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| logo_alt = | | logo_alt = | ||
| logo_caption = | | logo_caption = | ||
| image = |
| image = Castlemaine Art Museum.jpg | ||
| image_size = |
| image_size = 300px<!-- that's the maximum size allowed by Infobox museum --> | ||
| image_upright = |
| image_upright = | ||
| alt = The facade of the Art Museum at dusk with a family walking up the steps |
| alt = The facade of the Art Museum at dusk with a family walking up the steps | ||
| caption = 1931 Art Deco facade of the Castlemaine Art Museum photographed in 2017 | | caption = 1931 Art Deco facade of the Castlemaine Art Museum photographed in 2017 | ||
| map_type = Victoria | | map_type = Victoria | ||
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| map_caption = | | map_caption = | ||
| map_dot_label = Castlemaine | | map_dot_label = Castlemaine | ||
| coordinates = |
| coordinates = {{coord|display=inline,title|-37.0647|144.2138|type:landmark_region:AU}} | ||
| former_name = Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | | former_name = Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | ||
| established = {{start date|1913|07|09|df=y}} |
| established = {{start date|1913|07|09|df=y}} | ||
| dissolved = <!-- {{end date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=y}} --> | | dissolved = <!-- {{end date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=y}} --> | ||
| location = |
| location = 12–14 Lyttleton Street, Castlemaine | ||
| type = Art gallery and historical museum | | type = Art gallery and historical museum | ||
| accreditation = ] | | accreditation = ] | ||
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| collections = Tonal Realism; Bookplates; Black and White Illustration; Women Artists; Modernist Prints; Castlemaine History, Places and People | | collections = Tonal Realism; Bookplates; Black and White Illustration; Women Artists; Modernist Prints; Castlemaine History, Places and People | ||
| collection_size = 2,000+ artworks and 4000+ historical artefacts | | collection_size = 2,000+ artworks and 4000+ historical artefacts | ||
| visitors = 5,713 ( |
| visitors = 5,713 (2021–2022) | ||
| founder = Anna Mary Winifred Brotherton ( |
| founder = ] (1874–1956) | ||
| executive_director = Naomi Cass | | executive_director = Naomi Cass | ||
| leader_type = | | leader_type = | ||
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| architect = ] | | architect = ] | ||
| historian = Peter Perry, David J. Golightly | | historian = Peter Perry, David J. Golightly | ||
| owner = Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum Trust |
| owner = Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum Trust | ||
| employees = 1 |
| employees = 1 full-time, 3 part-time, 50 volunteers | ||
| publictransit = VLine |
| publictransit = VLine Melbourne–Bendigo–Swan Hill Line, Castlemaine Railway Station, 300m | ||
| parking = <!-- or |car_park= --> | | parking = <!-- or |car_park= --> | ||
| website = https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au | | website = https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au | ||
| network = | | network = | ||
| embedded = <!-- or |nrhp= --> |
| embedded = <!-- or |nrhp= --> | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Castlemaine Art Museum''' is an |
'''Castlemaine Art Museum''' is an art gallery and museum in ], Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1913, it is housed in a purpose-built Art Deco building, completed in 1931 and heritage-listed by the National Trust.<ref name=":8" /> Its collection concentrates on Australian art and the museum houses historical artefacts and displays drawn from the local district. | ||
The |
The museum is governed by private trustees and managed by a board elected by subscribers. It is funded by state and local governments with additional support from benefactors, local families, artists and patrons. Its trustees also oversee the management of ], a heritage-listed villa and garden 1.3 km adjacent to the museum, which houses its own collection of art and artefacts associated with the Leviny family, and is also open to the public for exhibitions, events displays and garden tours. | ||
==Collection== | |||
The Collections may be searched online. | |||
===Museum collection=== | |||
The museum, housed in the basement, presents the history of Castlemaine and its region in objects, maps, models, photographs and prints, including a large group of hand-coloured ] from watercolours by ]; pithy vignettes of life on the goldfields. Historical glassware and ceramics, much brought to Castlemaine by its European immigrants, extends from the ]. Local fauna is represented by taxidermy specimens. Items of Victorian-era fashion are also displayed, and arts and crafts is represented in early-to-mid century enamelware and silver.<ref name=":2" /> | |||
===Gallery=== | |||
The gallery has always specialised in Australian art<ref name=":15" /><ref name=":3" /><ref>'Rambler', "Treasure in Castlemaine: Unique Provincial Gallery," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 27 April 1940, p. 8</ref> as the gallery's constitution stipulated in 1913, emphasising "... the cultivation of a taste for the Fine Arts by the collection and exhibition of works of especially Australian Artists..."<ref>The Rules and Constitution of the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 1913</ref> Accordingly, at its opening in 1931 it held 155 pictures, 26 added only the year prior,<ref>''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 22 October 1930, p. 14</ref> and the total predominantly Australian,<ref>A. C. "The Castlemaine Art Galleries," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 18 April 1931, p. 13</ref> and now the collection spans the periods Colonial, Impressionist, Early Twentieth Century Modernism, Mid-Century Modern, Postmodernism, and Contemporary in varieties of media. | |||
Earlier artists include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ]. | |||
Modernists include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
More contemporary artists include ], ], ], ], ], Fiona Orr, ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
===Indigenous art=== | |||
] art is progressively being transferred from the Museum to the walls and display cases of the Gallery,<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":5" /> and its collection is being actively expanded. In 2019 Tiriki Onus, of ] and ] heritage and ] Associate Dean Indigenous Development and Head of the ], became the premier First Nations appointment to the CAM Board.<ref>{{cite web|last=Dennis|first=Lisa|date=2020-08-14|title=CAM welcomes First Nations board member|url=https://castlemainemail.com.au/latest-news/featured/2020/08/14/cam-welcomes-first-nations-board-member/|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Castlemaine Mail|language=en-US}}</ref> The Art Museum's Strategic Plan released in 2019 and current until 2023 declares;<blockquote>During the life of this Plan, CAM will consult with Traditional Owners towards increasing its engagement with and relevance for Traditional Owners and other Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists and audiences.<ref name=":6">{{cite web|last1=Cass|first1=Naomi|last2=Mutton|first2=Craig|date=2019|title=Connecting People Through Art, History, Place and Ideas: Strategic Plan for Castlemaine Art Museum 2019–2023|url=https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/media/pages/about/1514808448-1627466252/cam-strategic-plan.pdf|url-status=live|website=Castlemaine Art Museum|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918073852/https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/media/pages/about/1514808448-1627466252/cam-strategic-plan.pdf |archive-date=18 September 2021 }}</ref> </blockquote> | |||
===Portraits of Australian artists=== | |||
Portraits of Australian artists by Australian photographers ], ], Richard Beck, ], ], ], Sonia Payes, ], ], ], ] and ] and others form another specialist concentration in the collection initiated by previous Director Peter Perry.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38398455|title=The reflecting eye: portraits of Australian visual artists|date=1996|publisher=National Library of Australia|others=Helen Ennis, National Library of Australia, National Portrait Gallery|isbn=0-642-10673-8|location=|oclc=38398455}}</ref> | |||
=== Buda Historic Home === | |||
Separate from the Art Museum, but under its auspices, ] holds on display domestic items, decorative art, furnishings, artworks, books and personal effects of the Leviny family from the 1850s up until 1981, after Hilda Leviny's death, when the home and garden were opened to the public.Clothing and accessories, documents, correspondence, diaries and photographs preserve the family's history and the eras in which they lived. | |||
Hungarian Ernest Leviny, a practicing gold- and silversmith, arrived on the Castlemaine goldfields in 1853 and the collection of his work is notable. Arts and Crafts style articles of embroidery, woodcarving and metalwork on display throughout the house and garden were produced by the Leviny daughters. | |||
Also in the Buda collection are original artworks by mostly early twentieth century Australian artists including ], ], ], ], Ursula Ridley Walker and Alice Newell, studio pottery from the 1920s and 1930s by ], Philippa James and John Campbell, and hand-printed textiles of Melbourne artists ], ] and ]. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
The founding of Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum was preceded by four other public regional galleries in the state of Victoria: ] in 1884, ] in 1886, ] in 1887 and ] in 1900, but its significance, by comparison, was that it was in a small town, not a regional city like its |
The founding of Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum was preceded by four other public regional galleries in the state of Victoria: ] in 1884, ] in 1886, ] in 1887 and ] in 1900, but its significance, by comparison, was that it was in a small town, not a regional city like its forebears. | ||
Cultural precedents were the 1855 Castlemaine ] which included a library; the School of Mines whose art teacher C. Steiner in 1908 taught engineering, surveying, architecture and fine art students;<ref>{{Cite news |date=1908-06-15 |title=Correspondence |pages=2 |work=Mount Alexander Mail |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199803534 |access-date=2023-05-06}}</ref> and numbers of artists, including ],<ref>{{cite web|title="Mounted Police Gold Escort Guard – Mt Alexander"|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/3185/mounted-police-gold-escort-guard-mt-alexander|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> ], ],<ref>{{cite web|title=Forest Creek, Mount Alexander from Adelaide Hill|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/873/forest-creek-mount-alexander-from-adelaide-hill|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> and early photographers ]<ref>{{cite web|title=No Title (Argus Flat Gold Mining Co.)|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/7352/no-title-argus-flat-god-mining-co|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> and ],<ref>{{cite web|title="Sun Pictures Of Victoria – The Fauchery-daintree Collection 1858"|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/3941|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> had visited to document the swarming ]. | |||
===''Castlemaine Past and Present''=== | ===''Castlemaine Past and Present''=== | ||
] | |||
The Castlemaine Progress Association's display of items of a 'novel and interesting nature', ''Castlemaine Past and Present,''<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Grant|first=Donald|date=1 March 1965|title=Castlemaine Is Live History|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-751824007|journal=Walkabout|publisher=Australian National Travel Association|volume=31|issue=3|pages=21}}</ref> the town's first major exhibition, running 18–20 August 1910, celebrated the commercial, civic and cultural achievements of the town with "a collection of geological specimens and curios from the Government collection," photographs of historical interest, maps, furniture, applied art, books and artefacts, as well as landscapes by local artists intended to "popularise our town as a resort for artists and painters."<ref>{{Cite news|date=1910-07-21|title=Castelemaine Past and Present|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article200262869|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> | |||
The Castlemaine Progress Association's display of items of a 'novel and interesting nature', ''Castlemaine Past and Present,''<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Grant|first=Donald|date=1 March 1965|title=Castlemaine Is Live History|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-751824007|journal=Walkabout|publisher=Australian National Travel Association|volume=31|issue=3|pages=21}}</ref> the town's first major exhibition, running 18–20 August 1910, celebrated the commercial, civic and cultural achievements of the town with "a collection of geological specimens and curios from the Government collection," photographs of historical interest, maps, furniture, applied art, books and artefacts, as well as landscapes by local artists intended to "popularise our town as a resort for artists and painters".<ref>{{Cite news|date=1910-07-21|title=Castelemaine Past and Present|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article200262869|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> | |||
The committee included a "special feature" of "modern art, the only stipulation being that works of art, as well as all other exhibits, must relate in some way to Castlemaine or its district," and called for "historical curios, weapons, maps, manuscripts, medals, trophies, or any other article of local significance |
The committee included a "special feature" of "modern art, the only stipulation being that works of art, as well as all other exhibits, must relate in some way to Castlemaine or its district," and called for "historical curios, weapons, maps, manuscripts, medals, trophies, or any other article of local significance".<ref>{{Cite news|date=1910-07-29|title=Castlemaine Past and Present|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article200262538|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> An early supporter was ].<ref>Arnold Shore, "Elioth Gruner: A Master Of Panoramic Landscape," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 9 January 1960, p. 18</ref> The exhibition thus established the principle of collecting of Australian art and of looking locally, for works connected to Castlemaine in some aspect,<ref name=":1" /> in contrast to a policy of concentrating on British and European art that was pursued by most Australian galleries of the period, in particular the National Gallery of Victoria purchases in Europe by ] through the ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Rankin|first=Gwen|title=L. Bernard Hall: the man the art world forgot|date=2013|publisher=NewSouth|isbn=978-1-74224-647-5|edition=|location=Sydney|oclc=849924004}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|author1=Murray, Phip|title=The NGV story: a celebration of 150 years / Phip Murray|year=2011|publisher=National Gallery of Victoria|language=en|author2=National Gallery of Victoria}}. p. 16</ref> | ||
===Public meeting=== | ===Public meeting=== | ||
Two years later, in October 1912, the first solo exhibition of paintings by a local resident, ], wife of a Castlemaine police magistrate,<ref name=":9">{{Cite book|last=McCulloch|first=Alan |
Two years later, in October 1912, the first solo exhibition of paintings by a local resident, ], wife of a Castlemaine police magistrate,<ref name=":9">{{Cite book|last=McCulloch|first=Alan|title=Encyclopedia of Australian art|date=1984|publisher=Hutchinson of Australia|others=Charles Nodrum|isbn=0-09-148300-X|location=Hawthorn, Vic.|oclc=12016075}}</ref> was held in the reading room of the Mechanics Institute, raising hopes "that the Castlemaine public will have the same opportunity in this matter as is afforded to the Melbourne public, which now-a-days is rarely without an Art Exhibition".<ref>{{Cite news|date=1912-10-19|title=Art Exhibition in Castlemaine|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199582168|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> | ||
Subsequently, a meeting at Barlow's home on 9 July 1913<ref>{{Cite news|date=1913-07-11|title=Progress Association|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199591564|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|date=1913-07-29|title=Castlemaine Art GalleryASTLEMAINE ART GALLERY|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199585641|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> proposed the creation of a permanent gallery for Castlemaine and approached the Mayor to "affirm the advisability of establishing a Museum and Art Gallery in Castlemaine" at a public meeting of Mayors and Councillors from ], ], ], ] and Mount Alexander with Col. Davies, Secretary of the ], Mr A T Woodward Director of the Bendigo School of Arts, Mr ], Director of the ], Trustees of the National Gallery and Museum and the Old Pioneers Association, and with support of the local High School committee.<ref>{{Cite news|date=1913-07-07|title=Local School of Mines|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199590748|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> | Subsequently, a meeting at Barlow's Hunter Street home on 9 July 1913<ref>{{Cite news|date=1913-07-11|title=Progress Association|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199591564|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|date=1913-07-29|title=Castlemaine Art GalleryASTLEMAINE ART GALLERY|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199585641|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> proposed the creation of a permanent gallery for Castlemaine and approached the Mayor to "affirm the advisability of establishing a Museum and Art Gallery in Castlemaine" on 30 July at a public meeting of Mayors and Councillors from ], ], ], ] and Mount Alexander with Col. Davies, Secretary of the ], Mr A T Woodward Director of the Bendigo School of Arts, Mr ], Director of the ], Trustees of the National Gallery and Museum and the Old Pioneers Association, and with support of the local High School committee.<ref>{{Cite news|date=1913-07-07|title=Local School of Mines|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199590748|access-date=2021-09-16}}</ref> | ||
Winifred Brotherton,<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |
],<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum: history & collections|date=2013|author=Geoff Hannon|isbn=978-0-9807831-9-3|location=Castlemaine, Australia|oclc=869312119}}</ref> who took the minutes, emphasised the imperative of establishing a museum in which to preserve the heritage of the town, and the museum was later to be given her name in her honour. | ||
Colonel Davis spoke from the experience of Bendigo Art Gallery where he was secretary, advising not to expect government funds such as they had received as the grant was only £2,000 to be divided amongst all the arts organisations, but to secure donations of pictures, be prepared to go into debt, and make use of loans from the National Gallery of Victoria. The housing of the gallery was considered and proposals included the cooking classroom of the Technical High School, the Market Building, the Town Hall, and the School of Mines.<ref>{{Cite news|date=23 April 1914|title=Csstlemaine Art Gallery Special Meeting of Subscribers. More Accommodation Necessary. Room at School of Mines Wanted|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article119632090|access-date=2021-09-17}}</ref> | Colonel Davis spoke from the experience of Bendigo Art Gallery where he was secretary, advising not to expect government funds such as they had received as the grant was only £2,000 to be divided amongst all the arts organisations, but to secure donations of pictures, be prepared to go into debt, and make use of loans from the National Gallery of Victoria. The housing of the gallery was considered and proposals included the cooking classroom of the Technical High School, the Market Building, the Town Hall, and the School of Mines.<ref>{{Cite news|date=23 April 1914|title=Csstlemaine Art Gallery Special Meeting of Subscribers. More Accommodation Necessary. Room at School of Mines Wanted|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article119632090|access-date=2021-09-17}}</ref> | ||
===Realisation=== | ===Realisation=== | ||
The gallery became a reality when Bertha Leviny of ]<ref>{{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|title=Buda: historic home and garden of the Leviny family|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|year=1988|location=Castlemaine|oclc=220717467}}</ref> provided use of a room in a shop in Lyttleton St. for one year free of charge, and Bendigo Art Gallery offered a loan of paintings. A loan exhibition of 30 works in the Stock Exchange Room of the Town Hall launched the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum on 24 October 1913. Significant exhibitors who made donations of their work included ] and ]. | The gallery became a reality when Bertha Leviny of ]<ref>{{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|title=Buda: historic home and garden of the Leviny family|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|year=1988|location=Castlemaine|oclc=220717467}}</ref> provided use of a room in a shop in Lyttleton St. for one year free of charge, and Bendigo Art Gallery offered a loan of paintings. A loan exhibition of 30 works in the Stock Exchange Room of the Town Hall launched the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum on 24 October 1913. Significant exhibitors who made donations of their work included ] and ]. | ||
When the gallery moved into the room offered by Leviny in Lyttleton St., more donations were made. Bertha |
When the gallery moved into the room offered by Leviny in Lyttleton St., more donations were made. ] made generous loans of works from her collection to its inaugural exhibition, including paintings by ], ], ], ] and ].<ref>{{Cite news |date=16 September 1913 |title=The Art Gallery |pages=2 |work=Mount Alexander Mail |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article199590719 |access-date=2022-08-30}}</ref> joined by direct loans by artists, and by the National Gallery of Victoria which contributed ]' ''Morning'', ]'s ''Death of the Duke of Buckingham'', Robert Dowling's ''Sheikh and His Son Entering Cairo;''<ref>{{cite web|last=Dowling|first=Robert|title=NGV Collection: A Sheikh and his son entering Cairo on their return from a pilgrimage to Mecca, 1874|url=https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/explore/collection/work/5508/|url-status=live|access-date=17 September 2021|website=National Gallery of Victoria|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170722024430/http://www.ngv.vic.gov.au:80/explore/collection/work/5508/ |archive-date=22 July 2017 }}</ref> ]'s ''Freshwater Bay, Isle of Wight''; ]' ''Canute Listening to the Monks at Ely''; and ]'s ''Summer afternoon, Templestowe''. | ||
