Archive for the 'Curator profiles' Category

Meet the curator – Deborah Turnbull

Deborah Turnbull, Assistant Curator, in the basement  with a few of her favourite things. Image Powerhouse Photography

Deborah Turnbull, Assistant Curator, in the basement with a few of her favourite things. Image Powerhouse Photography

What is your specialty area?
Well, I have two art history degrees, so the short answer is art. The long answer is I used to be thoroughly obsessed with gendered architecture, until I discovered contemporary art in the last year of my undergraduate degree. I knew of it from a year 11 trip to the Vancouver Art Gallery where Andy Warhol was featured, but I think the turning points for me were when I discovered the sculptures of Eva Hesse and the film works of Matthew Barney. I was hooked!
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Farewell to curator, Christina Sumner, OAM

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Christina Sumner, Principal Curator, Design & Society in the basement with textiles, including 92/775 Suzani (needlework), Collection: Powerhouse Museum

On the eve of of Christina Sumner’s departure we asked her a few questions about her experiences at the Museum over the last 28 years.


What have you enjoyed the most about working in the Museum?

Always always always it’s been the people and the collection. I’ve been lucky enough to spend every working day with curatorial and other colleagues who are bright, interested, articulate and as passionate as I am about the collection – building it, and committing ourselves to interpret, tell stories about and communicate the meaning of our objects to the wider community.

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What does a curator really do in a day?

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Portrait of Min-Jung Kim, Curator of Asian Arts & Design, Powerhouse Museum, Photo by Sotha Bourn

People often ask me what curators do. Usually my answer is “we research, collect, document and display objects.” However, this answer doesn’t seem to satisfy people who wonder what really goes on behind the scenes in the museums and galleries.

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Meet the curator – Rebecca Evans

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Rebecca Evans with vintage dresses from the Museum's collection.
Image: Sotha Bourn

What is your name?
Rebecca Evans

What is your speciality area?
Isn’t specialisation code for ‘things I like best’?
I have made and loved clothing and textiles for as long as I can remember. My Mum and Nan taught me to sew and with this passion I eventually completed a Creative Arts degree majoring in Textiles at Wollongong University. A romantic at heart, I am also obsessed with vintage clothing from the 1940s and 1950s. I love how a historic garment can tell a story. This may be a waistline that was let out for pregnancy or the economic use of materials; you don’t get much closer to the bodies of history than historic dress!

I am also fascinated with the manufacture of textiles and dress through time.
It goes against our current understanding of human ingenuity. We are so rapt up with the future that we forget that the past produced designs (especially in fashion and textiles) that we can no longer make due to lost knowledge and materials. We have much to learn from the past. For example, the way clothing was repaired and re-used can help with environment issues in the future.

How long have you been working at the museum? Since 2009

Individual favourite object in the collection?
In 2010 I worked with Glynis Jones on Frock Stars. For this I acquired the Iced VoVo dress by fashion design label Romance Was Born. This dress is a great example of contemporary Australian design and is fun and playful. It is also reflects the personalities of the designers, Anna Plunkett and Luke Sales.
The Museum has an incredible collection of fashion and textiles and it used as a resource for fashion designers, artists, and historians. Some of my favourite pieces include:
1957 evening dress by Christian Dior, the Annette Kellerman collection, Ann Marsden’s ball gown, a men’s patchwork dressing gown from the 1830s, an evening dress by Toni Maticevski, a maternity dress from 1825 and our collection of Indigenous Australian batiks.

What piece of research or exhibition are you most proud of in your career in the Museum?
I have just finished working on the Love Lace exhibition with Lindie Ward. I am still in awe of the creativity of the artists and makers in this show! If you have not seen it yet, you should definitely go and see it!
I am also really proud of working on the Australian Dress Register, first as a volunteer and then an Assistant Curator. It has been exciting to see regional museums and galleries re-consider their dress collections as significant in telling Australian history.

Love Lace will be open until April 2012.
You can follow Rebecca on twitter @rebeccajoyevans

Meet the curator- Charles Pickett

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Photography © Powerhouse Museum, all rights reserved.

If you are a regular reader of ‘Object of the Week’, you would know that Charles is one of our best contributors. I thought it was about time we ‘met’ Charles in one of our inimitable 6×6 style interviews!

Curator’s name: Charles Pickett (it’s actually Dr Charles, but he is modest! Charles holds a PhD in History from the University of Sydney).

What he’s known for: Charles is Curator of Design and the Built Environment. He has published widely on the topics of apartment living, Australian cities, Sydney suburbia, pub design and culture and gambling, among many others.

