Events | Featured projects | Call for entries | Announcements
From July 2009
Image courtesy of the Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House
Living Democracy: the power of the people offers insights into how Australians can participate in the running of their country. The exhibit asks: are you the one who's going to stand up and be counted? Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House.
6–16 August 2009
The SS Admella was steaming from Adelaide to Melbourne on 6 August 1859 when it struck Carpenters Reef, leaving passengers and crew clinging to the wreckage a mile offshore for up to eight days. 89 lives were lost, and only 24 people survived, thanks to a gallant rescue bid. Educational and tourism based projects based around the festival include a Teaching Resource Kit, an Admella Exhibition, a museum scale model of the ship and a 'Wreck of the Admella' DVD.
Image courtesy of the History Trust of South Australia.
19 February 2008 – 21 August 2009
Blue Jeans and Jungle Greens: revisiting the 60s and 70s explores the political and social complexity of the Sixties and Seventies. The exhibition examines both the conflict in Vietnam, including the part played by South Australians in the war, and the anti-war campaign on the home front. The History Trust of South Australia.
26 June - 29 August 2009
Black(s)town is an exhibition of established and emerging artists exploring the origins of Blacktown through its historical and contemporary Aboriginal identities. Inspired and informed by the stories of the original Blacks' Town settlement, this project acknowledges and celebrates Aboriginal heritage and contemporary practices within Blacktown, while exploring issues central to the identity of the region. Public programming for the exhibition will include educational workshops by selected Aboriginal artists, guest lectures from Darug and local elders and local historians. Blacktown Arts Centre.
12 December 2008 – 30 August 2009
Great Collections is an exhibition of national significance, offering an unprecedented display of over 115 of the rarest items from the some of the oldest and most significant collecting agencies in the country. Various locations.
18 July – 6 September 2009
Strike a Pose ... with Lee Lin Chin features 89 images taken by Australian Government photographers during the 1960s and 70s to promote the burgeoning Australian fashion industry. With fashion icon and broadcaster Lee Lin Chin as guest curator, the exhibition developed by the National Archives of Australia celebrates the emerging local fashion industry of the time, along with its personalities, trends and influences. Warrnambool Art Gallery.
Max Dupain, Boys playing cricket at the beach Melbourne, 1946. Image courtesy of the National Archives of Australia.
30 July – 26 September 2009
Max Dupain on Assignment features striking images of rural and urban Australia, architecture, industry and culture from the 1940s to the 1970s. Many have never been on public display. Gladstone Regional Art Gallery.
4 April – 27 September 2009
Every time you drink a Coke, enjoy an ice cream or sweet chocolate treat, go to the cinema, or listen to the latest popular music hit, you can thank Australia's Greek settlers. Greek cafés initially introduced American commercial food catering ideas, technology and products and later influenced the development of cinema and popular music. Migration Museum.
1 August – 27 September 2009
The National Archives’ photographic exhibition Summers Past: Golden Days in the Sun 1950–1970 vividly reminds us of our enduring love affair with the sun and the sea.
11 March – 14 October 2009
The History and the Meaning of Things 2009 Seminar Series on History and Material Culture are held on the second Wednesday of every month. Melbourne Museum.
Louis XVI giving instructions to de Laperouse. Image courtesy of the Western Australian Museum - Maritime.
17 October 2008 – 30 October 2009
Journeys of Enlightenment celebrates the dramatic and often tragic journeys of 18th and 19th century French explorers and scientists who ventured into the relatively unknown to extend man's knowledge of the world. The records and collections from the French expeditions are invaluable in helping to identify loss of species, habitat and changes in the environment. Western Australian Museum - Maritime.
The expedition posed at Gunbalanya, 1948. Image courtesy of the National Museum of Australia.
16–20 November 2009
In 2009 the Centre for Historical Research at the National Museum of Australia will commemorate this anniversary by hosting the Barks, Birds & Billabongs symposium that will investigate the expedition's significant, and often controversial legacy around three core themes: histories, legacies, and methodologies. National Museum of Australia.
July 2009
Australian History Mysteries is a video and print resource with curruiculum materials. Topics include the discovery of Australia, female convicts, Eureka, frontier conflict and Ned Kelly. It draws on materials from a variety of museums, historical collections and historic sites. Developed by the National Museum of Australia and Ryebuck Media.June 2009
A partnership between The Department of Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC) and the National Library of Australia to produce an oral history project focusing on immigration to Australia after World War II has delivered its first live interviews, photographs, memorabilia and video presentations. About 20 Chief Migration Officers (CMOs), who now retired - including Ron Metcalf, Harold Grant and Lionel Mead - are participating in this joint project.