The 1914 annual report recorded 30 memberships and a collection of 23 pictures with others on loan and a balance of £75.<ref>Castlemaine Art Gallery minutes, 22 April 1914</ref> Initial opening hours in 1914 were daily from 3 to 5 p.m., and Wednesday and Saturday evenings from 7.30 to 9.30,<ref name=":0" /> changed later to weekdays 10 am |
The 1914 annual report recorded 30 memberships and a collection of 23 pictures with others on loan and a balance of £75.<ref>Castlemaine Art Gallery minutes, 22 April 1914</ref> Initial opening hours in 1914 were daily from 3 to 5 p.m., and Wednesday and Saturday evenings from 7.30 to 9.30,<ref name=":0">{{Cite news|date=16 October 1914|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery. Medici Reproductions. Victoria League Exhibition. Public Appreciation.|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article119625167|access-date=2021-09-17}}</ref> changed later to weekdays 10 am to 12 pm and 2 to 5 pm, and Sundays 2 to 5 pm.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book|last=Baddeley|first=Claire|title=A History of the Castlemaine Art Gallery: Its establishment, growth, character and collections with a brief summary of the history and development of its Historical Museum, PGDip Art History|publisher=Visual Cultures Resource Centre, The University of Melbourne|year=1990}}</ref> | ||
] | ] | ||
The next home of the gallery and museum, by June 1915, was in the rooms above the Castlemaine Post Office which it rented for £1 per annum, and where it remained until 1931 in three well-lit rooms: two small ones, and one measuring {{convert| 9 by 5.5|m}} which served as the main gallery.<ref>Victorian Artists' Society, 1 July 1915</ref> Nevertheless, the Victorian Government rejected their grant application of 1915 because the Gallery's tenure of its premises was not secure.<ref name=":1" /> Electric lighting was added in 1927. | The next home of the gallery and museum, by June 1915, was in the rooms above the Castlemaine Post Office which it rented for £1 per annum, and where it remained until 1931 in three well-lit rooms: two small ones, and one measuring {{convert| 9 by 5.5|m}} which served as the main gallery.<ref>Victorian Artists' Society, 1 July 1915</ref> Nevertheless, the Victorian Government rejected their grant application of 1915 because the Gallery's tenure of its premises was not secure.<ref name=":1" /> Electric lighting was added in 1927. | ||
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==Building== | ==Building== | ||
], ''Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum'', 1931]] | |||
] painting (left)]] | |||
Since 17 November 1983 Castlemaine Art Museum is classified by The ] (revised 3 August 1998), which notes its significance as; | Since 17 November 1983 Castlemaine Art Museum is classified by The ] (revised 3 August 1998), which notes its significance as; | ||
<blockquote>… an exceptional building in its intent and execution and … historically important as one of the earliest examples of the "modern movement" in provincial Victoria.<ref name=":8">{{cite web|title=Art Gallery – Castlemaine Historic Area|url=http://vhd.heritage.vic.gov.au/search/nattrust_result_detail/69230|url-status=live|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Victorian Heritage Database|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212828/http://vhd.heritage.vic.gov.au/search/nattrust_result_detail/69230 |archive-date=20 September 2021 }}</ref></blockquote> | <blockquote>… an exceptional building in its intent and execution and … historically important as one of the earliest examples of the "modern movement" in provincial Victoria.<ref name=":8">{{cite web|title=Art Gallery – Castlemaine Historic Area|url=http://vhd.heritage.vic.gov.au/search/nattrust_result_detail/69230|url-status=live|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Victorian Heritage Database|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212828/http://vhd.heritage.vic.gov.au/search/nattrust_result_detail/69230 |archive-date=20 September 2021 }}</ref></blockquote> | ||
A building fund was set up in 1923 using a donation of £100 by Sir John and Lady Higgins. A site in Templeton Street was purchased for £1200 but later sold to acquire the present block in Lyttleton Street in 1927 for about £300. That year in a visit to Castlemaine the Hon ] enabled a deputation to seek a grant to augment the building fund, to which he offered £1000 on the basis of £1 for every £2 raised locally.<ref>{{cite |
A building fund was set up in 1923 using a donation of £100 by Sir John and Lady Higgins.<ref>{{Citation |last=Griffin |first=Helga M. |title=Higgins, Sir John Michael (1862–1937) |url=https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/higgins-sir-john-michael-6663 |work=Australian Dictionary of Biography |access-date=2023-08-07 |place=Canberra |publisher=National Centre of Biography, Australian National University |language=en}}</ref> A site in Templeton Street was purchased for £1200 but later sold to acquire the present block in Lyttleton Street in 1927 for about £300. That year in a visit to Castlemaine the Hon ] enabled a deputation to seek a grant to augment the building fund, to which he offered £1000 on the basis of £1 for every £2 raised locally.<ref>{{cite news|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery – Erection of New Building. Chief Secretary Promises £1,000|newspaper=]|location=Melbourne|date=15 August 1927|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article3872966|access-date=2021-09-25|via=]}}</ref> Walter J. Whitchell promised £500 for the building fund should the balance be found when the fund held only £760. With the building costed at £3,500, an appeal for funds from the public was launched. Despite the onset of the ], £3,250 was raised in only six weeks from private individuals and companies the ], ] and ],<ref name=":1" /> augmented by the promised State government grant of £1,000, and afterward a further £500. With furnishings, the total cost was £4,132.<ref name=":18">{{Cite news|date=24 December 1948|title=Csstlemaine Art Gallery Lesson in Vision: Enthusiasm and Local Interest Main Factors|page=1|work=Horsham Times}}</ref> | ||
] | |||
Architect ], who trained in the United States presented to a reluctant management committee a "modern and artistic" design for the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (as it was then named) in an American ] style.<ref name=":3">Joe Rollo "Bold extensions add to a loving restoration at Castlemaine," ''The Age,'' 19 November 2000, p. 67</ref> | |||
Architect ], who trained in the United States presented to a reluctant management committee a "modern and artistic" design for the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (as it was then named) in an American ] style.<ref name=":3">Joe Rollo "Bold extensions add to a loving restoration at Castlemaine," ''The Age,'' 19 November 2000, p. 67</ref> The main gallery walls and those of both additional gallery spaces were naturally and indirectly lit from the concealed windows of a ] above suspended ceilings. | |||
] | |||
The main gallery walls and those of both additional gallery spaces were naturally and indirectly lit from the concealed windows of a ] above suspended ceilings. The entry steps were Harcourt granite, the parapet of Malmsbury bluestone, and Barker's Creek slate paved the forecourt, on which rest two planters by ] decorated with panels in a sympathetic style.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Montana|first=Andrew|date=2012|title=Lost and Found: Michael O'Connell at Bendigo Art Gallery|journal=Art Monthly Australasia|volume=251|pages=36–38}}</ref> A "Jazz" style frieze decorates the parapet, front wall and tympanum over the central front door, itself recessed behind ornate wrought-iron grille gates. The symmetrical facade includes a ] in ] featuring a female figure that symbolises Castlemaine surrounded, on the right, by two attendant gold-miners of the past, and artist and sculptor at left. It was designed and carved by H. Orlando Dutton (1894-1962), an English artist working in Melbourne.<ref>{{cite web|title=Art. – Some Exhibition Impressions. – The Australasian (Melbourne, Vic.: 1864–1946) - 18 October 1930|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article140834319|access-date=2021-09-25|website=Trove|language=en}}</ref> | |||
The entry steps are Harcourt granite, the parapet of Malmsbury bluestone, and Barker's Creek slate pave the forecourt, on which rest two cuboid planters decorated with panels showing native animals in a sympathetic style by textile artist and sculptor ] who also provided planters and ornaments to Buda's garden.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Montana|first=Andrew|date=2012|title=Lost and Found: Michael O'Connell at Bendigo Art Gallery|journal=Art Monthly Australasia|volume=251|pages=36–38}}</ref> | |||
A "Jazz" style frieze that combines Egyptian and Central American motifs and fluting decorates the parapet, front wall and tympanum over the central front door, itself recessed behind ornate wrought-iron grille gates. The symmetrical facade includes a ] in ] featuring a female figure that symbolises Castlemaine surrounded, on the right, by two attendant gold-miners of the past, and artist and sculptor at left. It was designed and carved by ] (1894-1962), an English-born artist working in Australia after 1920.<ref>{{cite news|title=Art – Some Exhibition Impressions|newspaper=]|location=Melbourne|date=18 October 1930|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article140834319|access-date=2021-09-25|via=]}}</ref> | |||
] | ] | ||
Builder Frank Pollard<ref>Death notice, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 18 October 1933, p. 11</ref> completed construction between June 1930 and April 1931 for the Gallery and Museum's official opening, free of debt,<ref name=":3" /> It consisted of a main gallery {{convert|19.5 by 7.3|m}} for the display of oil paintings, behind two smaller galleries for prints and water-colours flanking the entry, each approximately {{convert|7 by 6|m}} and with the museum in the basement with storerooms. on the 18th of that month by the Governor of Victoria ] at a ceremony conducted in front of a crowd at the entrance to the Gallery that flowed across the street. It was reported as far away as Canada that<blockquote>In opening the art gallery, in the presence of a very large gathering, Lord Somers said that he had been amazed at seeing a gallery and a collection so fine. He did not suppose that a gallery of those dimensions would be found in a town of that size anywhere else in the British Dominions. Extraordinary enthusiasm must have been shown to make the gallery possible.<ref>''The Gazette'' (Montreal, Quebec, Canada) 14 July 1931, p. 13</ref></blockquote>Visitor numbers during 1933 increased to 10,000.<ref name=":17">{{Cite news|date=1933-11-28|title=Castlemaine.|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article203363224|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | Builder Frank Pollard<ref>Death notice, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 18 October 1933, p. 11</ref> completed construction between June 1930 and April 1931 for the Gallery and Museum's official opening, free of debt,<ref name=":3" /> It consisted of a main gallery {{convert|19.5 by 7.3|m}} for the display of oil paintings, behind two smaller galleries for prints and water-colours flanking the entry, each approximately {{convert|7 by 6|m}} and with the museum in the basement with storerooms. The opening was held on the 18th of that month by the Governor of Victoria ] at a ceremony conducted in front of a crowd at the entrance to the Gallery that flowed across the street. It was reported as far away as Canada that;<blockquote>In opening the art gallery, in the presence of a very large gathering, Lord Somers said that he had been amazed at seeing a gallery and a collection so fine. He did not suppose that a gallery of those dimensions would be found in a town of that size anywhere else in the British Dominions. Extraordinary enthusiasm must have been shown to make the gallery possible.<ref>''The Gazette'' (Montreal, Quebec, Canada) 14 July 1931, p. 13</ref></blockquote>Visitor numbers during 1933 increased to 10,000.<ref name=":17">{{Cite news|date=1933-11-28|title=Castlemaine.|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article203363224|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | ||
P. S. Markham and Professor ], touring Australia on behalf of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, reported that the Gallery was "a credit to all concerned ... After Port Sunlight, where Lord Lever's art collection is housed, this small town has probably a better art gallery than any comparable town in the British Empire."<ref>{{Cite news|date=1934-03-17|title=Art |
P. S. Markham and Professor ], touring Australia on behalf of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, reported that the Gallery was "a credit to all concerned ... After Port Sunlight, where Lord Lever's art collection is housed, this small town has probably a better art gallery than any comparable town in the British Empire."<ref>{{Cite news|date=1934-03-17|title=Art|work=]|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article141401323|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | ||
===Additions=== | ===Additions=== | ||
] | ] | ||
By 1938 space proved insufficient for special exhibitions and to accommodate the program of public galleries lending artworks and circulating exhibitions amongst them. At Castlemaine that necessitated dismounting the existing collection and storing while a temporary exhibition was on display. The burgeoning collection posed storage problems; in 1942 Sir John Higgins' bequest of his pictures, china, glassware and furniture,<ref>"Estate of Sir J. M. Higgins – University Benefits – Gifts to Charities," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 14 December 1937, p. 12</ref> could not be housed and the committee was forced to make plans for extensions to be part-funded by his sister Catherine's bequest of £8,300.<ref>{{Cite news|date=1942-06-11|title=Gifts to Art Gallery and Charities: £25,148 Estate|work=Argus|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article11980750|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> However, it was not spent due to war and post-war impediments to building. | By 1938 space proved insufficient for special exhibitions and to accommodate the program of public galleries lending artworks and circulating exhibitions amongst them. At Castlemaine that necessitated dismounting the existing collection and storing while a temporary exhibition was on display. The burgeoning collection posed storage problems; in 1942 Sir John Higgins' bequest of his pictures, china, glassware and furniture,<ref>"Estate of Sir J. M. Higgins – University Benefits – Gifts to Charities," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 14 December 1937, p. 12</ref> could not be housed and the committee was forced to make plans for extensions to be part-funded by his sister Catherine's bequest of £8,300.<ref>{{Cite news|date=1942-06-11|title=Gifts to Art Gallery and Charities: £25,148 Estate|work=Argus|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article11980750|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> However, it was not spent due to war and post-war impediments to building. | ||
===1960=== | ===1960=== | ||
] | |||
Impetus for a new extension did not gather until 1956, when the possibility of an internal paved courtyard for sculpture was considered. But only in 1959 was a decision reached to complete the project though the cost had risen to £16,000, beyond the means of the Gallery. The ] promised a subsidy on a pound for pound basis and in late 1960 the adjacent Presbyterian Church donated a strip of land for driveway access to the rear of the building, enabling work to commence. The resulting Higgins Gallery was opened on 23 September 1961, by Dr Leonard Cox, Chairman of Trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria, and it included storerooms, work areas, and shelving and sliding racks for storage of artworks.<ref>"Gallery Opened at Castlemaine," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 25 September 1961, p. 6</ref> | Impetus for a new extension did not gather until 1956, when the possibility of an internal paved courtyard for sculpture was considered. But only in 1959 was a decision reached to complete the project though the cost had risen to £16,000, beyond the means of the Gallery. The ] promised a subsidy on a pound for pound basis and in late 1960 the adjacent Presbyterian Church donated a strip of land for driveway access to the rear of the building, enabling work to commence. The resulting Higgins Gallery was opened on 23 September 1961, by Dr Leonard Cox, Chairman of Trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria, and it included storerooms, work areas, and shelving and sliding racks for storage of artworks.<ref>"Gallery Opened at Castlemaine," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 25 September 1961, p. 6</ref> | ||
===1973=== | ===1973=== | ||
]]] | |||
A third space for special and temporary exhibitions was funded by a gift of $12,500 from the Stoneman Foundation after which it is named, and a State Government grant of $26,000 and was opened by Premier ] on 14 September 1973, on the occasion of the Gallery's sixtieth anniversary.<ref name=":3" /> | A third space for special and temporary exhibitions was funded by a gift of $12,500 from the Stoneman Foundation after which it is named, and a State Government grant of $26,000 and was opened by Premier ] on 14 September 1973, on the occasion of the Gallery's sixtieth anniversary.<ref name=":3" /> | ||
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===Forming the collection=== | ===Forming the collection=== | ||
==== Policy ==== | ==== Policy ==== | ||
] | |||
While its building was assertively Modern, attitudes prevailing during the 1930s and 1940s meant that the collection of works within remained conservative. One artist, and one of the wealthiest, associated with the Gallery, A.M.E. Bale was vehement in her distaste for anything 'modern,'<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Rankin|first=Gwenyth|date=2006-11-01|title=Rethinking the Creative Space|url=https://doi.org/10.1080/08164640600926107|journal=Australian Feminist Studies|volume=21|issue=51|pages=379–388|doi=10.1080/08164640600926107|s2cid=146275296|issn=0816-4649}}</ref> echoing the views of then National Gallery of Victoria director ] who, of the 1939 Herald exhibition of contemporary French and English painting sponsored by Sir ], proclaimed, 'They are exceedingly wretched paintings ... putrid meat ... the product of degenerates and perverts ... filth'. A demonstration of these conservative values was the Gallery's 1933 commission to have painter ] travel to England to paint a portrait of the Duke of York (later ]).<ref>{{Cite journal|date=8 February 1933|title=Melbourne Chatter|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-604988669|journal=The Bulletin|location=Sydney, N.S.W.|publisher=John Haynes and J.F. Archibald|volume=54|issue=2765|pages=33}}</ref> | |||
While its building was assertively Modern, attitudes prevailing during the 1930s and 1940s meant that the collection of works within remained conservative. One artist, and one of the wealthiest, associated with the Gallery, A.M.E. Bale was vehement in her distaste for anything 'modern,'<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Rankin|first=Gwenyth|date=2006-11-01|title=Rethinking the Creative Space|journal=Australian Feminist Studies|volume=21|issue=51|pages=379–388|doi=10.1080/08164640600926107|s2cid=146275296|issn=0816-4649}}</ref> echoing the views of then National Gallery of Victoria director ] who, of the 1939 Herald exhibition of contemporary French and English painting sponsored by Sir ], proclaimed, 'They are exceedingly wretched paintings ... putrid meat ... the product of degenerates and perverts ... filth'. A demonstration of these conservative values was the Gallery's 1933 commission to have painter ] travel to England to paint portraits of the Duke and Duchess of York (later ]).<ref>{{Cite journal|date=8 February 1933|title=Melbourne Chatter|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-604988669|journal=The Bulletin|location=Sydney, N.S.W.|publisher=John Haynes and J.F. Archibald|volume=54|issue=2765|pages=33}}</ref> Numbers of 20th-century artists represented were members of the conservative, anti-modernist ] (1937–1946),<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-323428163 |title=Australian Academy of Art First Exhibition, April 8th-29th, Sydney: Catalogue |publisher=Australian Academy of Art |year=1938 |edition=1st |location=Sydney |language=en |access-date=2022-11-02}}</ref> while others joined its rival the ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Helmer |first=June|title=George Bell: the art of influence |date=1985 |publisher=Greenhouse Publications |oclc=707445575}}</ref> | |||
It was not until 1946 with the purchase for 175 guineas (A$13,000 in 2020) of ''Desolation,'' painted the same year by ],<ref>{{cite web|title=Desolation|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/252/desolation|access-date=2021-09-24|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> a dark expressionist work, that this attitude changed. When added to existing holdings of 105 oils, 57 water colours and 76 etchings, drawings and prints,<ref name=":18" /> the purchase was welcomed by ], since 1942 the Murdoch-appointed art critic at the ''Herald'', who considered the cost ... | It was not until 1946 with the purchase for 175 guineas (A$13,000 in 2020) of ''Desolation,'' painted the same year by ],<ref>{{cite web|title=Desolation|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/252/desolation|access-date=2021-09-24|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> a dark expressionist work, that this attitude changed. When added to existing holdings of 105 oils, 57 water colours and 76 etchings, drawings and prints,<ref name=":18" /> the purchase was welcomed by ], since 1942 the Murdoch-appointed art critic at the ''Herald'', who considered the cost ... | ||