Describe your typical working day…
At the moment it involves rushing to get the kids to school and then arriving at work for a rest! Actually, not quite. A typical working day for me, now, is slogging away on a new book.

What major projects are you currently working on?
The book. It’s called Designer Suburbs and I am co-writing it with Judith O’Callaghan of the University of New South Wales. I’m also working on an architecture exhibition which is in the pipeline.

What was the last book you read?
A huge volume on Le Corbusier. These days, however, I rarely get time to read books outside of work, although I like to look at online magazines and newspapers like Slate, the New Yorker and the Guardian.

Last film you watched?
I used to be a real film buff, but my wife and kids have kind of squashed that! I’ve been getting through the whole Mad Men series and I also recently saw Never let me go.

Last piece of writing you published?
My masterpiece blog post on ‘Object of the Week’ – Osama’s lair.

Last exhibition you curated?
I developed a section on design in The 80s Are Back exhibition. I also developed a section for Sydney’s Pubs, an exhibition at the Justice and Police Museum (part of the Historic Houses Trust) a couple of years back. I’ve curated or co-curated about 25 exhibitions in my time.

Last person you had a conversation with?
I took my son’s broken violin bow into a music shop this morning and the shop owner and I had a chat about how nothing is repaired anymore, given it’s much easier to buy a replacement!

Last shop you visited?
The music shop – Logan’s in Burwood. Before that I went to Burwood Cycleworld to buy a new tube. I’ve been busy this morning!

Last meal you ate?
Breakfast – a long black and two pieces of toast.

Last time you laughed uncontrollably?
I don’t know if I do a lot of uncontrollable laughing. Maybe on Sunday morning while watching the Champions League Final.

From the top…
[Charles was asked to select which of the following pairs of words best describes him]

Introverted or extroverted? Introverted
Meateater or vegetarian? Both
Country or classical? I like opera, I don’t care much for classical. Never liked country!
Swim or cycle? Cycle [Charles is a real bicycle buff]
Tooheys or VB? I like Tooheys Old
Borneo or Berlin? Berlin
Camping or cruising? Neither – both are hell on earth!
Crossword or sudoku? Neither
Early bird or night owl? Night owl
Manual or auto? Auto
T-shirt or tie? I like a nice shirt
ABBA or Village People? Village People
Basil Fawlty or Benny Hill? Basil Fawlty was funny a century ago! Never really watched Benny Hill.
Flip flops or sneakers? I like Dunlop Volleys
Cocopops or Cornflakes? Neither

Turn out your pockets…
In Charles’s jacket and trouser pockets, we found the following items: his Powerhouse Museum swipe card, a business card obtained at a recent conference he attended at Sydney Olympic Park, some dirty tissues (also leftover from the conference…which, for the record, was 2 days ago!), a wallet and set of keys.

To read Charles’s blog posts on ‘Object of the Week’, click here. And, if you liked this interview, please feel free to put forward some suggestions of other interviewees you’d like to see in the hot seat!

Meet the curator- Rebecca Bower

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Photography by Sotha Bourn © Powerhouse Museum, all rights reserved.

Name: Rebecca Bower

What is your specialty area? Like many curators at the Powerhouse I studied archaeology, having wanted to be an Egyptologist since I was a little girl. It was pure coincidence that my first year at university was soon after Raiders of the Lost Ark came out. There were a bumper number of wannabe archaeologists that year hoping to be lectured by an Australian Indiana Jones!!! The reality was far different and the drop out rate, high. Unlike many I survived the undergraduate course, became the inaugural graduate of the Historical Archaeological honours program at the University of Sydney and followed that with a post graduate degree in Maritime Archaeology. Before making the leap into the museum world I ran my own consultancy business specialising in archaeological footwear and shipwreck research, but within a couple of years was bored and looking for new challenges. I started at the Powerhouse as an Assistant Registrar, later moving to Curatorial. I pursued an internship at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History and a Masters Degree in Public History to develop my understanding of photographic history and practice.

Over the years I’ve worked primarily within the area of performing arts on a number of research projects and exhibitions. An inveterate traveller and hoarder, my research interests are so diverse that I have difficulty in sticking to one specialty. I am lucky my job and studies have allowed me the flexibility to develop specialist knowledge in a range of areas in performing arts and photography, such as early 20th century travelling tent shows, Bollywood films and vernacular photography. My colleagues consider me the resident Elvis Presley aficionado and my desk, the local tourist attraction, is littered with kitsch ephemera, the product of travels in the Middle East and India and my fascination for religious ritual. Some may accuse me of having a short attention span, I consider it collecting knowledge like I collect things and you can never have too much of either.

