conservatism and narrow corridors of aesthetic acceptability evident in their acquisitions and in many of their dealings. It aims to explore the role of Britishness, through an examination of the influence of the London Royal Academy of Art, within theses emerging official art institutions. This study argues that the dominant artistic ideology illustrated in these National Gallery collections was determined by a social elite, which was, at its heart, British. Its collective taste was predicated on models established in Great Britain and on tr...
The Chantrey Bequest, set out in the Will of sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey, was of primary importanc...
The Chantrey Bequest, set out in the Will of sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey, was of primary importanc...
This paper examines the virtual invisibility of colonial art in British art museums today, despite a...
This book explores, for the first time, the engagement of the five 'national' art galleries of the d...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
Australia’s relationship with the rest of the world was particularly complex in the two decades of a...
© 2004 Dr. Sarah Russell ScottBetween 1953 and 1964 a series of major Australian art commissions and...
This dissertation examines the Art Gallery of South Australia’s patterns of collecting modern and c...
© 2015 Dr. Suzanne FraserScottish art was consistently collected and displayed in Australia from the...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 125-138).This thesis is an enquiry into the policies and ...
This thesis is a critical examination of the acquisition of British and Foreign oil paintings by the...
Ever since its conception in 1824, the 'much loved friend' in Trafalgar Square has been part of nati...
sculptures and nautical curiosities was one of the first ‘national ’ collections to be acquired and ...
Images, Institutions, and Evolving Nation: Transformations in Australian art, museums, and cultural...
The Chantrey Bequest, set out in the Will of sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey, was of primary importanc...
The Chantrey Bequest, set out in the Will of sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey, was of primary importanc...
This paper examines the virtual invisibility of colonial art in British art museums today, despite a...
This book explores, for the first time, the engagement of the five 'national' art galleries of the d...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
Australia’s relationship with the rest of the world was particularly complex in the two decades of a...
© 2004 Dr. Sarah Russell ScottBetween 1953 and 1964 a series of major Australian art commissions and...
This dissertation examines the Art Gallery of South Australia’s patterns of collecting modern and c...
© 2015 Dr. Suzanne FraserScottish art was consistently collected and displayed in Australia from the...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 125-138).This thesis is an enquiry into the policies and ...
This thesis is a critical examination of the acquisition of British and Foreign oil paintings by the...
Ever since its conception in 1824, the 'much loved friend' in Trafalgar Square has been part of nati...
sculptures and nautical curiosities was one of the first ‘national ’ collections to be acquired and ...
Images, Institutions, and Evolving Nation: Transformations in Australian art, museums, and cultural...
The Chantrey Bequest, set out in the Will of sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey, was of primary importanc...
The Chantrey Bequest, set out in the Will of sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey, was of primary importanc...
This paper examines the virtual invisibility of colonial art in British art museums today, despite a...