<blockquote>... a good price by any Australian standards. The gallery's committee has shown its enterprlse and the courage of its convictions in buying what ranks as a "modern" work. "Desolation," as this large oil is called, is one of the series painted by Russell Drysdale — in some peoples' view the most significant of all contemporary Australian artists — after his visit to the erosion country of New South Wales last year. In rich, dark colors, it is typical and good Drysdale of this period. The foreground is dominated by a huge twisted tree form. A picture of the power and quality of this one obviously presents considerable difficulties in hanging in a small gallery it is destructive of neighboring works which are merely pretty or superficially representational, and one hardly supposes that the placing of it will be entirely satisfactory until there are enough works of kindred character and quality to keep it company Castlemaine is to be congratulated on having obtalned this picture.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Turnbull|first=Clive|date=2 March 1946|title=Fine Example In Country Art Purchase|page=4|work=Herald|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article245391014|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | <blockquote>... a good price by any Australian standards. The gallery's committee has shown its enterprlse and the courage of its convictions in buying what ranks as a "modern" work. "Desolation," as this large oil is called, is one of the series painted by Russell Drysdale — in some peoples' view the most significant of all contemporary Australian artists — after his visit to the erosion country of New South Wales last year. In rich, dark colors, it is typical and good Drysdale of this period. The foreground is dominated by a huge twisted tree form. A picture of the power and quality of this one obviously presents considerable difficulties in hanging in a small gallery it is destructive of neighboring works which are merely pretty or superficially representational, and one hardly supposes that the placing of it will be entirely satisfactory until there are enough works of kindred character and quality to keep it company Castlemaine is to be congratulated on having obtalned this picture.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Turnbull|first=Clive|date=2 March 1946|title=Fine Example In Country Art Purchase|page=4|work=Herald|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article245391014|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Even so, the purchase coincided with that of ]'s semi-allegorical 1932 ''Stepping Stones'',<ref name=":14" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Stepping Stones|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/261/stepping-stones|access-date=2021-09-25|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> and the policy remained still to prefer figurative studies, landscape and portraiture, but to permit semi-abstract works.<ref name=":2" /> | Even so, the purchase coincided with that of ]'s semi-allegorical 1932 ''Stepping Stones'',<ref name=":14">{{Cite news|date=1947-01-11|title=Improving Our Art Galleries|work=Argus|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article22401431|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Stepping Stones|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/261/stepping-stones|access-date=2021-09-25|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref> and the policy remained still to prefer figurative studies, landscape and portraiture, but to permit semi-abstract works.<ref name=":2" /> | ||
==== Funding ==== | ==== Funding ==== | ||
Lack of funds has historically handicapped the Gallery's acquisitions of significant works of art. After WWI it survived on subscribers, door takings and a government grant of £20 per annum,<ref name=":15">{{Cite news|date=1918-08-24|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery|work=Castlemaine Mail|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article121066116|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> and finances were particularly strained when it had found a permanent home during a period coinciding with the Great Depression, when all government funding was withdrawn until 1935. Nevertheless, bequests were forthcoming, such as that for the portrait of Edna Thomas, by ], funded from the will of F. McKillop, editor of the |
Lack of funds has historically handicapped the Gallery's acquisitions of significant works of art. After WWI it survived on subscribers, door takings and a government grant of £20 per annum,<ref name=":15">{{Cite news|date=1918-08-24|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery|work=]|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article121066116|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> and finances were particularly strained when it had found a permanent home during a period coinciding with the Great Depression, when all government funding was withdrawn until 1935. Nevertheless, bequests were forthcoming, such as that for the portrait of Edna Thomas, by ], funded from the will of F. McKillop, editor of the '']''.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=24 August 1932|title=Melbourne Chatter|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-604537642|journal=The Bulletin|location=Sydney|publisher=John Haynes and J.F. Archibald|volume=53|issue=2741|pages=33|issn=0007-4039}}</ref> It relied also on direct donations of works, such as ]'s large canvas ''Ploughing'' and etchings by ] given by Sir ],<ref>''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia),6 May 1924, p. 8</ref><ref name=":13" /> and ]'s gifts of a portrait of her father ] by ]<ref>{{Cite book|last=Hetherington|first=Joh|title=Melba: a biography|date=1995|publisher=Melbourne University Press|isbn=978-0-522-84697-3|location=Carlton|oclc=253873351}}</ref> and Frederick McCubbin's ''Golden Sunlight''.<ref>''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 13 November 1924, p. 7</ref><ref name=":13">"The Castlemaine Art Gallery," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 10 November 1923, p. 30</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Marsh|first=Anne|date=3 January 1996|title=Golden Dreams on Canvas|work=Herald Sun|location=Melbourne, Victoria, Australia|url=https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A105414245/STND?u=wikipedia&sid=ebsco&xid=5b4a1a1d|access-date=10 October 2021}}</ref> Locals contributed to special subscription funds in order to secure desirable works unlikely to be donated, as they did in 1925 for ]'s ''The Last Ray''.<ref>''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 12 September 1925, p. 20</ref> | ||
Other works have been acquired by exchange; for example The ]'s provision of duplicates of two ] lithographs in return for an ] portrait of ], the highly decorated ] ].<ref>{{Citation | author1=Australian War Memorial Council. | title=Annual report of the Council for the year ended 30 June ... together with financial statements and the report of the Auditor-General. | year=1982 | section=12 v. : illustrations ; 25 cm. | issn=0811-0018 | series=Parliamentary paper (Australia. Parliament) | issue=1988/1989, PP no. 424 of 1989 | location=Canberra | publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service | url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-1928160248 | id=nla.obj-1928160248 | access-date=24 September 2021 | via=Trove }}</ref> The Australian Government's Taxation Incentives for the Arts Scheme provided for other donations.<ref>{{Citation | Other works have been acquired by exchange; for example The ]'s provision of duplicates of two ] lithographs in return for an ] portrait of ], the highly decorated ] ].<ref>{{Citation | author1=Australian War Memorial Council. | title=Annual report of the Council for the year ended 30 June ... together with financial statements and the report of the Auditor-General. | year=1982 | section=12 v. : illustrations ; 25 cm. | issn=0811-0018 | series=Parliamentary paper (Australia. Parliament) | issue=1988/1989, PP no. 424 of 1989 | location=Canberra | publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service | url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-1928160248 | id=nla.obj-1928160248 | access-date=24 September 2021 | via=Trove }}</ref> The Australian Government's Taxation Incentives for the Arts Scheme provided for other donations.<ref>{{Citation | ||
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| access-date=24 September 2021 | | access-date=24 September 2021 | ||
| via=Trove | | via=Trove | ||
}}</ref> | |||
}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=1983-01-01|title=Annual progress report, July 1, 1982-June 30, 1983|doi=10.2172/5776531|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/5776531}}</ref> | |||
In 1916 an annual state government grant of a mere £30 ($2,836.00 value in 2020) was " ... to be spent on pictures, and pictures only |
In 1916 an annual state government grant of a mere £30 ($2,836.00 value in 2020) was " ... to be spent on pictures, and pictures only". By 1937 this had been raised to £100, with the municipality contributing only £6.<ref>"Fortunate Castlemaine," ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 17 June 1937, p. 10</ref> | ||
In 1980, former Director Perry wrote in complaint to ] of the ] objecting to one of its purchases at auction when both galleries were the only bidders beyond $11,000 for ]'s 1925 ''Still Life'',<ref>{{cite web|title=Margaret Preston, Still life, 1925. Accession Number: 80.1090|url=https://searchthecollection.nga.gov.au/object?uniqueId=71272|url-status=live|access-date=2021-09-20|website=National Gallery of Australia|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212938/https://searchthecollection.nga.gov.au/object?uniqueId=71272 |archive-date=20 September 2021 }}</ref> which went to Canberra for a record price of $17,000. Perry felt the richer rational gallery should have withdrawn to let the work through to a less prosperous smaller institution.<ref>Mary Eagle, "Paying the price of capitalism," ''The Age'', 26 June 1980, p. 10</ref> | In 1980, former Director Perry wrote in complaint to ] of the ] objecting to one of its purchases at auction when both galleries were the only bidders beyond $11,000 for ]'s 1925 ''Still Life'',<ref>{{cite web|title=Margaret Preston, Still life, 1925. Accession Number: 80.1090|url=https://searchthecollection.nga.gov.au/object?uniqueId=71272|url-status=live|access-date=2021-09-20|website=National Gallery of Australia|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212938/https://searchthecollection.nga.gov.au/object?uniqueId=71272 |archive-date=20 September 2021 }}</ref> which went to Canberra for a record price of $17,000. Perry felt the richer rational gallery should have withdrawn to let the work through to a less prosperous smaller institution.<ref>Mary Eagle, "Paying the price of capitalism," ''The Age'', 26 June 1980, p. 10</ref> | ||
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Government funding tended to be piecemeal; deputations to MPs during the war years and another during the Depression received minor dispensation,<ref>{{Cite news|date=1944-06-22|title=Art Galleries|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article206783460|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref><ref name=":17" /> $319 from the ] in 1985 was given for "purchase of crafts for public display and permanent collection",<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Australia Council|date=1985|title=Australia Council Annual Report 1984-85|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-2498401537|journal=Australia Council Annual Report|publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service|pages=157|issn=0725-7643}}</ref> and in 1987 Minister for the Arts, ], announced minor capital grants including $60,000 approved to enable the Castlemaine Art Gallery to extend its storage space.<ref>The Age (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 14 January 1987, p. 12</ref> The Gallery and Museum received $2,325 in 1988,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Australia Council|date=1988|title=Australia Council Annual Report 1987-88|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-2021895675|journal=Australia Council Annual Report|publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service|pages=83|issn=0725-7643}}</ref> and then two years later a further $6,000, from the ] Visual Arts/Crafts Board for collections development,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Australia Council|date=1990|title=Annual Report 89/90|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-1186380554|journal=Australia Council Annual Report|publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service|pages=83|issn=0725-7643}}</ref> and in 1997, part of $2.5m through the state government's Victoria Organisations Funding program, shared with seven other arts institutions.<ref>"Raising the profile ," The Age (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 16 July 1997, p. 41</ref> | Government funding tended to be piecemeal; deputations to MPs during the war years and another during the Depression received minor dispensation,<ref>{{Cite news|date=1944-06-22|title=Art Galleries|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article206783460|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref><ref name=":17" /> $319 from the ] in 1985 was given for "purchase of crafts for public display and permanent collection",<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Australia Council|date=1985|title=Australia Council Annual Report 1984-85|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-2498401537|journal=Australia Council Annual Report|publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service|pages=157|issn=0725-7643}}</ref> and in 1987 Minister for the Arts, ], announced minor capital grants including $60,000 approved to enable the Castlemaine Art Gallery to extend its storage space.<ref>The Age (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 14 January 1987, p. 12</ref> The Gallery and Museum received $2,325 in 1988,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Australia Council|date=1988|title=Australia Council Annual Report 1987-88|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-2021895675|journal=Australia Council Annual Report|publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service|pages=83|issn=0725-7643}}</ref> and then two years later a further $6,000, from the ] Visual Arts/Crafts Board for collections development,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Australia Council|date=1990|title=Annual Report 89/90|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-1186380554|journal=Australia Council Annual Report|publisher=Australian Govt. Pub. Service|pages=83|issn=0725-7643}}</ref> and in 1997, part of $2.5m through the state government's Victoria Organisations Funding program, shared with seven other arts institutions.<ref>"Raising the profile ," The Age (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 16 July 1997, p. 41</ref> | ||
== |
==Collection== | ||
The Collections may be searched online.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://collection.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/explore | title=Explore the Collection - Castlemaine Art Museum }}</ref> | |||
===Museum collection=== | |||
The museum, housed in the basement, presents the history of Castlemaine and its region in objects, maps, models, diaoramas, photographs and prints, including a large group of hand-coloured ] from watercolours by ]; pithy vignettes of life on the goldfields. Historical glassware and ceramics, much brought to Castlemaine by its European immigrants, extends from the ]. Local fauna is represented by taxidermy specimens. Items of Victorian-era fashion are also displayed, and locally-produced arts and crafts is represented in early-to-mid 20th-century enamelware and silver.<ref name=":2" /> | |||
===Gallery=== | |||
The gallery has always specialised in Australian art<ref name=":15" /><ref name=":3" /><ref>'Rambler', "Treasure in Castlemaine: Unique Provincial Gallery," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 27 April 1940, p. 8</ref> as the gallery's constitution stipulated in 1913, emphasising "... the cultivation of a taste for the Fine Arts by the collection and exhibition of works of especially Australian Artists..."<ref>The Rules and Constitution of the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 1913</ref> Accordingly, at its opening in 1931 it held 155 pictures, 26 added only the year prior,<ref>''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 22 October 1930, p. 14</ref> and the total predominantly Australian,<ref>A. C. "The Castlemaine Art Galleries," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 18 April 1931, p. 13</ref> and now the collection spans the periods Colonial, Impressionist, Early Twentieth Century Modernism, Mid-Century Modern, Postmodernism, and Contemporary in varieties of media. | |||
Earlier artists include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ]. | |||
Modernists include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
More contemporary artists include ], ], ], ], ], Fiona Orr, ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
===Indigenous art=== | |||
] art is progressively being transferred from the Museum to the walls and display cases of the Gallery,<ref name=":4">{{cite web|title=From the Land|url=https://www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/exhibitions/from-the-land|access-date=2021-09-18|website=www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{cite web|title=James Henry: 18 Families|url=https://www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/exhibitions/james-henry-18-families|access-date=2021-09-18|website=www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> and its collection is being actively expanded. In 2019 Tiriki Onus, of ] and ] heritage and ] Associate Dean Indigenous Development and Head of the ], became the premier First Nations appointment to the CAM Board.<ref>{{cite web|last=Dennis|first=Lisa|date=2020-08-14|title=CAM welcomes First Nations board member|url=https://castlemainemail.com.au/latest-news/featured/2020/08/14/cam-welcomes-first-nations-board-member/|access-date=2021-09-20|website=]}}</ref> The Art Museum's Strategic Plan released in 2019 and current until 2023 declares;<blockquote>During the life of this Plan, CAM will consult with ] towards increasing its engagement with and relevance for Traditional Owners and other Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists and audiences.<ref name=":6">{{cite web|last1=Cass|first1=Naomi|last2=Mutton|first2=Craig|date=2019|title=Connecting People Through Art, History, Place and Ideas: Strategic Plan for Castlemaine Art Museum 2019–2023|url=https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/media/pages/about/1514808448-1627466252/cam-strategic-plan.pdf|url-status=live|website=Castlemaine Art Museum|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918073852/https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/media/pages/about/1514808448-1627466252/cam-strategic-plan.pdf |archive-date=18 September 2021 }}</ref> </blockquote> | |||
===Portraits of Australian artists=== | |||
] (1920s) ] in his 70s, in Italian medieval costume with sword. Collection: Castlemaine Art Museum]] | |||
Portraits of Australian artists by Australian photographers ], ], Richard Beck, ], ], ], Sonia Payes, ], ], ], ] and ] and others form another specialist concentration in the collection initiated by previous Director Peter Perry.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The reflecting eye: portraits of Australian visual artists|date=1996|publisher=National Library of Australia, National Portrait Gallery|author=Helen Ennis|isbn=0-642-10673-8|location=|oclc=38398455}}</ref> | |||
=== Buda historic home === | |||
] | |||
Separate from the Art Museum, but under the guardianship of the trustees of the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (CAGHM), ] holds on display domestic items, decorative art, furnishings, artworks, books and personal effects of the Leviny family from the 1850s up until 1981, after Hilda Leviny's death, when the home and garden were opened to the public. Clothing and accessories, documents, correspondence, diaries and photographs preserve the family's history and the eras in which they lived. | |||
Hungarian Ernest Leviny, a practising gold- and silversmith, arrived on the Castlemaine goldfields in 1853 and the collection of his work is notable. Arts and Crafts style articles of embroidery, woodcarving and metalwork on display throughout the house and garden were produced by the Leviny daughters. | |||
Also in the Buda collection are original artworks by mostly early twentieth century Australian artists including ], ], ], ], Ursula Ridley Walker and Alice Newell, studio pottery from the 1920s and 1930s by ], Philippa James and John Campbell, and hand-printed textiles of Melbourne artists ], ] and ]. | |||
=== Gallery of selected works === | |||
<gallery mode="packed" heights="175"> | |||
File:Tom Roberts, 1887 - Reconciliation.jpg|], ''Reconciliation'', 1887 | |||
File:John Ford Paterson Fernshaw.jpg|], ''Fernshaw'', 1896 | |||
File:John Longstaff Portrait of Edna Thomas.jpg|], ''Portrait of Edna Thomas'', c. 1900 | |||
File:E Philips Fox Bathing Hour.jpg|], ''Bathing Hour'', 1909 | |||
File:Frederick McCubbin Golden Sunlight.jpg|], ''Golden Sunlight'', c. 1914 | |||
File:Clarice Beckett Wet Evening.jpg|], ''Wet Evening'', 1927 | |||
</gallery> | |||
===Management=== | |||