How long have you been working at the Museum? That’s like asking a lady how old she is! I’d like to say since Adam was a boy. In fact, compared to some, a relatively brief 17 years.

Favourite object in the collection? In all the years I have worked here I have never been able to nominate a single object as my favourite as my tastes and interests change on a regular basis. Is it museological schizophrenia? The beauty of working with a collection as diverse as this is that most interests are catered for. One thing that has remained constant though is my passion for interesting and quirky stories. I have a great fondness for objects relating to people’s religious observation, their sexual proclivities and the rituals associated with their death. To me these are the most important aspects of human existence and yet often these subjects are shrouded in shame, misinformation or bigotry.

I am drawn to the beauty of Natraja, the Hindu god Shiva performing his celestial dance, the serenity of the Tibetan Buddha, the sacred bull Nandi, the joi de vivre of Krishna dancing and the rituals associated with the Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhist skullcap. The ushabtis and bust of Osiris are a nod to my past. I am fascinated by the appropriation and reinterpretation of religious symbols as expressed in the posters for Mambo Goddess and the ‘Christmas is false consciousness Eve’ party while the statue of St Cecilia, speaks to my love of Christian/Catholic ritual. My interest in the rituals surrounding death is represented by the funerary urn “Three Dead Passengers” and the crucifix from the Eastern Suburbs Crematorium. There wasn’t room for the ash grinder in the photograph. Finally, I am intrigued by the pushing of sexual boundaries as expressed by Richard Boulez’s bondage collection euphemistically entitled “collection of leather accessories’’ and Gretel Pinniger’s fetish corsetry.

If there was a position called ‘Curator of religion, sex, death and weird stuff’ then I’m sure it would have been invented with me in mind!

What piece of research or exhibition are you most proud of in your career at the Museum? I rarely use my archaeological specialist knowledge in a museum context. So it was a real pleasure to use my specialist knowledge to catalogue the Joseph Box footwear collection and work directly from shoe historian June Swann’s notes.

Being just a tiny bit ‘obsessed’ by Bollywood I relished researching Indian films made in Australia for the Australian component of the Cinema India exhibition, curating a film program and exposing our audience to the magic of Indian film. Watching scenes being filmed on the streets of Sydney for the Bollywood film ‘Heyy Babyy” wasn’t bad either.

The running joke of the team during the development of The 80s are Back was that I ‘was born’ to work on this exhibition. There is certainly no denying that my formative social years happened during the 1980s and being able to relive my youth under the guise of work was a pretty special experience. Being able to use social media such as Facebook to undertake primary research and in the process discovering so much rich content for the exhibition was fun and a revelation. I think the subcultures section of the exhibition was all the richer for these personal stories and mementoes.

Meet the curator- Glynis Jones

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Photography by Sotha Bourn © Powerhouse Museum, all rights reserved

Name: Glynis Jones (I often receive phone calls from gentlemen of a certain age who ask me if I appeared in Mary Poppins!!).

What is your specialty area? I completed a Bachelor of Arts majoring in Archaeology and Fine Arts and a postgraduate degree in Museum Studies. It was working as an archaeologist on the excavation of the First Government House site on Bridge St that gave me first hand experience of studying the past through artefacts. The glass, ceramics, drains, bones and clay pipes left me with a vivid impression of early colonial occupation of the area.

I joined the Museum as an Assistant Registrar, cataloguing the textiles and dress collection and from there became Assistant Curator and then Curator of fashion and dress. I look after a very diverse collection area covering men’s, women’s and children’s clothing and accessories ranging from elaborate embroidered waistcoats dating from the 1700s to the work of contemporary international and Australian fashion labels including Chanel, Akira Isogawa and Romance Was Born. We also have important designer archives from Jenny Kee and Linda Jackson including their original artwork for textiles and garments, stunning fashion photography and even business records. In addition there are significant manufacturer’s archives from companies like Speedo which document the evolution of competitive swimwear from the racer back woollen Speedos of the 1930s to today’s high tech suits. Through filmed interviews and photography we collect and document the richness and diversity of subcultural and alternative dressing in Australia, from Mods to Metalheads and Goths to DIY punks.