June 2009
In 2009, Queensland celebrates the 150th anniversary of its independence from New South Wales. Celebrations will run from January to December 2009. The 12 month program of events and celebrations will engage Queenslanders to recognise past achievements, current opportunities and future directions.
May 2009
Lighthouse Girl is a book telling the story of Fay who lives alone with her father on bleak, windswept Breaksea Island, near Albany, Western Australia . Her isolated life takes a dramatic turn with the outbreak of World War I. Fay collects the morse code messages of departing soldiers heading to the front line in Egypt and Gallipoli. After their departure, she follows their fortunes and continues her long distance conversations with letters and postcards. Based on the true story of Faye Howe.
May 2009
Since 1788, the letters of our nation have carried the thoughts, feelings and aspirations of Australia and Australians. Now, the Lettters of a Nation project is extracting these letters from desks, cupboards and files all over the country and bringing them together in an interactive timeline and archive. So, if you have an interesting, moving or historically significant letter, we'd love to share it with the nation.
Ongoing
Country Viewpoint is a site for anyone who lives outside our capital cities, or perhaps has a connection to rural or regional Australia, who wants to share an experience, place or idea that is close to their hearts. Country Viewpoint has been airing on ABC Radio National's Bush Telegraph program for almost a decade, but has now expanded to the greater community via the internet. Country Viewpoint invites the expressions of views about anything funny, serious, topical or trivial in your backyard.
The limestone Shepherds Hut c1845-1854, the oldest building at the Quarantine Station, Point Nepean, Victoria. Image courtesy of Heritage Victoria.
8 June 2009
The Commonwealth Government has handed over the certificate of title for the 90 hectare former Quarantine Station at Point Nepean to Victoria. Located at the end of the Mornington Peninsula, Point Nepean is the site of two historic, 19th century landmarks: the fortifications and the Quarantine Station, defending the Colony of Victoria against foreign attack and providing protection from disease. The Point Nepean Defence Sites and Quarantine Station were included in the National Heritage List in 2006.
31 May 2009
The Japanese midget submarine M-24 has been declared an historic shipwreck under the Commonwealth Historic Shipwreck Act 1976 on the 67th anniversary of the attack on Sydney Harbour during World War II. The announcement was made by Federal Heritage Minister Peter Garrett and the New South Wales Minister for Planning, Kristina Keneally.
31 May 2009
Arts Minister Peter Garrett unveiled 900 new names in a Welcome Wall ceremony at the Australian National Maritime Museum. More than 18,000 names from more than 130 countries are inscribed on the Wall, and the museum conducts an unveiling ceremony twice a year.
7 May 2009
Federal Heritage Minister Peter Garrett announced funding of more than $2 million to support important conservation and restoration work at the National Heritage–listed Old Government House in Parramatta. Old Government House is the first site in New South Wales to receive funding support from the $60 million for heritage funding under the Government's Jobs Fund.
7 May 2009
A report into the economic activity of Australia's World Heritage properties released by Minister for the Environment, Heritage and the Arts, Peter Garrett, highlights the value of these universally significant places to Australia's national, regional and local economies.
Air hangar for Qantas Empire Airways Ltd., 1930-1940. Courtesy of John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland.
2 May 2009
One of Australia's earliest civil aviation sites, which is also the birthplace of QANTAS operations, has been included in the National Heritage List, Minister for Heritage Peter Garrett announced in regional Queensland. Mr Garrett joined Queensland Premier, Anna Bligh, QANTAS executives and other special guests at Queensland's Longreach airport to celebrate the listing of the QANTAS Hangar.
29 April 2009
Budj Bim National Heritage Landscape, the first place included in Australia's National Heritage List, will be the first place to receive part of the $60 million in heritage funding under the Government's Jobs Fund.
28 April 2009
The World War II shipwreck Florence D is now protected under the Commonwealth's Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976 after its discovery was confirmed in waters off Bathurst Island, following important work by a Territory Government department.
27 April 2009
The Powerhouse Museum's latest acquisition is the Bruno Benini Photography Archive (1950–2001), purchased with assistance from the Australian Government through the National Cultural Heritage Account.
3 April 2009
Federal Minister for the Arts, Peter Garrett, congratulated Mr Daniel Gilbert AM on his appointment as Chair of the Council of the National Museum of Australia (NMA). Mr Gilbert has over 30 years experience in commercial law, specialising in technology and corporate law, as well as an extensive background in social justice issues and the arts.