Volunteers administered and managed the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum for the first six decades of operations, opening Monday-Sunday 1-5pm and 2.30-5pm Sunday,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Advertisement|date=1 March 1965|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-751824007|journal=Walkabout|publisher=Australian National Travel Association|volume=31|issue=3|pages=36}}</ref> but for a period having to close for lack of a caretaker.<ref>"Castlemaine Art Gallery Closed," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 18 May 1949, p. 2</ref> In 1962, the requirements of the Regional Galleries Association of Victoria necessitated the appointment of professional staff.<ref name=":9" /> This transition to being a managed cultural organisation was handled largely by Beth Sinclair (1919–2014) who, when she moved to Castlemaine in 1953, was introduced to the Gallery by her husband Alec who was on its committee. As reported in 1948 by Castlemaine Technical School lecturer in Art Colin Hunt to an audience at Horsham interested in repeating the success of Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum;<blockquote>Women have been active in their support of the movement from its inception. They have contributed substantially to its success during the formative period, and are still active in committee. One holds the office of vice president and another leads the selection committee.<ref name=":18" /></blockquote>Using her background in secretarial work she volunteered to catalogue works and organize the office systems. In 1963 Castlemaine hosted a meeting of the Victorian Public Galleries Association,<ref>"Regional Art Galleries," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 23 April 1963, p. 6</ref> and in May, Sinclair was able to announce that Castlemaine had secured its rating as one of four 'A' class regional galleries and would retain its government funding.<ref>"Art Gallery 'Will Keep Position'," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 16 May 1963, p. 6</ref> | Volunteers administered and managed the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum for the first six decades of operations, opening Monday-Sunday 1-5pm and 2.30-5pm Sunday,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Advertisement|date=1 March 1965|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-751824007|journal=Walkabout|publisher=Australian National Travel Association|volume=31|issue=3|pages=36}}</ref> but for a period having to close for lack of a caretaker.<ref>"Castlemaine Art Gallery Closed," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 18 May 1949, p. 2</ref> In 1962, the requirements of the Regional Galleries Association of Victoria necessitated the appointment of professional staff.<ref name=":9" /> This transition to being a managed cultural organisation was handled largely by Beth Sinclair (1919–2014) who, when she moved to Castlemaine in 1953, was introduced to the Gallery by her husband Alec who was on its committee. As reported in 1948 by Castlemaine Technical School lecturer in Art Colin Hunt to an audience at Horsham interested in repeating the success of Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum;<blockquote>Women have been active in their support of the movement from its inception. They have contributed substantially to its success during the formative period, and are still active in committee. One holds the office of vice president and another leads the selection committee.<ref name=":18" /></blockquote>Using her background in secretarial work she volunteered to catalogue works and organize the office systems. In 1963 Castlemaine hosted a meeting of the Victorian Public Galleries Association,<ref>"Regional Art Galleries," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 23 April 1963, p. 6</ref> and in May, Sinclair was able to announce that Castlemaine had secured its rating as one of four 'A' class regional galleries and would retain its government funding.<ref>"Art Gallery 'Will Keep Position'," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 16 May 1963, p. 6</ref> | ||
] | |||
Sinclair was appointed the Gallery's first Director in 1969, and was the first woman to be a public gallery director in Australia.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27628284|title=Seventy-five years 1913-1988, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1989|publisher=The Gallery|others=Beth Sinclair, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-9598066-4-4|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=27628284}}</ref> She was rigorous in her management of the collection and the daily running of the Gallery, and established a network of individuals and organisations all over Australia for purchases and loans of artworks and a regular schedule of exhibitions. A significant acquisition of contemporary art, made in her first year as Director, was ]' ''Silver Landscape,'' painted 1968<ref>{{cite web|title=Silver Landscape|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/425/silver-landscape|access-date=2021-09-21|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Sinclair|first=Beth|date=1970|editor-last=Hoff|editor-first=Ursula|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery: Fred Williams|url=https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Art-Bulletin-of-Victoria-12-1970-71.pdf|journal=Art Bulletin of Victoria, Incorporating the Annual Bulletin of the National Gallery of Victoria|publisher=Council of Trustees of the National Gallery Of Victoria, Victorian Arts Centre|volume=13|pages=27}}</ref> In 2000, after her retirement in 1975 and in celebration of the extensive renovations Sinclair donated her personal collection of Australian art, including watercolour landscapes by ], works by Rick Amor, E. W. Syme and other painters, which was presented in the inaugural exhibition ''The Beth Sinclair Donation of Australian Art'' in the new temporary exhibitions gallery.<ref name=":10" /> | |||
Sinclair was appointed the Gallery's first Director in 1969, and was the first woman to be a public gallery director in Australia.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter|title=Seventy-five years 1913-1988, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1989|publisher=The Gallery|others=Beth Sinclair, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-9598066-4-4|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=27628284}}</ref> She was rigorous in her management of the collection and the daily running of the Gallery, and established a network of individuals and organisations all over Australia for purchases and loans of artworks and a regular schedule of exhibitions. A significant acquisition of contemporary art, made in her first year as Director, was ]' ''Silver Landscape,'' painted 1968<ref>{{cite web|title=Silver Landscape|url=https://collection.castlemainegallery.com/objects/425/silver-landscape|access-date=2021-09-21|website=Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Sinclair|first=Beth|date=1970|editor-last=Hoff|editor-first=Ursula|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery: Fred Williams|url=https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Art-Bulletin-of-Victoria-12-1970-71.pdf|journal=Art Bulletin of Victoria, Incorporating the Annual Bulletin of the National Gallery of Victoria|publisher=Council of Trustees of the National Gallery Of Victoria, Victorian Arts Centre|volume=13|pages=27}}</ref> In 2000, after her retirement in 1975 and in celebration of the extensive renovations Sinclair donated her personal collection of Australian art, including watercolour landscapes by ], works by Rick Amor, E. W. Syme and other painters, which was presented in the inaugural exhibition ''The Beth Sinclair Donation of Australian Art'' in the new temporary exhibitions gallery.<ref name=":10">Peter Timms, "Status quo for Castlemaine: The Beth Sinclair Donation of Australian Art," ''The Age'' 11 October 2000, p. 29</ref> The north-east corner gallery was named in her honour. | |||
When Sinclair retired, and on her recommendation, after he and his twin brother John, who had been collecting since their teens, held a 1974 exhibition of their collection of Australian paintings,<ref>Rebecca Lancashire, "Painting: Meldrum's art and life: Twins peak with book tribute," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) | When Sinclair retired, and on her recommendation, after he and his twin brother John, who had been collecting since their teens, held a 1974 exhibition of their collection of Australian paintings,<ref>Rebecca Lancashire, "Painting: Meldrum's art and life: Twins peak with book tribute," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) | ||
14 January 1997, p. 16</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter W. |
14 January 1997, p. 16</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter W.|title=Max Meldrum & associates: their art, lives and influences|date=1996|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=John R. Perry, Max Meldrum|isbn=0-9598066-7-9|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=38415991}}</ref> the committee appointed Peter Perry as the next Director, at 23 years old the youngest in Australia,<ref>{{cite web|title=A Gallery of Longevity|url=https://wp.secretsmagazine.com.au/article/a-gallery-of-longevity/|access-date=2021-09-26|website=Secrets Magazine}}</ref> into the role he was to serve for thirty-eight years before his retirement in 2014.<ref name=":1" /><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Adams|first1=E.|last2=Booth|first2=J|last3=Cribb|first3=J.|last4=Jones|first4=E.|last5=Vardy|first5=S.|last6=Foley|first6=D.|date=November 2013|title=ADAMS, E, BOOTH, J, CRIBB, G, JONES, E, VARDY, S & FOLEY, D 2013, 'Sector moves|journal=Art Monthly Australasia|volume=265|pages=62}}</ref> He was assisted by the Gallery's first curator Lauretta Zilles from 1986 to 1995<ref>{{cite web|title=Reflections on the Castlemaine Art Museum: Zilles on Buda and CAM|url=https://us18.campaign-archive.com/?u=522abcffa55894025f026a224&id=9cd4c38693|access-date=2021-09-21|website=us18.campaign-archive.com}}</ref> and Kirsten McKay, 1995 to 2014.<ref name=":11">Robert Nelson, "Imprints of talent: a modern look," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 24 January 1996, p. 14</ref> In interview, Perry acknowledged the importance of women in the history of the gallery and its collection; | ||
<blockquote>"The gallery was founded by women in 1913. They were women artists here or wives of local dignitaries and their war cry was 'No art, no culture; no culture, no nation'. We also had the first woman director appointed to an Australian public gallery: Beth Sinclair. It's not that we've pushed women artists. We just have that tradition and it's always been there. I've tended since my earliest days in the '70s to support research of women artists."<ref>{{Cite news|last=Bragge|first=Anita|date=8 January 1998|title=The Specialist : Anita Bragge hunts out a dedicated regional collector|page=45|work=Herald Sun|location=Melbourne, Victoria, Australia}}</ref></blockquote> | <blockquote>"The gallery was founded by women in 1913. They were women artists here or wives of local dignitaries and their war cry was 'No art, no culture; no culture, no nation'. We also had the first woman director appointed to an Australian public gallery: Beth Sinclair. It's not that we've pushed women artists. We just have that tradition and it's always been there. I've tended since my earliest days in the '70s to support research of women artists."<ref>{{Cite news|last=Bragge|first=Anita|date=8 January 1998|title=The Specialist : Anita Bragge hunts out a dedicated regional collector|page=45|work=Herald Sun|location=Melbourne, Victoria, Australia}}</ref></blockquote> | ||
Perry also introduced musical recitals in the Gallery, and talks with presenters including ], then director of the National Gallery of Australia;<ref>Michael Shmith, "Promptings |
Perry also introduced musical recitals in the Gallery, and talks with presenters including ], then director of the National Gallery of Australia;<ref>], "Promptings", '']'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 5 November 1988, p. 173</ref> and Dr. ], then Director, Ministry of the Arts, for a champagne brunch talk on appreciation and enjoyment of art.<ref>"Weekender: Festival Program," ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) | ||
27 October 1978, p. 51</ref> In 2022 Perry was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for his service in the museums and galleries field.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Dennis |first=Lisa |date=2022-02-01 |title=Gallery stalwart honoured with OAM |url=https://castlemainemail.com.au/latest-news/featured/2022/02/01/gallery-stalwart-honoured-with-oam/ |access-date=2022-05-27 |website=Castlemaine Mail |
27 October 1978, p. 51</ref> In 2022 Perry was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for his service in the museums and galleries field.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Dennis |first=Lisa |date=2022-02-01 |title=Gallery stalwart honoured with OAM |url=https://castlemainemail.com.au/latest-news/featured/2022/02/01/gallery-stalwart-honoured-with-oam/ |access-date=2022-05-27 |website=]}}</ref> | ||
===List of |
===List of directors=== | ||
* 1969 to 1975: Beth Sinclair | * 1969 to 1975: Beth Sinclair | ||
* 1975 to 2014: Peter Perry OAM | * 1975 to 2014: Peter Perry OAM | ||
* 2014 to 2017 Jennifer Kalionis<ref>{{cite web|last=Barlow|first=Genevieve|date=2014-10-14|title=Castlemaine into the picture|url=https://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/country-living/castlemaine-art-gallerys-new-director-wants-art-to-shine/news-story/d398e23cc39ce8f24093906d45c96e1c |
* 2014 to 2017 Jennifer Kalionis<ref>{{cite web|last=Barlow|first=Genevieve|date=2014-10-14|title=Castlemaine into the picture|url=https://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/country-living/castlemaine-art-gallerys-new-director-wants-art-to-shine/news-story/d398e23cc39ce8f24093906d45c96e1c|access-date=2021-09-18|website=]}}</ref> | ||
* 2019: Naomi Cass (Director, CAM Renewal) | * 2019: Naomi Cass (Director, CAM Renewal) | ||
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In 2015, gallery members, for the purpose of accountability and compliance voted for the gallery to become incorporated. However a consequence was that income from the SR Stoneman Foundation a major annual philanthropic endowment, which had been worth $30,000 per year over 13 years, was lost due to its condition that the Gallery remain unincorporated.<ref>{{cite web|last=Webb|first=Carolyn|date=2017-08-01|title=Shock and anger at closure of Castlemaine gallery|url=https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/shock-and-anger-at-closure-of-castlemaine-gallery-20170730-gxlpyd.html|access-date=2021-09-23|website=The Age|language=en}}</ref> Thus, due to lack of funds, the Art Museum faced a forced closure on 11 August 2017.<ref>{{cite web|date=2017-07-27|title=Castlemaine Art Museum closes to confront crisis|url=https://www.artshub.com.au/2017/07/27/castlemaine-art-museum-closes-to-confront-crisis-254151/|access-date=2021-09-18|website=ArtsHub Australia|language=en-AU}}</ref> It was saved when a town hall meeting in Castlemaine on 2 August announced a $50,000 gift from the Macfarlane Fund, launched concomitantly in honour of the late businessman Don Macfarlane, for whom the gallery was his favourite, and given on the condition of greater support from Mount Alexander council.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Kearney|first=Mark|date=6 August 2017|title=White knight's donation a tribute to late father|work=Bendigo Advertiser|location=Bendigo, Australia}}</ref> Combined with a $250,000 donation by an anonymous couple, by fundraising efforts amongst local supporters, and a government grant,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-08-03/victoria-anonymous-donors-save-castlemaine-gallery/8770270|title=Anonymous couple saves Castlemaine Art Museum from closure|website=] |date=3 August 2017}}</ref> the money meant the gallery would remain open to the public giving time for sustainable revenue to be sourced, though difficulties, as identified by The Institute of Community Directors Australia, remained.<ref>{{cite web|last=Directors|first=Institute of Community|title=The art of survival for regional gallery|url=https://communitydirectors.com.au/articles/the-art-of-survival-for-regional-gallery|access-date=2021-09-24|website=Institute of Community Directors Australia (ICDA)|language=en}}</ref> | In 2015, gallery members, for the purpose of accountability and compliance voted for the gallery to become incorporated. However a consequence was that income from the SR Stoneman Foundation a major annual philanthropic endowment, which had been worth $30,000 per year over 13 years, was lost due to its condition that the Gallery remain unincorporated.<ref>{{cite web|last=Webb|first=Carolyn|date=2017-08-01|title=Shock and anger at closure of Castlemaine gallery|url=https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/shock-and-anger-at-closure-of-castlemaine-gallery-20170730-gxlpyd.html|access-date=2021-09-23|website=The Age|language=en}}</ref> Thus, due to lack of funds, the Art Museum faced a forced closure on 11 August 2017.<ref>{{cite web|date=2017-07-27|title=Castlemaine Art Museum closes to confront crisis|url=https://www.artshub.com.au/2017/07/27/castlemaine-art-museum-closes-to-confront-crisis-254151/|access-date=2021-09-18|website=ArtsHub Australia|language=en-AU}}</ref> It was saved when a town hall meeting in Castlemaine on 2 August announced a $50,000 gift from the Macfarlane Fund, launched concomitantly in honour of the late businessman Don Macfarlane, for whom the gallery was his favourite, and given on the condition of greater support from Mount Alexander council.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Kearney|first=Mark|date=6 August 2017|title=White knight's donation a tribute to late father|work=Bendigo Advertiser|location=Bendigo, Australia}}</ref> Combined with a $250,000 donation by an anonymous couple, by fundraising efforts amongst local supporters, and a government grant,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-08-03/victoria-anonymous-donors-save-castlemaine-gallery/8770270|title=Anonymous couple saves Castlemaine Art Museum from closure|website=] |date=3 August 2017}}</ref> the money meant the gallery would remain open to the public giving time for sustainable revenue to be sourced, though difficulties, as identified by The Institute of Community Directors Australia, remained.<ref>{{cite web|last=Directors|first=Institute of Community|title=The art of survival for regional gallery|url=https://communitydirectors.com.au/articles/the-art-of-survival-for-regional-gallery|access-date=2021-09-24|website=Institute of Community Directors Australia (ICDA)|language=en}}</ref> | ||
Naomi Cass, previously director of the ], was appointed Director, CAM Renewal, in January 2019, reopened the gallery, free of charge to visitors at the request of the benefactors and, after some refurbishment in November,<ref>{{Cite news|date=8 November 2019|title=Castlemaine Art Museum reopens its doors|work=Midland Express|url=https://midlandexpress.com.au/latest-news/featured/2020/06/16/castlemaine-art-museum-to-reopen/|access-date=20 September 2021}}</ref> in December launched the ''Strategic Plan for Castlemaine Art Museum |
Naomi Cass, previously director of the ], was appointed Director, CAM Renewal, in January 2019, and reopened the gallery, free of charge to visitors at the request of the benefactors and, after some refurbishment in November,<ref>{{Cite news|date=8 November 2019|title=Castlemaine Art Museum reopens its doors|work=Midland Express|url=https://midlandexpress.com.au/latest-news/featured/2020/06/16/castlemaine-art-museum-to-reopen/|access-date=20 September 2021}}</ref> in December launched the ''Strategic Plan for Castlemaine Art Museum 2019–2023 – connecting people through Art, History and Ideas''<ref name=":6" /> In the 2019-20 financial year the budget returned to surplus.<ref name=":7">{{cite web|title=Castlemaine Art Museum Annual Report 2019–2020|url=https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/media/pages/about/1527643078-1620959551/cam_annualreport_2020.pdf|url-status=live|website=Castlemaine Art Museum|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212854/https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/media/pages/about/1527643078-1620959551/cam_annualreport_2020.pdf |archive-date=20 September 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Vallely|first=William|date=2018-11-14|title=Cash surplus: Castlemaine Art Museum back in the black|url=https://www.bendigoadvertiser.com.au/story/5758388/cash-surplus-castlemaine-art-museum-back-in-the-black/|access-date=2021-09-23|website=Bendigo Advertiser|language=en-AU}}</ref> | ||
==Outreach== | ==Outreach== | ||
] | |||
In 2019, CAM commenced a pilot inclusivity program to engage with three communities impeded in attending and enjoying CAM; First Nations young people, people with disability, and young people at risk. Participants were recruited through Nalderun, the Mount Alexander Shire Disability Advocacy Group, the local hospital and local school teachers. Ideas were received concerning solutions to increasing accessibility and relevance.<ref name=":7" /> | In 2019, CAM commenced a pilot inclusivity program to engage with three communities impeded in attending and enjoying CAM; First Nations young people, people with disability, and young people at risk. Participants were recruited through Nalderun, the Mount Alexander Shire Disability Advocacy Group, the local hospital and local school teachers. Ideas were received concerning solutions to increasing accessibility and relevance.<ref name=":7" /> | ||
In 2021 the Art Museum updated its website, including online access and searching of its collection. ''Reflections'', a series of commentaries on works from members of the gallery's community is included.<ref>{{cite web|title=Home|url=https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/|access-date=2021-09-29|website=castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> | In 2021 the Art Museum updated its website, including online access and searching of its collection. ''Reflections'', a series of commentaries on works from members of the gallery's community is included.<ref>{{cite web|title=Home|url=https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/|access-date=2021-09-29|website=castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> | ||
From 2020 the Museum held 'Orbit;' shows by significant local artists in its Benefactor's gallery, moving later to the Sinclair gallery, and in 2022 commenced a series of public 'Terrace Projections;' digital video projected onto its facade during night-time hours.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Mail |first=Castlemaine |date=2023-02-02 |title=New exhibitions to be launched at CAM |url=https://castlemainemail.com.au/entertainment/2023/02/03/new-exhibitions-to-be-launched-at-cam/ |access-date=2023-03-02 |website=]}}</ref> | |||
=== Awards and Prizes === | |||
As early as 1928 Castlemaine Art Gallery offered a generous acquisitive prize of 40 guineas (A$3,484.70 value in 2020) for "the best oil or watercolour painting submitted, the works to be judged by Sir ]."<ref name=":16">{{Cite news|date=1928-08-09|title=Art Notes|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article205484253|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> The biennial $3,000 James Farrell Self Portrait Award was founded in 1991, but is longer being held.<ref>{{cite web|title=YARP - James Farrell Self Portrait Award|url=http://artprizedatabase.com.au/prize_details.php?rID=257|access-date=2021-09-26|website=artprizedatabase.com.au}}</ref> The biannual Clunes Ceramic Award, jointly offered by the Art Gallery of Ballarat and the Castlemaine Art Museum with a total prize money of $5000 was last opened in 2019 and was postponed until 2022.<ref>{{cite web|title=Clunes Ceramic Award – A biannual acquisitive prize|url=https://www.clunesceramicaward.com.au/|access-date=2021-09-25|language=en}}</ref> In 2021Castlemaine Art Museum continued to encourage artists with the following awards: | |||
=== Awards and prizes === | |||
As early as 1928 Castlemaine Art Gallery offered a generous acquisitive prize of 40 guineas (A$3,484.70 value in 2020) for "the best oil or watercolour painting submitted, the works to be judged by Sir ]".<ref name=":16">{{Cite news|date=1928-08-09|title=Art Notes|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article205484253|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> The biennial $3,000 James Farrell Self Portrait Award was founded in 1991, but is longer being held.<ref>{{cite web|title=YARP – James Farrell Self Portrait Award|url=http://artprizedatabase.com.au/prize_details.php?rID=257|access-date=2021-09-26|website=artprizedatabase.com.au}}</ref> The biannual Clunes Ceramic Award, jointly offered by the Art Gallery of Ballarat and the Castlemaine Art Museum with a total prize money of $5000 was last opened in 2019 and was then postponed.<ref>{{cite web|title=Clunes Ceramic Award – A biannual acquisitive prize|url=https://www.clunesceramicaward.com.au/|access-date=2021-09-25|language=en}}</ref> In 2021Castlemaine Art Museum continued to encourage artists with the following awards: | |||