How long have you been working at the Museum? Since 1985

Favourite object in the collection? I love wearing elastic sided boots and never get over the thrill of looking at the first pair of ‘elastic’ sided boots invented by Joseph Sparkes Hall (94/88/1). These very dainty boots are Sparkes Hall’s prototype version of the elastic-sided boot and were presented to Queen Victoria in 1837. At the time they hadn’t perfected the use of elastic rubber in clothing so the gussets are actually made of coiled wire, Sparkes Hall had to wait a few years for rubber technology to catch up with his invention. Another favourite is a collection of photographs by Melbourne based photographer Ilana Rose which document aspects of subcultural and alternative style in Sydney and Melbourne. I love Ilana’s ability to capture her subject’s often spectacular and highly expressive style. I also can’t go past the extraordinary dress embroidered by outsider artist Madge Gill. Made in the 1940s it’s a simple cotton dress which is covered in an explosion of bold freestyle embroidery. And then there’s……………………………..

What piece of research or exhibition are you most proud of in your career at the Museum? Initiating the collecting and documenting of Australian subcultural and alternative style as part of our dress collection. This is one of the most creative and innovative areas of dress; the richness and diversity of its expressions, the way it challenges or reworks traditions and aesthetic codes and the play on gender, age, race, status and body image means the study of subcultural style offers us new ways of thinking about dress. From this research I was able to contribute an article on the history of Australian subcultural style to the recently published Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion.

In terms of exhibitions I loved working on Sourcing the Muse. Eight Australian designers were invited to look through the Museum’s textile and dress collection and select items to use as a source of inspiration for a new work. It was fascinating to see what they chose and to watch the creative process as they translated their inspiration into a finished garment. They didn’t focus on the most visually spectacular or historically significant pieces in the collection. Instead I found them to be most attracted to details of construction, the inside of garments, dress components, decorative techniques from all around the world and in one case the deterioration of historic dress. I enjoy taking designers and researchers into our basement store; they always make me look at the collection in new ways.

Meet the curator- Alysha Buss

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Photography by Sotha Bourn © Powerhouse Museum, all rights reserved

Name: Alysha Buss

What is your specialty area? At university I completed a Bachelor of Arts where I majored in Archaeology (Classical and Near Eastern) and Heritage Studies, and also studied Art History and Anthropology. I have recently graduated with a Master of Museum Studies. However, at the Powerhouse Museum, I am most familiar with the Bruno Benini photography archive, which I have been working with exclusively for over a year now! This archive contains photographic prints, negatives, transparencies, contact sheets, proof prints and newspaper clippings covering fashion, portraits, flowers and nudes, as well as biographical material, from the 1950s to 2001.

How long have you been working at the Museum? In April 2009 I began as an intern working on the Bruno Benini archive as part of the Master of Museum Studies course, and after my internship ended I continued on as a volunteer. Due to my familiarity and experience with the archive, I was extremely lucky to be employed as a temporary Assistant Curator working with Anne-Marie Van de Ven on the Creating the Look: Benini and fashion photography project. This exhibition will open soon, in conjunction with the 2010 Sydney Design Festival.

Favourite object in the collection? There are too many – every time I open a box from the archive, I find another photograph to love! As I look through the boxes of prints and negatives, I am now recognising favourite models, locations, props and styles which Bruno Benini and his wife Hazel used over and over, and they almost feel like old friends.

However, my favourite object in the archive, for its sheer beauty and sophistication, is a photograph taken by Bruno in 1956 of Pauline Kiernan, about which I wrote a ‘photo of the day’ blog post. I first saw this in Parade: the story of fashion in Australia by Alexandra Joel (1998) when I was 14, and have loved it ever since. I didn’t remember it was by Bruno Benini, and so I was shocked when I saw the physical photograph in the transit room for the first time! Each element of the composition, such as the model’s graceful pose, the use of an elegant sofa as a prop, and the high contrast between the deep black background and the model’s luminous face and gown, all work together to create an incredibly glamorous image.

Working with the Bruno Benini archive and photographs, such as this one, has definitely increased my interest in photography, and fashion photography, in particular.

Alysha Buss
Assistant Curator (Creating the Look: Benini and fashion photography exhibition)

Meet the Curator: Andrew Grant

Photography by Sotha Bourn © Powerhouse Museum, all rights reserved

Photography by Sotha Bourn © Powerhouse Museum, all rights reserved

Name
Andrew Grant

What is your specialty area?
Land Transport with particular interest in horse drawn transport. It’s hard to claim any field within the vast transport area as a “specialty”, because they are all complex. My interest in transport began with cars and trains in my boyhood, but it was not until many years later while studying Industrial Arts that I chose to write my honours thesis about the Australian motor car industry. While teaching high school I took up a Masters Degree, also in Industrial Arts, to examine the links between the motor car industry and the coach building industry that had preceded it. This led to my discovering that very little research had been done into the latter industry which resulted in horse drawn vehicles becoming a focus. The demands of teaching and a young family were a challenge to the study, so the opportunity to join the Museum in 1980 as an assistant curator of transport was timely and exciting. At that time, the Curator of Transport and Engineering, Norman Harwood, was in his last of 30 years’ service at the Museum, and I was very fortunate to spend my first 6 months at the Museum effectively being mentored before his retirement. “Norm” had a very engaging personality and was a true hands-on professional curator whose foresight, wisdom and experience provided much of the solid foundation on which the new Museum would be built. Norm introduced me to the Museum’s impressive and previously unknown collection of horse drawn vehicles, some of which have since been featured in Powerhouse Museum exhibitions and, more recently, Powerhouse Discovery Centre displays.

How long have you been working at the Museum?
30 years (the time has flown by!)

Favourite object in the collection?
The horse drawn omnibus. This is a special favourite not only because it is a horse drawn vehicle but because it has a particular charm. This is due to its distinctive design, utilitarian yet pleasing to the eye, and the fascinating anecdotes that show how these distinctive vehicles were woven into the daily lives of the residents of late 19th century Sydney.

What piece of research or exhibition are you most proud of in your career at the Museum?
While it is not a discrete project, I’m proud to have had the wonderful and unique experience of planning and executing exhibitions for both Stage 1 and Stage 2 of the Powerhouse Museum. I had the unique opportunity of being involved in all the planning meetings for the first stage of the Power House Museum (as it was then called), followed by the great practical experience of liaising with architects and designers, researching objects, writing labels and installing the exhibits. A few years later, I was part of a large team who worked on the groundbreaking development of the Powerhouse Stage 2, as it was called, then by far the largest Museum project ever in Australia.

Meet the curator- Min-Jung Kim

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Photography by Sotha Bourn © Powerhouse Museum

Name: Min-Jung Kim

What is your specialty area? My known speciality is East Asian decorative arts and design within the Museum. I look after the Chinese, Japanese and Korean collections in all mediums including: ceramics, textiles, wood and lacquer, metal, jade, paper etc. However, I would like to say my specialty is facilitating dialogues between Asian communities and the Museum. After all, we care for objects to tell the stories of people!

How long have you been working at the Museum? My first work at the Museum was 12 years ago when I co-curated an exhibition Rapt in colour: Korean textiles and costumes of the Choson Dynasty (1392-1910). Following this exhibition, I worked on Earth, Spirit, Fire: Korean masterpieces of the Choson Dynasty in 2000. I went back to academics to study Cultural Studies then started again at the Museum in my current role three years ago.

Favourite object in the collection? If someone asks who your favourite child is amongst all your children, then you probably can’t answer! Still, if I have to, I would probably say “my first child is Shou Lao (Chinese figure of the God of longevity). I regard him as my guardian angel in the Museum. Shou Lao is riding a deer and holding a peach looking at you wishing longevity. It has a fascinating story around it and we still need to hunt down the mystery of the story about how it came to Australia. He takes the role of the first child in the Asian collection very well.”

Then I would probably keep saying proudly, “I love my charming second daughter – the Japanese comb collection. My third child is the collection of Chinese toggles and Japanese netsuke. They are so precious and they are kept in the Museum’s special vault. Chinese toggles, in particular, are very rare and this is known as one of the world’s largest collections. My fourth child is quite a character. He is our Samurai arms and amours collection. My heart goes to my fifth one, a traditional Korean wedding robe. I am pictured here with the first and fifth of my children!”

What piece of research or exhibition are you most proud of in your career at the Museum? I was very excited to find out that our Chinese toggle collection is one of the world’s largest collections of its kind when I was developing an exhibition Chinese belt toggles in 2008. This collection was formed by Hedda and Alastair Morrison in Beijing in the 1940s and donated to the Museum in 1992. People know about Japanese netsuke, but not much of its forebear, Chinese toggles.

My favourite exhibition is Rapt in colour : Korean textiles and costumes of the Chosôn Dynasty. People still talk about the exhibition and how beautiful it was. It also had great stories. Korea has a long tradition of wrapping things with beautiful wrapping cloths and women made the wrapping cloths with left over fabrics from making clothes for her family members. The compositions of colour created by these unknown women were no less innovative and brilliant than how Mondrian is known today.