==== Experimental Print Prize ==== | ==== Experimental Print Prize ==== | ||
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====Len Fox Painting Award==== | ====Len Fox Painting Award==== | ||
The Len Fox Painting Award is the Castlemaine Art Museum $50,000 biennial acquisitive award and among the richest in the nation. It is awarded to a living Australian artist to commemorate the life and work of ], the uncle of Len Fox, partner of CAM benefactor Mona Fox.<ref>{{cite web|last=Dennis|first=Lisa|date=2021-08-12|title=Len Fox Art Prize now open|url=https://castlemainemail.com.au/entertainment/2021/08/13/len-fox-art-prize-now-open/|access-date=2021-09-20|website=Castlemaine Mail |
The Len Fox Painting Award is the Castlemaine Art Museum's $50,000 biennial acquisitive award and among the richest in the nation. It is awarded to a living Australian artist to commemorate the life and work of ], the uncle of Len Fox, partner of CAM benefactor Mona Fox.<ref>{{cite web|last=Dennis|first=Lisa|date=2021-08-12|title=Len Fox Art Prize now open|url=https://castlemainemail.com.au/entertainment/2021/08/13/len-fox-art-prize-now-open/|access-date=2021-09-20|website=]}}</ref> | ||
===Associations=== | ===Associations=== | ||
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==Exhibitions== | ==Exhibitions== | ||
{{Main|List of exhibitions at the Castlemaine Art Museum}} | |||
] | ] | ||
{{Table TOC|1913–1920|1921–1960|1961–1970|1971–1980|1981–1990|1991–2000|2001–2010|2011–2020|2021 onwards}} | |||
===1913–1920=== | |||
* 1913, 22–25 October: Loan Exhibition, Castlemaine Town Hall | |||
* 1914, October: Fifty Medici Society coloured photographic reproductions of ]s 14th–19th century, on loan from Bendigo Art Gallery<ref name=":0">{{Cite news|date=16 October 1914|title=Castlemaine Art Gallery. Medici Reproductions. Victoria League Exhibition. Public Appreciation.|pages=2|work=Mount Alexander Mail (Vic.: 1854–1917)|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article119625167|access-date=2021-09-17}}</ref> | |||
* 1915, from 2 November: Watercolours by ] and Miss M. Townsend<ref>{{Cite news|date=1915-11-08|title=Castlemains Art Gallery|work=Mount Alexander Mail|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article119646372|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | |||
===1921–1960=== | |||
* 1926, June: 21 recent acquisitions and 25 works on loan<ref>{{Cite news|date=1926-06-16|title=Castlemaine.|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article201633697|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | |||
*1928, 22 October: Art Prize:<ref name=":16" /> 51 entries in watercolour or oil, winner William Rowell<ref>{{Cite news|date=1928-10-24|title=Castlemaine.|work=Age|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article204127945|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | |||
*1933, 3 December: Unveiling of W. B. Mclnnes portrait of the Duke of York officiated by General Sir ]<ref name=":17" /> | |||
* 1935, June: Exhibition of Prints<ref>{{cite web|title=. at Castlemaine Art Gallery And Historical Museum (1935) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/311/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref> | |||
* 1946, June: Contemporary Sydney Painters | |||
* 1947, January: British contemporary paintings, loan from National Gallery of Victoria<ref name=":14">{{Cite news|date=1947-01-11|title=Improving Our Art Galleries|work=Argus|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article22401431|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | |||
* 1948, 6–27 November: ''Contemporary Art of South Australia : Exhibition of Paintings'' | |||
* 1951, 21–30 August: ''DUNLOP PRIZE WINNING COLLECTION OF AUSTRALIAN ART'' | |||
* 1952/3, 9 December–3 February: ''Castlemaine Residents' Art Exhibition:'' 40 paintings from 38 district homes<ref>{{Cite news|date=1952-12-08|title=Art show from country homes|work=Argus|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article23212827|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | |||
===1961–1970=== | |||
* 1963, July: Junior Art Prize<ref>"22 Prizes for Junior Artists," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 3 July 1963, p. 3</ref> | |||
* 1963, 1 September: ''Prints '63, Studio One Printmakers'', ], ], ], ], ], ], ]<ref>{{cite web|title=Prints '63. Studio One Printmakers. at Multiple venues (1963 – 1964) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/938/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref> | |||
* 1963, November: Exhibition of Religious and Applied Art<ref>"Religious and Applied Art on Exhibition," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 19 November 1963, p. 5</ref> | |||
* 1964, 5–7 November: ''First Castlemaine National Exhibition of Photography'' | |||
* 1966, 3–5 November: ''Third Castlemaine National Exhibition of Photography'' | |||
* 1967, 19–21 October: ''Fourth Castlemaine National Exhibition of Photography'' | |||
* 1968, 7–9 November: ''Fifth Castlemaine National Exhibition of Photography'' | |||
* 1969, 6–8 November: ''Sixth Castlemaine National Exhibition of Photography'' | |||
===1971–1980=== | |||
* 1971, 15–31 March: Rosemary Fazakerley<ref>{{cite web|title=Rosemary Fazakerley. at (1971) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/10182/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref> | |||
* 1971, 6–8 May: ''Seventh Castlemaine National Exhibition of Photography'' | |||
* 1972, 29 April–21 May 1972: An exhibition of fifty chairs of the 19th and early 20th centuries<ref>{{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/exhibition-of-fifty-chairs-of-the-19th-and-early-20th-centuries-catalogue/oclc/220905271|title=An exhibition of fifty chairs of the 19th and early 20th centuries: catalogue.|date=1972|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=220905271}}</ref> | |||
* 1974, September: ''Die Basler Fasnacht'': A collection of drawings on the theme of the traditional March carnival in Basel, Switzerland | |||
* 1975, 24 March–15 November: Arts Victoria Statewide Festival <ref>Advertisement, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 22 March 1975, p. 21</ref> | |||
* 1975, 2 May–22 June: ''Artists and Central Victoria'', for Arts Victoria '74 | |||
* 1975, 15 August–22 September: ''The Meldrum School''<ref>Advertisement, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 23 August 1975, p. 19</ref> | |||
* 1975, 7 November – 5 December: ''Crafts Victoria 75: a survey of contemporary crafts in Victoria''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Craft Association of Victoria|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/crafts-victoria-75-a-survey-of-contemporary-crafts-in-victoria/oclc/368063094|title=Crafts Victoria 75: a survey of contemporary crafts in Victoria|date=1975|language=en|oclc=368063094}}</ref> | |||
* 1976, 12 March–12 April: ''Cartoons Political + Non Political'' | |||
* 1976, 14 April–5 May: ''Erica Beilharz and Helen Harrison: Fibre and Form'' | |||
* 1976, 16 May – 27 June: ''Self portraits''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Self portraits Castlemaine Art Gallery, 16th May – 27th June, 1976 | date=1976 | publisher=the Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/10244910 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1976: ], 73 works<ref>Sinclair, B., Sturgess, R. W., Perry, P. (1986). ''R.W. Sturgess, Water-colourist, 1892-1932''. Australia: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum.</ref> | |||
* 1976, 16 October–28 November: ]<ref>{{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/ae-newbury-castlemaine-art-gallery-historical-museum-16th-oct-28th-nov-1976/oclc/739118794|title=A.E. Newbury: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 16th Oct.-28th Nov., 1976.|date=1976|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=739118794}}</ref> | |||
* 1977, 13 Apr–1 May: The Callow Collection: Watercolours by Constable, Turner, Cox, Rowlandson and Sandby<ref>Wendy Milsom, "Watercolors on show," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 13 April 1977, p. 2</ref> | |||
* 1977, 7 May-29 May: Dora Serle: an exhibition of paintings and drawings<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Serle|first1=Dora|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/dora-serle-an-exhibition-of-paintings-and-drawings/oclc/221023626|title=Dora Serle: an exhibition of paintings and drawings.|last2=McClelland Gallery|date=1977|publisher=McClelland Gallery|location=Langwarrin, Vic.|language=en|oclc=221023626}}</ref> | |||
* 1977, 12 June–3 July: ''Elsie Barlow 1876 -1948 '' | |||
* 1977, 11 September-30 October: ''A.M.E. Bale''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Bale, A. M. E. (Alice Marian Ellen) | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=A.M.E. Bale: Castlemaine Art Gallery, 11th September-30th October, 1977 | date=1977 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18779540 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1978, 5–31 March: The Leviny Family, an early craft family of Castlemaine: silver, jewellery, design, embroidery, enamelling<ref>"Weekender. Galleries: Regional," ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 10 March 1978, p. 42</ref><ref>{{Citation | author1=Leviny, Ernest | author2=Leviny, Dorothy | author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery | title=The Leviny family: Castlemaine Art Gallery, 5th-31st March | date=1978 | publisher=The Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/37102277 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1978 10 June-1 July: ]: sculptures 1968-78<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Clark|first1=Marc|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/marc-clark-sculptures-1968-78/oclc/223143468|title=Marc Clark: sculptures 1968-78.|last2=Victorian College of the Arts|last3=Gallery|last4=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|last5=Warrnambool Art Gallery|date=1978|publisher=Warrnambool Art Gallery|location=Warrnambool, Vic.|language=en|oclc=223143468}}</ref> | |||
* 1978, 22 August–4 September: Tribal And Traditional Textiles. The 1978 National Gallery of Victoria Travelling Exhibition<ref>Advertisement, ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 5 August 1978, p. 17</ref> | |||
* 1978, 10–29 September: ''The Newell family''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Newell|first1=Lucy|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/newell-family/oclc/221717594|title=The Newell family|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1978|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine|language=en|oclc=221717594}}</ref> | |||
* 1978, 1–29 October: The Colquhouns: a creative and productive family<ref>''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 27 October 1978, p. 40</ref><ref>{{Citation | author1=Colquhoun, Alexander| author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=The Colquhoun family: Castlemaine Art Gallery 1st 29th Oct | date=1978 | publisher=the Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/10244927 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1978, 4–26 November: ''Fibre craft work by local artisans''<ref>"Weekender," ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 24 November 1978, p. 42</ref> | |||
* 1979, to 3 June: ''Art metal craft by S. J. Ellis, craftsman and teacher''<ref>Ted Cavey, "Weekender's Choice: Craft," ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 1 June 1979, p. 40</ref> | |||
* 1979, 12 September-10 October: ''Aspects of Australian Art 1900-1940'': Australian National Gallery Touring exhibition<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Australian National Gallery|date=1976|title=Aspects of Australian Art 1900-1940 Itinerary|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-1466775872|journal=Australian National Gallery Annual Report|publisher=Parliamentary paper (Australia. Parliament)|volume=1979/1980|pages=14, 17|issn=0314-9919}}</ref> | |||
* 1980, 13 April–25 May: ]:''Notes, nocturnes & harmonies''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/notes-nocturnes-harmonies/oclc/222029063|title=Notes, nocturnes & harmonies.|date=1980|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery|language=en|oclc=222029063}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Ellis|first1=Stanley J|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/school-of-stanley-j-ellis-castlemaine-art-gallery-historical-museum-5th-may-3rd-june-1979/oclc/1058493426|title=The school of Stanley J. Ellis: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 5th May-3rd June, 1979.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1979|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=1058493426}}</ref> | |||
* 1980, 3–24 August: ''20th Anniversary Exhibition of the Embroiderer's Guild'' | |||
===1981–1990=== | |||
* 1981, 8 March–5 April: Merryle Johnson | |||
* 1981, to 10 May: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum 50th Anniversary: ] Ceramic Ware<ref>"Briefly," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), | |||
20 April 1981, p. 8</ref><ref>{{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Royal Doulton: the Kaye Collection | date=1981 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9598066-1-8}}</ref> | |||
* 1981, 19 July–23 August: Five Australian Expatriates: ], ], ], ] & ]<ref>Advertisement, ''The Age'', 18 July 1981, p. 26</ref> | |||
* 1981, 6 September-4 October: ''Two centuries of Australian bird illustrations''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Two centuries of Australian bird illustrations | date=1981 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18071328 | access-date=23 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1981, 25 October–23 November: ''Aspects of Castlemaine, 1854-1980''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Aspects of Castlemaine, 1854-1980: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 25th. October – 23rd. November | date=1981 | publisher=the Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/10244917 | access-date=23 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1982, 24 March–2 May: ''Twenty years of acquisitions, 1962-1982''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Twenty years of acquisitions, 1962-1982 | date=1982 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/21436281 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1982, 8 May- 27 June: ''Pictures from Private Collections'' | |||
* 1982, 12 August–5 September: ] and ]: ''An Exhibition of Impressionist Landscapes''<ref>"Briefly," The Age, 12 August 1982, p. 14</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/e-phillips-fox-ethel-carrick-an-exhibition-of-impressionist-paintings/oclc/222032057|title=E. Phillips Fox & Ethel Carrick: an exhibition of impressionist paintings.|date=1982|publisher=publisher not identified|language=en|oclc=222032057}}</ref> | |||
* 1983, June: ] and ]: Pioneer Modernists<ref>Listing, ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 17 June 1983, p. 45</ref> | |||
* 1983, 22 August–12 September: Print Council Exhibition 10<ref>{{Citation | author1=Print Council of Australia | title=Print Council exhibition 10 | date=1980 | publisher=Print Council of Australia | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/11739966 | access-date=23 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1983, 18 September–23 October: ''], 1883-1963: a retrospective''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Hurry, Polly | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=McClelland Gallery | title=Polly Hurry, 1883-1963: a retrospective | date=1983 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/21437337 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1983: David Chapman 1927-1983: works on paper<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Chapman|first1=David|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/david-chapman-1927-1983-works-on-paper/oclc/220292334|title=David Chapman 1927-1983: works on paper|last2=Ararat Gallery|last3=McClelland Gallery|last4=Albury Regional Art Centre|last5=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1986|publisher=McClelland Art Gallery|location=Langwarrin, Vic.|language=en|oclc=220292334}}</ref> | |||
* 1984, to 1 April: Works by Edward B. Heffernan<ref>Listing, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 9 March 1984, p. 35</ref> | |||
* 1984, 6 May–2 June 1984: Kathlyn Ballard, 1946-1984<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Ballard|first1=Kathlyn|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/kathlyn-ballard-1946-1984/oclc/930342897|title=Kathlyn Ballard, 1946-1984.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1984|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic|language=en|oclc=930342897}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|date=1989-01-13|title=Kathlyn judges works|work=Times|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article190887926|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | |||
* 1984, 1 November–2 December: ]<ref>"Program of Events," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 16 November 1984, p. 59</ref><ref>{{cite news | first=Maria | last=Prendergast | title=The old gold village springs to life | newspaper=The Age | location=Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | date=2 November 1984 | pages=38–39}}</ref><ref>{{Citation | author1=Drysdale, Russell, Sir, 1912-1981 | author2=Castlemaine State Festival | author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Russell Drysdale: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum 3 November-2 December, 1984 | date=1984 | publisher=Castlemaine State Festival?] | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/12345033 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1985, 2 March–31 March: ''Selected Works from the Diamond Valley Art Collection'' | |||
* 1985, 21 July-11 August: ''Sydney: a frame of mind'': photographs by Graeme Dawes<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Dawes|first1=Graeme|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/sydney-a-frame-of-mind-photographs-by-graeme-dawes/oclc/220871498|title=Sydney: a frame of mind: photographs by Graeme Dawes.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1985|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic|language=en|oclc=220871498}}</ref> | |||
* 1985 18 August–15 September: ''Fifty Chairs of the 18th, 19th and 20th Centuries '' | |||
* 1986: Victoria, views by contemporary artists | |||
* 1986, 13–30 July: Margaret Pestell 1894–1984 | |||
* 1986, 13 September–5 October:'' Painters, Potters, Printmakers & Photographers from Castlemaine and District'' | |||
* 1986, to 7 December: ''], Watercolorist 1892-1932''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/21594920|title=R.W. Sturgess, water-colourist, 1892-1932|date=1986|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Beth Sinclair|isbn=0-9598066-3-6|location=|oclc=21594920}}</ref><ref>Advertisement, ''The Age'', 22 November 1986, p. 174</ref> | |||
* 1987, 5 April – 3 May: ''Pubs and breweries of Castlemaine and district''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/pubs-and-breweries-of-castlemaine-and-district/oclc/221511151|title=Pubs and breweries of Castlemaine and district.|date=1989|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=221511151}}</ref> | |||
* 1987, 20 September–25 October: Harley C. Griffiths, 1908–1981<ref>{{Citation | author1=Griffiths, Harley | author2=McClelland Gallery | author3=Geelong Art Gallery | author4=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Harley C. Griffiths, 1908-1981 | date=1987 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/6857543 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1987, 12 October – 31 October: ]: Sculpture<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Prest|first1=Trefor|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/sculpture/oclc/223274799|title=Sculpture|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|last3=Pinacotheca (Art gallery)|date=1988|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=223274799}}</ref> | |||
* 1987, December: Central Victorian Sculptors<ref>Listing, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 24 December 1987, p. 44</ref> | |||
* 1988, 16 September - 23 October: ''An Aspect of Australian Art: Three Private Collections in Central Victoria'' | |||
* 1988, September: Selection from 30 years of acquisitions<ref>Listing, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 2 September 1988, p. 49</ref> | |||
* 1988, 29 October - 20 November: ] | |||
* 1988, 29 October–4 December: Miles Evergood, 1871-1939: retrospective<ref>{{Citation | author1=Evergood, Miles | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=Jewish Museum of Australia | author4=Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House) | title=Miles Evergood, 1871-1939: retrospective |date=1988 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/6857554 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|date=1988-11-18|title=Miles Evergood retrospective|work=Australian Jewish Times|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article263334347|access-date=2021-09-26}}</ref> | |||
* 1989, January: ''Percy Leason, 1889-1959: centenary exhibition''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Leason|first1=Percy|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/percy-leason-1889-1959-centenary-exhibition/oclc/22859102|title=Percy Leason, 1889-1959: centenary exhibition|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1989|publisher=The Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=22859102}}</ref> | |||
* 1989, 5–27 August: 9x5 CENTENARY EXHIBITION | |||
* 1990, 13 July–5 August: ''The Sybil Craig Bequest''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Craig|first1=Sybil|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/sybil-craig-bequest-13-july-5-august-1990/oclc/222843220|title=The Sybil Craig Bequest: 13 July–5 August, 1990.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1990|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=222843220}}</ref> | |||
* 1990, 10 August–2 September: ''Iskustvo: Recent Soviet painting''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Wardell|first1=Michael|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/iskustvo-recent-soviet-paintings/oclc/154205213|title=Iskustvo: recent Soviet paintings|last2=Moscow Palitra Association|last3=Sonart Australia|date=1990|publisher=13 Verity Street|isbn=978-0-7316-9073-2|location=Richmond, Vic|language=en|oclc=154205213}}</ref> | |||
* 1990, November: Aspects of France: the Australian Artists View, 50 works by Australian artists from ] to ]<ref>"The A List: Out of Town," ''The Age ''(Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 11 November 1990, p. 28</ref> | |||
* 1990, to 2 December: Annemieke Mein: Textiles<ref>MARY LOU JELBART, "Rare skill and passion for the environment," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 21 November 1990, p. 14</ref><ref>Mein, A. (2019). ''Art of Annemieke Mein''. United Kingdom: Search Press.</ref> | |||
===1991–2000=== | |||
* 1991, April: ''Maladies, medicos & miracle cures: a guide to the history of medicine in Castlemaine and district from 1851- c.1950''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Zilles|first=Lauretta|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/maladies-medicos-miracle-cures-a-guide-to-the-history-of-medicine-in-castlemaine-and-district-from-1851-c1950/oclc/221334617|title=Maladies, medicos & miracle cures: a guide to the history of medicine in Castlemaine and district from 1851- c.1950|date=1991|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=221334617}}</ref> | |||
* 1991, 16 June–7 July: Harley Griffiths Snr. (1878-1951): works on paper<ref>{{cite web|title=Harley Griffiths Snr. (1878-1951): works on paper. at Multiple venues (1991) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/431/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref> | |||
* 1991, 14 July–11 August: '']'s Landscapes of the South of France''<ref>"Being There," The Age (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 20 July 1991, p. 190</ref><ref>Christopher Heathcote, "The gentle art of an artist who has learned to efface self," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 26 June 1991, p. 14</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Thomas|first1=David Emlyn Liddon|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/rupert-bunnys-landscapes-of-the-south-of-france/oclc/27618647|title=Rupert Bunny's landscapes of the south of France|last2=Bunny|first2=Rupert|last3=Bendigo Art Gallery|date=1991|publisher=Bendigo Art Gallery|isbn=978-0-949215-07-9|location=Bendigo, Vic.|language=en|oclc=27618647}}</ref> | |||
* 1991: 25 August–15 September: Arthur J. Lindsay, 1912-1990: retrospective<ref>{{Cite book|last=Lindsay|first=Arthur J|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/arthur-j-lindsay-1912-1990-retrospective/oclc/221782696|title=Arthur J. Lindsay, 1912-1990: retrospective.|date=1991|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=221782696}}</ref> | |||
* 1991, 13 October–3 November: Ten regional artists: Steve Beckley, Liz Caffin, Paul Cavell, Ian Drummond, John Gleeson, Craig Gough, Douglas Green, Juliana Hilton, Ken Killeen, Vicky Taylor<ref>{{cite web|title=Ten regional artists. at Castlemaine Art Gallery And Historical Museum (1991) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/2462/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref> | |||
* 1991, November: ''Nature's Inspiration: Arts in the Garden''<ref>"The Best of Sunday: Goldfields Gardens", The Age (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) | |||
3 November 1991, p. 30</ref> | |||
* 1992, to 3 May: ''A history of horticulture in Castlemaine and district''<ref>"Events", ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 28 April 1992, p. 29</ref> | |||
* 1992, 13 July–20 August: ''Completing the picture: women artists and the Heidelberg era''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Hammond|first=Victoria|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28609979|title=Completing the picture: women artists and the Heidelberg era|date=1992|publisher=Artmoves|others=Juliet Peers, Heide Park and Art Gallery|isbn=0-646-07493-8|edition=2nd |location=Hawthorn East, Vic.|oclc=28609979}}</ref><ref>"Feminine Touch," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 7 March 1992, p. 203</ref> | |||
* 1992, 20 September – 25 October: The Art of Christian Waller<ref>Rebecca Lancashire, "A creative world, naturally,"'' The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 19 September 1992, p. 150</ref> | |||
* 1992, 31 October – 6 December: ]: ceramics<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Hanssen Pigott|first1=Gwyn|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/gwyn-hanssen-pigott-ceramics-31-october-6-december-1992/oclc/902750080|title=Gwyn Hanssen Pigott: ceramics: 31 October – 6 December 1992.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1992|language=en|oclc=902750080}}</ref> | |||
* 1992, 31 October – 6 December: Harold Herbert, ''Watercolours 1918-44''<ref>Christopher Heathcote, "Deconstruction comes into its own, at last," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 11 November 1992, p. 14</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Herbert|first1=Harold B.|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/21263383|title=Harold B. Herbert watercolours, 31 October – 6 December, 1992|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|year=1992|access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1993, March–April: ''Religion in the Goldfields''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Poidevin, Brian | title=Text of material used at Castlemaine Art Gallery Exhibition "Religion in the Goldfields" March-April 1993 | date=1993 | publisher=The Author] | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/240258000 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 1993, 18 June–17 July: Wendy Stavrianos<ref>"Visual Arts," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 13 November 1993, p. 179</ref> | |||
* 1993 to 29 August: Ray Taylor: Ceramic Artist<ref name=":12">Zimmer, Jenny, "Of crazed glazes, ceramic pots and Windsor chairs," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) 18 August 1993, p. 17</ref> | |||
* 1993, to 12 September: Greg Stirling: ''Enchanted Wood<ref name=":12" />'' | |||
* 1994, 6 March – 10 April: ''Flynn silver, past and present''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/flynn-silver-past-and-present-castlemaine-art-gallery-and-historical-museum-6-march-10-april-1994/oclc/221782605|title=Flynn silver, past and present: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 6 March – 10 April 1994.|date=1994|publisher=Richard Cambridge Printers|location=Bendigo, Vic.|language=en|oclc=221782605}}</ref> | |||
* 1994, 15 May-12 June: ]: Mantles of Darkness<ref>{{Cite book|last=Stavrianos|first=Wendy|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/wendy-stavrianos-mantles-of-darkness/oclc/222005695|title=Wendy Stavrianos: mantles of darkness.|date=1994|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|language=en|oclc=222005695}}</ref> | |||
* 1994, to 2 October: ]: ''Self Portraits 1936–1986''<ref>Advertisement, ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 17 September 1994, p. 172</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Bush|first=Charles|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/35986902|title=Charles Bush: selfportraits 1936-1986: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 3 September-2 October 1994.|date= 1994|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=June Davies, Jock Palmer, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-646-19872-6|location=|oclc=35986902}}</ref> | |||
* 1994, 29 October-4 December: John Dent: retrospective 1973-1993<ref>{{Cite book|last=Dent|first=John|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/35831072|title=John Dent: retrospective 1973-1993: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 29 October-4 December, 1994.|date=1994|publisher=The Gallery|others=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-646-21117-X|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=35831072}}</ref> | |||
* 1995, 5 March–30 April: ''Australian Women Printmakers 1910–1940'', curated by Kirsten McKay of the Castlemaine gallery, touring exhibition<ref name=":11">Robert Nelson, "Imprints of talent: a modern look," ''The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 24 January 1996, p. 14</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/37179933|title=Women printmakers 1910 to 1940 in the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1995|publisher=The Gallery and Museum|others=Kirsten McKay|isbn=0-646-23161-8|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=37179933}}</ref> | |||
* 1996: ''Historic wallpapers in Australia, 1850-1920''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Murphy|first1=Phyllis|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/historic-wallpapers-in-australia-1850-1920/oclc/38757268|title=Historic wallpapers in Australia, 1850-1920|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1996|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9598066-6-3|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=38757268}}</ref> | |||
* 1996, 30 March–5 May: ] 1941-1992: ''A memorial exhibition''<ref>{{Cite journal|date=July 1941|title=Museum news: The Hjalmar Stolpe memorial exhibition|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00141844.1941.9980594|journal=Ethnos|volume=6|issue=3–4|pages=188|doi=10.1080/00141844.1941.9980594|issn=0014-1844}}</ref> | |||
* 1996, 2 November – 8 December: Tony Lloyd-Stephenson: 1921-1994<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Lloyd-Stephenson|first1=Tony|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/tony-lloyd-stephenson-1921-1994/oclc/902750519|title=Tony Lloyd-Stephenson: 1921-1994.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1996|language=en|oclc=902750519}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|date=1996-11-01|title=Coming Up the week ahead what's on a|work=Australian Jewish News|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article261024305|access-date=2021-09-25}}</ref> | |||
*1997: ''Mt. Alexander Printmakers' Show'' | |||
* 1997: 2 February–30 March: ''Sculpture by ], 1979-1997: a journey, abstraction to figuration to landscape''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/sculpture-by-fiona-orr-1979-1997-a-journey-abstraction-to-figuration-to-landscape/oclc/222118982|title=Sculpture by Fiona Orr, 1979-1997: a journey, abstraction to figuration to landscape|date=1997|publisher=Band Hall Private gallery|isbn=978-0-9598066-8-7|location=Knyeton, Vic.|language=en|oclc=222118982}}</ref> | |||
* 1997, 12 October – 23 November: ''Australian artists influenced by Rembrandt''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/222707073|title=Australian artists influenced by Rembrandt: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 12 October – 23 November, 1997.|date=1997|publisher=The Art Gallery|others=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-9598066-9-5|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=222707073}}</ref> | |||
* 1998: Jan Lancaster: ''Bloodlines- The Coliban''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Lancaster|first=Jan, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/bloodlines-the-coliban/oclc/902749981|title=Bloodlines the coliban|date=1999|language=en|oclc=902749981}}</ref> | |||
* 1998 Janet Goodchild-Cuffley, ''Women of History''<ref>Anna Clabburn, "New light in broad spectrum," ''The Age'', 5 August 1998, p. 16</ref> | |||
* 1998, 9–30 August: ''Achievement Through Art, Student Art Exhibition Regional Tour'', works of students in Years 4-10<ref>"Galleries," ''The Age'', 21 August 1998, p. 61</ref> | |||
* 1999, to 11 April: ''The Private Eye A Foreigner's Power of Observation'': contemporary artworks by Vicki McConville sourcing the cultural and historical archives of Central Victoria<ref>"Galleries," ''The Age'' 19 March 1999, p. 49</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=McConville|first1=Vicki|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/private-eye-a-foreigners-power-of-observation/oclc/974939317|title=The Private eye: a foreigner's power of observation|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1999|language=en|oclc=974939317}}</ref> | |||
* 1999, 24 April–4 May: ''Ian Armstrong Retrospective''<ref>Kay Stewart, "6 of the Best," ''The Age'', 2 May 1999, p. 88</ref><ref>Gabriella Coslovich, "A 'few good works'," The Age, 23 April 1999, p. 19</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Armstrong|first=Ian|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/223020016|title=Ian Armstrong restrospective 1941-1998|date=1999|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-9587299-1-3|location=Castlemaine|oclc=223020016}}</ref> | |||
* 1999, 27 June – 2 August: ]: drawings<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Hallandal|first1=Pam|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/pam-hallandal-drawings/oclc/40500141|title=Pam Hallandal: drawings|last2=Gowing|first2=Ainsley|last3=Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery|date=1998|publisher=Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery|isbn=978-0-9585894-1-3|location=Mornington, Vic.|language=en|oclc=40500141}}</ref> | |||
* 2000, 4 October – 10 December: ''The Beth Sinclair Donation of Australian Art''<ref name=":10">Peter Timms, "Status quo for Castlemaine: The Beth Sinclair Donation of Australian Art," ''The Age'' 11 October 2000, p. 29</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Backhouse|first=Megan|date=4 October 2000|title=Visual arts : Castlemaine opening|page=7|work=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne}}</ref> | |||
===2001–2010=== | |||
* 2001, 24 March to 29 April: Fraser Fair retrospective<ref>{{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/935586136|title=Fraser Fair: a retrospective.|date=2001|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Peter Perry|isbn=0-9587299-3-X|location=Castlemaine|oclc=935586136}}</ref> | |||
* 2001, 27 May to 1 July: ''Murray Griffin – the journey: a retrospective 1922-1980''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/murray-griffin-the-journey-a-retrospective-1922-1980-castlemaine-art-gallery-and-historical-museum-27-may-to-1-july-2001-eastgate-gallery-hawthorn-victoria-25-july-to-24-august-2001/oclc/314370902|title=Murray Griffin – the journey: a retrospective 1922-1980 ; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 27. May to 1. July 2001; Eastgate Gallery, Hawthorn, Victoria, 25. July to 24. August 2001.|date=2001|editor-last=Griffin|editor-first=Murray|location=Castlemaine|language=en|oclc=314370902|editor-last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum}}</ref> | |||
* 2002, 9 March-7 April: ]: sitting still, portrait studies of Graeme Doyle<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Wegner|first1=Peter|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/peter-wegner-sitting-still-portrait-studies-of-graeme-doyle/oclc/892130723|title=Peter Wegner: sitting still, portrait studies of Graeme Doyle.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2002|language=en|oclc=892130723}}</ref> | |||
* 2002, 6 April – 19 May: ]: stepping into the light<ref>{{Cite book|last=Lewis|first=Martin|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/155794636|title=Martin Lewis: stepping into the light|date=2002|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Kirsten McKay, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-9587299-4-8|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=155794636}}</ref> | |||
* 2002, 28 July – 25 August: ''A tribute to June Davies''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Davies|first1=June|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/tribute-to-june-davies/oclc/225428434|title=A tribute to June Davies.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2002|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9587299-5-6|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=225428434}}</ref> | |||
* 2003: ], ''Seeing the Forest for the Trees'' | |||
* 2003, 29 March-4 May: Highlights from the Stuart R. Stoneman art collection<ref>{{Citation | author1=Stoneman, Stuart R., 1927-2002, (collector.) | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, (host institution,) | title=Highlights from the Stuart R. Stoneman art collection | date=2003 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/9433149 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 2003, 10 May – 8 June: Basil Eliades: ''Isolated connections: the landscape politic''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Eliades|first=Basil|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/isolated-connections-the-landscape-politic/oclc/225269051|title=Isolated connections: the landscape politic.|date=2003|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum ; ; [Ballarat, Vic.|language=en|oclc=225269051}}</ref> | |||
* 2003, 6 July – 24 August: John Julian Gibbs, 1859-1887<ref>{{Cite book|last=Gibbs|first=John Julian|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/john-julian-gibbs-1859-1887/oclc/223999275|title=John Julian Gibbs, 1859-1887.|date=2003|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9587299-6-3|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=223999275}}</ref> | |||
* 2004, 1 May–6 June: As time goes by: Prints by ] | |||
* 2004, 3 October–21 November: ''Alexander Colquhoun: 1862-1941: artist and critic.''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Colquhoun|first1=A|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/alexander-colquhoun-1862-1941-artist-and-critic/oclc/62545517|title=Alexander Colquhoun: 1862-1941: artist and critic.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2004|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9587299-8-7|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=62545517}}</ref> | |||
* 2005: Gus Cohen<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/gus-cohen-castlemaine-art-gallery/oclc/1193379051|title=Gus Cohen Castlemaine Art Gallery|date=2005|language=en|oclc=1193379051}}</ref> | |||
* 2005, 2 April–1 May: Venezia Australis. Australian artists in Venice: 1900-2000<ref>{{Citation | author1=Geelong Art Gallery | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House) | author4=Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery | title=Venezia Australis: Australian artists in Venice, 1900–2000: a touring exhibition of oils watercolours, prints, drawings and photographs | date=2005 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9757388-0-1}}</ref> | |||
* 2006, 4 March–2 April: ] 1904–82: Works from the Permanent Collection | |||
* 2006, 4 March–2 April: Tom Roberts: 150th birthday anniversary | |||
* 2006, 2 April–28 May: Australian Printmaking, 1960s to the Present Day | |||
* 2006, 4 June–30 July: Sybil Craig 1901-89: Modernist painter<ref>{{cite web|title=Sybil Craig 1901-89: Modernist painter. at Multiple venues (2006) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/4532/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Craig|first=Sybil|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/225240436|title=Sybil Craig 1901-89: modernist painter|date=2006|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Kirsten McKay, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, Geelong Gallery, Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery|isbn=0-9757388-1-X|location=Castlemaine|oclc=225240436}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Speck|first=Catherine|date=2019-07-03|title=Women, Art and Wartime Industries: A Feminist Inter/Modern Analysis|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08164649.2019.1682456|journal=Australian Feminist Studies|language=en|volume=34|issue=101|pages=295–308|doi=10.1080/08164649.2019.1682456|s2cid=210454155|issn=0816-4649}}</ref> | |||
* 2006/7, 19 November–21 January: ]: retrospective<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Braund|first1=Dorothy|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/dorothy-braund-retrospective/oclc/225138812|title=Dorothy Braund: retrospective.|last2=A'Beckett|first2=Jan|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|last4=Hamilton Art Gallery (Vic.)|date=2006|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9757388-2-5|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=225138812}}</ref> | |||
* 2007, 17 February–18 March: Robert Clinch: ''Urban Myths''<ref>{{cite web|title=Robert Clinch: Urban Myths. at Multiple venues (2007) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/4698/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref> | |||
* 2007, 31 March–27 May: ''The Art of the Dog''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Kovacic|first=Katherine|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/225438828|title=The art of the dog|date=2007|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9757388-3-2|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=225438828}}</ref> | |||
* 2007, 9 June–29 July: ''European sensibilities: ] and his circle''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Baldessin, George, 1939-1978 | author2=Turner, Dick | author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=European sensibilities: George Baldessin and his circle: printmaking in Melbourne during the 1960s and 1970s | date=2007 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9757388-4-9}}</ref> | |||
* 2008, 5 April–18 May: Deborah Klein: Out of the past, a survey of works 1995-2007<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Klein|first1=Deborah|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/deborah-klein-out-of-the-past-1995-2007/oclc/298663997|title=Deborah Klein: out of the past 1995-2007|last2=Soumilas|first2=Diane|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2008|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=298663997}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Grishin|first=Sasha|date=2014|title=Profiles in Print -- Deborah Klein|journal=Craft Arts International|volume=90|pages=50–55}}</ref> | |||
*2008, to 31 August: Dick Turner : ''Cross Sections Layering Land and Culture''<ref>{{cite web|title=Painting degraded landscapes - ABC (none) - Australian Broadcasting Corporation|url=https://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2008/08/01/2321266.htm|access-date=2021-09-25|website=www.abc.net.au}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|author1=Turner, Anthony Dick|title=Cross Sections Layering Land and Culture|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/224298531|publication-date=2008|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery|access-date=25 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 2008, 4 October – 2 November: Donald Ramsay, artist in a landscape: a survey exhibition<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Ramsay|first1=Donald|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/donald-ramsay-artist-in-a-landscape/oclc/277184336|title=Donald Ramsay: artist in a landscape.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2008|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery|isbn=978-0-9757388-8-7|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=277184336}}</ref> | |||
* 2008, 8 November to 14 December: Jock Clutterbuck: ''Sculptures & drawings 1990-2008''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Clutterbuck|first1=Jock|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/jock-clutterbuck-sculptures-drawings-1990-2008/oclc/902750049|title=Jock Clutterbuck: Sculptures & drawings 1990-2008.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2008|language=en|oclc=902750049}}</ref> | |||
* 2009, 24 January–1 March: ]: printmaker<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Pugh|first1=Clifton|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/clifton-pugh-printmaker/oclc/271727566|title=Clifton Pugh: printmaker.|last2=O'Brien|first2=Alana|last3=La Trobe University|last4=Art Museum|last5=Bundoora Homestead Art Centre|last6=Shepparton Art Gallery|last7=Latrobe Regional Gallery|last8=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2007|publisher=La Trobe University Art Museum|location=Bundoora], Vic.|language=en|oclc=271727566}}</ref> | |||
* 2009: Jack Courier (1915–2007): lithographs<ref>{{Citation | author1=Courier, Jack | author2=Stocky, Catherine | author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Jack Courier (1915-2007): lithographs | date=2009 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/37798732 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
* 2010, 28 February – 4 April:''Associates of Rupert Bunny''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Chippindall|first1=Tom|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/associates-of-rupert-bunny/oclc/682514952|title=Associates of Rupert Bunny.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2010|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9757388-9-4|location=Castlemaine|language=en|oclc=682514952}}</ref> | |||
* 2010, from 23 April: ''Archie & Amalie Colquhoun''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Kovacic|first1=Katherine|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/archie-amalie-colquhoun/oclc/608149359|title=Archie & Amalie Colquhoun|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2010|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9807831-0-0|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=608149359}}</ref> | |||
* 2010, 11 September–3 October: Annette Edwards ... a lifetime of mark making<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Edwards|first1=Annette|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/annette-edwards-a-lifetime-of-mark-making/oclc/780532076|title=Annette Edwards: ... a lifetime of mark making.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2010|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9807831-2-4|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=780532076}}</ref> | |||
* 2010, 13 November—19 December: ''Mount Alexander Shire artists represented in the permanent collection'' | |||
===2011–2020=== | |||
* 2011, 15 January – 27 February: ''Imagining the Orient'': A National Gallery of Victoria Touring Exhibition | |||
* 2011, 2 April – 8 May: Touring exhibition ''Scottish painters in Australia''<ref>{{Citation | author1=Perry, Peter W.,(author.) | author2=McKay, Kirsten, (author.) | author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, (host institution.) | title=Scottish painters in Australia | date=2011 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9807831-3-1 }}</ref> | |||
* 2011, 18 June – 24 July: ''Douglas Watson (1920–72) Works from the Permanent Collection'' | |||
* 2011, 18 June – 24 July: Victor Majzner: ''Location watercolours from Australia and Overseas'' | |||
* 2011, 10 September – 23 October: Greg Moncrieff: now and then – : a survey exhibition of selected paintings, screen prints and mixed media works from 1974 to the present<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Moncrieff|first1=Greg|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/greg-moncrieff-now-and-then-a-survey-exhibition-of-selected-paintings-screen-prints-and-mixed-media-works-from-1974-to-the-present/oclc/760034537|title=Greg Moncrieff: now and then – : a survey exhibition of selected paintings, screen prints and mixed media works from 1974 to the present.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2011|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine|language=en|oclc=760034537}}</ref> | |||
* 2012, 14 January—26 February: ''Peggy Shaw: A Retrospective''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Shaw|first1=Peggy|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/peggy-shaw-a-retrospective/oclc/822892917|title=Peggy Shaw: a retrospective|last2=McKay|first2=Kirsten|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2011|isbn=978-0-9807831-4-8|language=en|oclc=822892917}}</ref> | |||
* 2012, 10 March—29 April: Ray Pearce: ''Bite'' | |||
* 2012, 5 May—24 June: ''Max Middleton: Painter of Light'' | |||
* 2012, 1 July—29 July: Richard Crichton Profile: ''Selected Works''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Crichton|first1=Richard|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/richard-crichton-profile-selected-works-july-1-29-2012/oclc/806368976|title=Richard Crichton: profile selected works: July 1–29, 2012.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|last3=Eastgate & Holst|date=2012|publisher=Eastgate & Holst: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-646-58042-5|location=Hawthorne, Vic.; Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=806368976}}</ref> | |||
* 2012, 4 August—2 September: ''Jeff Makin: Drawings'' | |||
* 2012, 9 September—28 October: John Borrack: ''Selected Paintings and Drawings 1970-2012'' | |||
*2012, to 9 December: Susan Weste: ''Elements of Nature; Meanderings With a Camera'' | |||
*2013, 5 January—3 February: ''Director's Choice: Thirty-eight years of collecting'' | |||
*2013, 9 February—10 March: ''] (1892–1932) Works from the Permanent Collection'' | |||
*2013, 16 March—26 May: Barry Singleton'': A Survey from Public and Private Collections and an Exhibition of Current Work''<ref>{{Cite book|last=Singleton|first=Barry|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1004506372|title=A retrospective exhibition of ceramics from 1970-2013 by Barry Singleton: Castlemaine Art Gallery. 16.03.2013-26.05.2013.|date=2013|others=Ray Hearn, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9807831-6-2|location=Castlemaine|oclc=1004506372}}</ref> | |||
*2013, 16 March-26 May: ''Mediterranean Summers: Australian Artists along the French and Italian Coast'' | |||
*2013, 1 June—28 July: ], ''from Study to Painting''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Amor|first1=Rick|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/rick-amor-from-study-to-painting-1-june-28-july-2013/oclc/903203825|title=Rick Amor: from study to painting: 1 June – 28 July 2013.|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2013|isbn=978-0-9807831-8-6|language=en|oclc=903203825}}</ref> | |||
* 2013, 3 August–15 September: ''A collective vision: prints from the Castlemaine Art Gallery permanent collection 1970–2013:'' a selection of works from the 1970s to 2013 celebrating the role of artists, collectors and benefactors<ref>{{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, (host institution..) | title=A collective vision: prints from the Castlemaine Art Gallery permanent collection 1970–2013: a selection of works from the 1970s to 2013 celebrating the role of artists, collectors and benefactors | date=2013 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/191666420 | access-date=22 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
*2013, 21 September—10 November: ''Shimmering Light: ] and the Thames''<ref>{{Cite book|last=McKay|first=Kirsten|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/shimmering-light-dora-meeson-and-the-thames/oclc/873675981|title=Shimmering light: Dora Meeson and the Thames.|date=2013|isbn=978-0-9807831-5-5|language=en|oclc=873675981}}</ref> | |||
*2013, 16 November—31 December: ''2013 Len Fox Painting Award'' | |||
*2013, 3 November—9 December: ''Ray Stanyer and Ellen Hansa- Wither shall I wander?'' | |||
*2013, 23 November—15 December: ''The Art of Jock Clutterbuck'' | |||
*2104, 1 January—23 February: ''Acquisitions'' | |||
*2014, 1 January—23 February: ''] 1927-2013: Gouaches from the Permanent Collection'' | |||
*2014, 2–21 August: ''Ray Hearn: A Survey 2004 – 2014'' | |||
* 2014, 1 Mar–13 Apr: Wayne Viney, ''Singular Impressions'' | |||
* 2014, 26 Apr–1 Jun: ''Ann Geroe: Ceramics Survey'' | |||
* 2014, 3 May–7 Jun: ''Jennie Stewart: Works on Paper '' | |||
* 2014, 7 June–27 July: Dean Bowen ''Day by Day – Paintings, Sculpture, Prints and Drawings'' | |||
* 2014, 2–31 Aug: ''Ray Hearn: A Survey 2004 – 2014'' | |||
* 2014, 2–31 Aug: '']: 1000 Years- 10 Drawings of Centenarians'' | |||
* 2014, 6 Sep–26 Oct: ''Ludmilla Meilerts Retrospective'' | |||
* 2014, 2 Nov–14 Dec: '']: Nurturing the Place''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Meyer|first1=Bill|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/nurturing-the-place/oclc/897490496|title=Nurturing the place|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2014|isbn=978-0-9593138-0-2|language=en|oclc=897490496}}</ref> | |||
*2015, 15 January—8 March: ]: ''The Boss of Colour''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Riley|first1=Ginger|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/ginger-riley-the-boss-of-colour/oclc/920461202|title=Ginger Riley: the boss of colour.|last2=Alves|first2=Tim|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2015|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=920461202}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=First exhibition of Indigenous art at Castlemaine Art Gallery in 100 years - ABC (none) - Australian Broadcasting Corporation|url=https://www.abc.net.au/local/photos/2015/02/05/4174976.htm|access-date=2021-09-23|website=www.abc.net.au}}</ref><ref>McLean, I. (2016). ''Rattling Spears: A History of Indigenous Australian Art.'' United Kingdom: Reaktion Books. p. 113, 121</ref> | |||
* 2015, 28 February: Catherine Pilgrim. ''Making history: Hidden world of the Leviny women.''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Pilgrim|first1=Catherine|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/making-history-hidden-world-of-the-leviny-women/oclc/1158894182|title=Making history: hidden world of the Leviny women|last2=McNeil|first2=Peter|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2015|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|language=en|oclc=1158894182}}</ref> | |||
*2015, 13 March – 22 March: Patrick Pound: ''The Museum of Holes''<ref>{{Citation|author1=Pound, Patrick|title=The Museum of Holes|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/230135229|publication-date=2015-01-01|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum|access-date=25 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
*2015, 2 May – 28 June: ''EARTH, FIRE AND WATER: 50 years of shaping the elements.'' Ceramics from the Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum permanent collection. | |||
*2015, 2 May – 28 June: ''Recent Drawings: Christine Hooper'' | |||
* 2015, 4 July – 23 August: "]: Survey Exhibition" | |||
* 2015, 17 July–31 August: ]: ''Life on the Goldfields''<ref>{{cite web|title=ST Gill: Life on the Goldfields. at (2015) · Australian Prints + Printmaking|url=https://www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au/exhibitions/8801/|access-date=2021-09-22|website=www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au}}</ref> | |||
*2015, 29 August – 18 October: ''Inking Up'' | Rona Green, Deborah Klein & Clayton Tremlett<ref>{{Cite book|last=Middlemost|first=Thomas|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/inking-up-a-group-exhibition-of-prints-by-clayton-tremlett-curator-rona-green-and-deborah-klein/oclc/927074958|title=Inking up: a group exhibition of prints by Clayton Tremlett (curator), Rona Green and Deborah Klein|location=Castlemaine, Victoria|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2015|language=en|oclc=927074958}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Klein|first1=Deborah|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/tattooed-faces/oclc/950521494|title=Tattooed faces|last2=Moth Woman Press|date=2015|language=en|oclc=950521494}}</ref> | |||
* 2015, 29 August–18 October: Contemporary Australian Silver & Metalwork Award 2015<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/938380301|title=Contemporary Australian Silver & Metalwork Award 2015.|date=2015|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, Buda Historic Home and Garden Inc|isbn=978-0-9924753-2-1|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=938380301}}</ref> | |||
* 2015: 31 Oct–31 Dec: ''David Moore: Glimpses of Chewton'' | |||
* 2015: 31 Oct–31 Dec: ''Women of Gold'' | |||
* 2016, 15 Jan–15 Apr: '' ]: After Afghanistan 2016'' | |||
* 2016, 30 Apr–30 Jun: ]: ''Landscapes''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/bill-henson-landscapes/oclc/948632099|title=Bill henson landscapes.|date=2016|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery &|isbn=978-0-9924753-3-8|location=Place of publication not identified|language=en|oclc=948632099}}</ref> | |||
* 2016, 10 Jul–15 Aug: ''Clayton Tremlett: Beard and Influence''<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/clayton-tremlett-beard-and-influence/oclc/954226415|title=Clayton tremlett: beard and influence.|date=2016|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery &|isbn=978-0-9587299-0-1|location=Castlemaine|language=en|oclc=954226415}}</ref> | |||
* 2016, 21 Aug–25 Sep: ''Slipstitch'' | |||
* 2017, 15 Jan–26 Feb: ''Michael Doolan: World Without World '' | |||
* 2017, 15 Jan–26 Feb: ''Minna Gilligan: Groove is in the Heart'' | |||
* 2017: 19 Mar–25 Jun: John Nixon: ''Experimental Painting Workshop''<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Nixon|first1=John|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/john-nixon-experimental-painting-workshop/oclc/982656702|title=John Nixon: experimental painting workshop.|last2=Cox|first2=Emma|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2017|isbn=978-0-9598066-1-8|language=en|oclc=982656702}}</ref> | |||
* 2017, 15–22 July Oct: ''Gifted: The Kohane and Moore donations of Australian studio ceramics'' | |||
*2017/18, 11 November—5 February: ''Daughters of the Sun: ] and ]'' | |||
*2019, 8 June—1 September: ''2019 Len Fox Painting Award'' | |||
*2019/20, 6 December—1 May: ''Experimental Print Prize'' | |||
*2020, 27 —29 November: ''the Way-the Water-the Walk (Reserved for the Convenience or Pleasure of the People)'' | |||
*2019/20, 11 October—11 October: ''The Unquiet Landscape'' | |||
===2021 onwards=== | |||
*2020/21, 1 May – 9 March: ''Cast Recast: Damon Moon'' | |||
*2020/21, 17 May – 9 March: ''Janina Green in conversation with the Collection'' | |||
* 2020–2022, 31 May–1 Jan: ''From the Land'': Peter Banjurljurl (Jinang), Batumbil Bararrwanga (Gumatj), Gabi Briggs (Anaiwan and Gumbangier)and Arika Waulu (Gunai and Gunditjmara), Alvin Darcy Briggs (Yorta Yorta, Taungwurrung), Blackgin (Wurundjeri), ], ] (Madarrpa, Yithuwa), Malalakpuy Munyarryan (Wanggurri) Baluka Maymuru (Manggalili, Belang group), Lorna Fencer Napurrula (Warlpiri), ] (Pitjantjatjara, Yankunytjatjara), Charlie Marabinyin, ] (Marra), Tashara Roberts (Dja Dja Wurrung, Yorta Yorta), works by unknown makers from the Castlemaine Art Museum, ] (]-], Dha-malamirr), Yumitjin Wunumurra (Dhalwangu, Narrkala)<ref name=":4">{{cite web|title=From the Land|url=https://www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/exhibitions/from-the-land|access-date=2021-09-18|website=www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> | |||
* 2020/21, 23 Nov–24 November: ''Cloudy – a few isolated showers'': Lyndell Brown and Charles Green, ], ], Vipoo Srivilasa, ], ], W Rubery Bennett, ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], Vipoo Srivilasa, Munuy'gnu Marika (Rirratjigna), Naminapu #2 Maymuru (Mangalili), Edwin Stocqueler, ], Verey & Co, ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Cloudy – a few isolated showers|url=https://www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/exhibitions/cloudy-a-few-isolated-showers|access-date=2021-09-18|website=www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> | |||
*2020/21, 26 December —31 January: Kylie Banyard – ''Holding Ground'', Orbit Gallery | |||
* 2021, 19 March–19 September: James Henry: ''18 Families''<ref name=":5">{{cite web|title=James Henry: 18 Families|url=https://www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/exhibitions/james-henry-18-families|access-date=2021-09-18|website=www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> | |||
* 2021, 19 March—17 October, ''#Perempuan 2021 – Contemporary Indonesian Art''<ref>{{cite web|title=#Perempuan 2021 – Contemporary Indonesian Art|url=https://www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/exhibitions/perempuan-2021-contemporary-indonesian-art|access-date=2021-09-18|website=www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> | |||
*2021, 19 March—2 May: Harry Nankin – ''The Fall,'' Orbit Gallery | |||
*2021, 4 February—7 March: ] – ''here now,'' Orbit Gallery | |||
* 2021–2022, 19 March–17 February: '']: In Conversation with the Collection''<ref>{{cite web|title=Melinda Harper: In Conversation with the Collection|url=https://www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au/exhibitions/melinda-harper-in-conversation-with-the-collection|access-date=2021-09-18|website=www.castlemaineartmuseum.org.au|language=en}}</ref> | |||
*2021, 6 May—30 May: Minaal Lawn – ''173 Forms,'' Orbit Gallery | |||
*2021, 10 June—4 July: ''David Frazer – Wood Engravings'', Orbit Gallery | |||
*2021, 8 July—22 August: Orbit: Tashara Roberts – ''Your Skin My Skin,'' Orbit Gallery | |||
*2021/22, 13 November-28 February: ''2021 Experimental Print Prize'' | |||
*2022, 12 March—13 June: ''Len Fox Painting Prize 2022''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Greg Creek Awarded 2022 Len Fox Painting Prize |url=https://www.sarahscoutpresents.com/news/40-greg-creek-awarded-2022-len-fox-painting-prize-castlemaine-art-museum/ |access-date=2022-09-16 |website=Sarah Scout Presents |language=en}}</ref> | |||
*2022–2023 23 June—26 February: ''Reflections on the Castlemaine Art Museum Collection''<ref>{{Cite news |last=Dennis |first=Lisa |date=August 2022 |title=Dan visits CAM |work=The Midland Express |location=Kyneton, Victoria |url=https://midlandexpress.com.au/latest-news/featured/2022/08/03/premier-tours-castlemaine-art-museum-ahead-of-upgrade/}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Dennis |first=Lisa |date=29 July 2022 |title=Mount Alexander LIVING: What’s on. CAM celebrates |pages=9,11 |work=Castlemaine Mail |location=Castlemaine, Victoria}}</ref> | |||
*2022–2023, 5 March–5 March: ''There is a certain slant of light: works from the Collection''<ref>{{Cite news |date=27 May 2022 |title=Review: There is a Certain Slant of Light |work=The Australian}}</ref> | |||
==Publications== | ==Publications== | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum | publication-date=1953 | publisher=The Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/5753972 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | * {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum | publication-date=1953 | publisher=The Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/5753972 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |
* {{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|title=An exhibition of fifty chairs of the 19th and early 20th centuries: catalogue|date=1972|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=220905271}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | date=1973 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/192683960 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | * {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | date=1973 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/192683960 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |
* {{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|title=A. E. Newbury: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 16th Oct. – 28th Nov., 1976|date=1976|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=739118794}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Bale, A. M. E. (Alice Marian Ellen) | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=A.M.E. Bale: Castlemaine Art Gallery, 11th September-30th October, 1977 | date=1977 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18779540 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | * {{Citation | author1=Bale, A. M. E. (Alice Marian Ellen) | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=A.M.E. Bale: Castlemaine Art Gallery, 11th September-30th October, 1977 | date=1977 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18779540 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Clark|first1=Marc |
* {{Cite book|last1=Clark|first1=Marc|title=Marc Clark: sculptures 1968–78|last2=Victorian College of the Arts|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1978|publisher=Warrnambool Art Gallery|location=Warrnambool, Vic.|oclc=223143468}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Newell|first1=Lucy |
* {{Cite book|last1=Newell|first1=Lucy|title=The Newell family|date=1978|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine|oclc=221717594}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Ellis|first1=Stanley J |
* {{Cite book|last1=Ellis|first1=Stanley J.|title=The school of Stanley J. Ellis: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 5th May – 3rd June, 1979|date=1979|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=1058493426}} | ||
* {{Cite book |
* {{Cite book|title=Notes, nocturnes & harmonies|date=1980|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery|oclc=222029063}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Two centuries of Australian bird illustrations | date=1981 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18071328 | access-date=23 September 2021}} | * {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Two centuries of Australian bird illustrations | date=1981 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18071328 | access-date=23 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Aspects of Castlemaine, 1854-1980: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 25th. October – 23rd. November | date=1981 | publisher=the Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/10244917 | access-date=23 September 2021}} | * {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Aspects of Castlemaine, 1854-1980: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 25th. October – 23rd. November | date=1981 | publisher=the Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/10244917 | access-date=23 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter |
* {{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter|title=E. Phillips Fox & Ethel Carrick: an exhibition of impressionist paintings|date=1982|publisher=publisher not identified|oclc=222032057}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Hurry, Polly | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=McClelland Gallery | title=Polly Hurry, 1883-1963: a retrospective | date=1983 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/21437337 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | * {{Citation | author1=Hurry, Polly | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=McClelland Gallery | title=Polly Hurry, 1883-1963: a retrospective | date=1983 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/21437337 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter |
* {{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter|title=R. W. Sturgess, water-colourist, 1892–1932|date=1986|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Beth Sinclair|isbn=0-9598066-3-6|location=|oclc=21594920}}<ref>{{Cite news|last=Hince|first=Kenneth|date=25 October 1986|title=The friendly festival|page=22|newspaper=]|location=Melbourne}}</ref> | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Evergood, Miles | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=Jewish Museum of Australia | author4=Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House) | title=Miles Evergood, 1871-1939: retrospective |date=1988 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/6857554 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | * {{Citation | author1=Evergood, Miles | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=Jewish Museum of Australia | author4=Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House) | title=Miles Evergood, 1871-1939: retrospective |date=1988 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/6857554 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |
* {{Cite book|last1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|title=Seventy-five years: 1913–1988|last2=Perry|first2=Peter|last3=Sinclair|first3=Beth|date=1988|publisher=The Gallery|isbn=978-0-9598066-4-9|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=222849742}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Leason|first1=Percy |
* {{Cite book|last1=Leason|first1=Percy|title=Percy Leason, 1889–1959: centenary exhibition|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=1989|publisher=The Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=22859102}} | ||
* {{Cite book |
* {{Cite book|title=Pubs and breweries of Castlemaine and district|date=1989|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=221511151}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Craig|first1=Sybil |
* {{Cite book|last1=Craig|first1=Sybil|title=The Sybil Craig Bequest: 13 July – 5 August, 1990|date=1990|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=222843220}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Zilles|first=Lauretta |
* {{Cite book|last=Zilles|first=Lauretta|title=Maladies, medicos & miracle cures: a guide to the history of medicine in Castlemaine and district from 1851 – c.1950|date=1991|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=221334617}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Lindsay|first=Arthur J |
* {{Cite book|last=Lindsay|first=Arthur J.|title=Arthur J. Lindsay, 1912–1990: retrospective.|date=1991|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=221782696}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=A catalogue of Australian ceramics | date=1991 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9598066-5-6}} | * {{Citation | author1=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=A catalogue of Australian ceramics | date=1991 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9598066-5-6}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Herbert|first1=Harold B.|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/21263383|title=Harold B. Herbert watercolours, 31 October – 6 December, 1992|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|year=1992|access-date=22 September 2021}} | * {{Cite book|last1=Herbert|first1=Harold B.|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/21263383|title=Harold B. Herbert watercolours, 31 October – 6 December, 1992|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum|year=1992|access-date=22 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Stavrianos|first=Wendy |
* {{Cite book|last=Stavrianos|first=Wendy|title=Wendy Stavrianos: mantles of darkness.|date=1994|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|oclc=222005695}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Bush, Charles | author2=Davies, June | author3=Palmer, Jock | author4=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Charles Bush: self-portraits 1936–1986: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 3 September-2 October 1994 | date=1994 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-646-19872-9}} | * {{Citation | author1=Bush, Charles | author2=Davies, June | author3=Palmer, Jock | author4=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Charles Bush: self-portraits 1936–1986: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 3 September-2 October 1994 | date=1994 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-646-19872-9}} | ||
* {{Cite book |
* {{Cite book|title=Flynn silver, past and present: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 6 March – 10 April 1994|date=1994|publisher=Richard Cambridge Printers|location=Bendigo, Vic.|oclc=221782605}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Dent|first=John |
* {{Cite book|last=Dent|first=John|title=John Dent: retrospective 1973–1993: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 29 October – 4 December, 1994|date=1994|publisher=The Gallery|others=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=0-646-21117-X|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=35831072}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=McKay, Kirsten | author2=McKay, Kirsten | author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Women printmakers 1910-1940: in the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | date=1995 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-646-23161-7}} | * {{Citation | author1=McKay, Kirsten | author2=McKay, Kirsten | author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Women printmakers 1910-1940: in the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | date=1995 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-646-23161-7}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Murphy|first1=Phyllis |
* {{Cite book|last1=Murphy|first1=Phyllis|title=Historic wallpapers in Australia, 1850–1920|date=1996|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9598066-6-3|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=38757268}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter W. |
* {{Cite book|last=Perry|first=Peter W.|title=Max Meldrum & associates: their art, lives and influences|date=1996|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=John R. Perry, Max Meldrum|isbn=0-9598066-7-9|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=38415991}}<ref>{{Cite news|last=Rooney|first=Robert|date=4 April 1997|title=Max Meldrum and Associates|page=12|work=The Australian|location=Australia}}</ref> | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Armstrong, Ian | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Ian Armstrong |
* {{Citation | author1=Armstrong, Ian | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | title=Ian Armstrong retrospective 1941-1998 | date=1999 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9587299-1-8}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |
* {{Cite book|last=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|title=Fraser Fair: a retrospective|date=2001|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Peter Perry|isbn=0-9587299-3-X|location=Castlemaine|oclc=935586136}} | ||
* {{Cite book |
* {{Cite book|title=Murray Griffin – the journey: a retrospective 1922–1980; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 27. May to 1. July 2001; Eastgate Gallery, Hawthorn, Victoria, 25. July to 24. August 2001|date=2001|editor-last=Griffin|editor-first=Murray|location=Castlemaine|oclc=314370902}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Lewis|first=Martin |
* {{Cite book|last=Lewis|first=Martin|title=Martin Lewis: stepping into the light|date=2002|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Kirsten McKay|isbn=0-9587299-4-8|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=155794636}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Davies|first1=June |
* {{Cite book|last1=Davies|first1=June|title=A tribute to June Davies|date=2002|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9587299-5-6|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=225428434}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Stoneman, Stuart R., 1927-2002, (collector.) |
* {{Citation | author1=Stoneman, Stuart R.<!--, 1927-2002, (collector.) -->| title=Highlights from the Stuart R. Stoneman art collection | date=2003 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/9433149 | access-date=22 September 2021}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Colquhoun|first1=A |
* {{Cite book|last1=Colquhoun|first1=A.|title=Alexander Colquhoun: 1862–1941: artist and critic|date=2004|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9587299-8-7|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=62545517}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Geelong Art Gallery | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House) | author4=Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery | title=Venezia Australis: Australian artists in Venice, 1900-2000: a touring exhibition of oils watercolours, prints, drawings and photographs | date=2005 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9757388-0-1}} | * {{Citation | author1=Geelong Art Gallery | author2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | author3=Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House) | author4=Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery | title=Venezia Australis: Australian artists in Venice, 1900-2000: a touring exhibition of oils watercolours, prints, drawings and photographs | date=2005 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9757388-0-1}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Craig|first=Sybil |
* {{Cite book|last=Craig|first=Sybil|title=Sybil Craig 1901–89: modernist painter|date=2006|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|others=Kirsten McKay, Geelong Gallery, Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery|isbn=0-9757388-1-X|location=Castlemaine|oclc=225240436}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Braund|first1=Dorothy |
* {{Cite book|last1=Braund|first1=Dorothy|title=Dorothy Braund: retrospective|last2=A'Beckett|first2=Jan|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|last4=Hamilton Art Gallery (Vic.)|date=2006|isbn=978-0-9757388-2-5|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=225138812}} | ||
* {{Cite book | |
* {{Cite book |last1=Baldessin |first1=George |last2=Turner |first2=Dick |author3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |title=European sensibilities: George Baldessin and his circle: printmaking in Melbourne during the 1960s and 1970s |publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-9757388-4-9 |location=Castlemaine, Vic. |language=en |oclc=225428312}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Kovacic|first=Katherine |
* {{Cite book|last=Kovacic|first=Katherine|title=The art of the dog|date=2007|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9757388-3-2|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=225438828}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Klein|first1=Deborah |
* {{Cite book|last1=Klein|first1=Deborah|title=Deborah Klein: out of the past 1995–2007|last2=Soumilas|first2=Diane|date=2008|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=298663997}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Ramsay|first1=Donald |
* {{Cite book|last1=Ramsay|first1=Donald|title=Donald Ramsay: artist in a landscape|date=2008|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery|isbn=978-0-9757388-8-7|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=277184336}} | ||
* {{Cite book | |
* {{Cite book |last1=Courier |first1=Jack |title=Jack Courier (1915-2007) : lithographs |last2=Stocky |first2=Catherine |last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |edition=Limited (500 copies) |location=Castlemaine |language=en |oclc=653970903}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Chippindall|first1=Tom |
* {{Cite book|last1=Chippindall|first1=Tom|title=Associates of Rupert Bunny|date=2010|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9757388-9-4|location=Castlemaine|oclc=682514952}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Edwards|first1=Annette |
* {{Cite book|last1=Edwards|first1=Annette|title=Annette Edwards: ... a lifetime of mark making|date=2010|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9807831-2-4|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=780532076}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Kovacic|first1=Katherine |
* {{Cite book|last1=Kovacic|first1=Katherine|title=Archie & Amalie Colquhoun|date=2010|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9807831-0-0|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=608149359}} | ||
* {{Citation | author1=Perry, Peter W. | author2=McKay, Kirsten | title=Scottish painters in Australia | date=2011 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9807831-3-1 }} | * {{Citation | author1=Perry, Peter W. | author2=McKay, Kirsten | title=Scottish painters in Australia | date=2011 | publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum | isbn=978-0-9807831-3-1 }} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Shaw|first1=Peggy |
* {{Cite book|last1=Shaw|first1=Peggy|title=Peggy Shaw: a retrospective|last2=McKay|first2=Kirsten|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2011|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |isbn=978-0-9807831-4-8|oclc=822892917}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Perry|first1=Peter |
* {{Cite book|last1=Perry|first1=Peter|title=A. M. E. Bale: her art and life|last2=Bale|first2=A. M. E.|date=2011|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9757388-7-0|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=793570972}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Moncrieff|first1=Greg |
* {{Cite book|last1=Moncrieff|first1=Greg|title=Greg Moncrieff: now and then – : a survey exhibition of selected paintings, screen prints and mixed media works from 1974 to the present|date=2011|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine|oclc=760034537}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Crichton|first1=Richard |
* {{Cite book|last1=Crichton|first1=Richard|title=Richard Crichton: profile selected works: July 1 – 29, 2012|date=2012|publisher=Eastgate & Holst; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-646-58042-5|location=Hawthorne, Vic.; Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=806368976}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=McKay|first=Kirsten |
* {{Cite book|last=McKay|first=Kirsten|title=Shimmering light: Dora Meeson and the Thames|date=2013|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |isbn=978-0-9807831-5-5|oclc=873675981}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Singleton|first=Barry |
* {{Cite book|last=Singleton|first=Barry|title=A retrospective exhibition of ceramics from 1970-2013 by Barry Singleton: Castlemaine Art Gallery. 16.03.2013 – 26.05.2013|date=2013|others=Ray Hearn, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9807831-6-2|location=Castlemaine|oclc=1004506372}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Amor|first1=Rick |
* {{Cite book|last1=Amor|first1=Rick|title=Rick Amor: from study to painting: 1 June – 28 July 2013|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2013|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum |isbn=978-0-9807831-8-6|oclc=903203825}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Meyer|first1=Bill |
* {{Cite book|last1=Meyer|first1=Bill|title=Nurturing the place|last2=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2014|publisher=Bill Meyer |isbn=978-0-9593138-0-2|oclc=897490496}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last=Middlemost|first=Thomas |
* {{Cite book|last=Middlemost|first=Thomas|title=Inking up: a group exhibition of prints by Clayton Tremlett (curator), Rona Green and Deborah Klein|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2015|oclc=927074958}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Riley|first1=Ginger |
* {{Cite book|last1=Riley|first1=Ginger|title=Ginger Riley: the boss of colour|last2=Alves|first2=Tim|date=2015|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=920461202}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Pilgrim|first1=Catherine |
* {{Cite book|last1=Pilgrim|first1=Catherine|title=Making history: hidden world of the Leviny women|last2=McNeil|first2=Peter|date=2015|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=1158894182}} | ||
* {{Cite book |
* {{Cite book|title=Contemporary Australian Silver & Metalwork Award 2015|date=2015|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum; Buda Historic Home and Garden Inc|isbn=978-0-9924753-2-1|location=Castlemaine, Vic.|oclc=938380301}} | ||
* {{Cite book |
* {{Cite book|title=Bill Henson landscapes|date=2016|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery &|isbn=978-0-9924753-3-8|location=Place of publication not identified|oclc=948632099}} | ||
* {{Cite book |
* {{Cite book|title=Clayton Tremlett: beard and influence|date=2016|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|isbn=978-0-9587299-0-1|location=Castlemaine|oclc=954226415}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Nixon|first1=John |
* {{Cite book|last1=Nixon|first1=John|title=John Nixon: experimental painting workshop|last2=Cox|first2=Emma|last3=Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum|date=2017|publisher=Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum |isbn=978-0-9598066-1-8|oclc=982656702}} | ||
* {{Citation |author1=Castlemaine Art Museum, (Compiled by) |title=2021 Experimental Print Prize : Catalogue for the exhibition held at Castlemaine Art Museum 20 November 2021 |
* {{Citation |author1=Castlemaine Art Museum, (Compiled by) |title=2021 Experimental Print Prize : Catalogue for the exhibition held at Castlemaine Art Museum 20 November 2021 – 28 February 2022. |publication-date=2021 |publisher=Castlemaine Art Museum |isbn=9780645128437}} | ||
* {{Cite book |author1=Tyndall |first=Peter |title=Peter Tyndall : Sinclair+gallery. Catalogue for Peter Tyndall's exhibition 'SINCLAIR+GALLERY', Castlemaine Art Museum 2021-2022. |location=Castlemaine |publication-date=2021 |publisher=Castlemaine Art Museum |year=2021 |isbn=9780645128413}} | * {{Cite book |author1=Tyndall |first=Peter |title=Peter Tyndall : Sinclair+gallery. Catalogue for Peter Tyndall's exhibition 'SINCLAIR+GALLERY', Castlemaine Art Museum 2021-2022. |location=Castlemaine |publication-date=2021 |publisher=Castlemaine Art Museum |year=2021 |isbn=9780645128413}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
{{coord|display=title|-37.0647|144.2138|type:landmark_region:AU}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | {{Authority control}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:39, 17 December 2024
Art gallery and museum in Victoria, Australia
1931 Art Deco facade of the Castlemaine Art Museum photographed in 2017 | |
CastlemaineLocation within Victoria | |
Former name | Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum |
---|---|
Established | 9 July 1913 (1913-07-09) |
Location | 12–14 Lyttleton Street, Castlemaine |
Coordinates | 37°03′53″S 144°12′50″E / 37.0647°S 144.2138°E / -37.0647; 144.2138 |
Type | Art gallery and historical museum |
Accreditation | Australian Museums and Galleries Association |
Key holdings | Frederick McCubbin, Heath Paddock, Hawthorn 1886 & Golden Sunlight 1914; Tom Roberts, Reconciliation 1886-87; E. Phillips Fox, Bathing Hour c.1909; Dora Meeson, In a Chelsea Garden 1913; Penleigh Boyd, Winter Calm, Frankston 1920; Russell Drysdale, Desolation 1945 |
Collections | Tonal Realism; Bookplates; Black and White Illustration; Women Artists; Modernist Prints; Castlemaine History, Places and People |
Collection size | 2,000+ artworks and 4000+ historical artefacts |
Visitors | 5,713 (2021–2022) |
Founder | Anna Mary Winifred Brotherton (1874–1956) |
Executive director | Naomi Cass |
Director | Naomi Cass |
President | Craig Mutton |
CEO | Sarina Meuleman |
Chairperson | Craig Mutton |
Curator | Livia Kenney, Jenny Long |
Architect | Percy Meldrum |
Historian | Peter Perry, David J. Golightly |
Owner | Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum Trust |
Employees | 1 full-time, 3 part-time, 50 volunteers |
Public transit access | VLine Melbourne–Bendigo–Swan Hill Line, Castlemaine Railway Station, 300m |
Website | https://castlemaineartmuseum.org.au |
Castlemaine Art Museum is an art gallery and museum in Castlemaine, Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1913, it is housed in a purpose-built Art Deco building, completed in 1931 and heritage-listed by the National Trust. Its collection concentrates on Australian art and the museum houses historical artefacts and displays drawn from the local district.
The museum is governed by private trustees and managed by a board elected by subscribers. It is funded by state and local governments with additional support from benefactors, local families, artists and patrons. Its trustees also oversee the management of Buda, a heritage-listed villa and garden 1.3 km adjacent to the museum, which houses its own collection of art and artefacts associated with the Leviny family, and is also open to the public for exhibitions, events displays and garden tours.
History
The founding of Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum was preceded by four other public regional galleries in the state of Victoria: Ballarat in 1884, Warrnambool in 1886, Bendigo in 1887 and Geelong in 1900, but its significance, by comparison, was that it was in a small town, not a regional city like its forebears.
Cultural precedents were the 1855 Castlemaine Mechanics Institute which included a library; the School of Mines whose art teacher C. Steiner in 1908 taught engineering, surveying, architecture and fine art students; and numbers of artists, including S. T. Gill, Samuel Calvert, George French Angas, and early photographers Antoine Fauchery and Richard Daintree, had visited to document the swarming goldfields.
Castlemaine Past and Present
The Castlemaine Progress Association's display of items of a 'novel and interesting nature', Castlemaine Past and Present, the town's first major exhibition, running 18–20 August 1910, celebrated the commercial, civic and cultural achievements of the town with "a collection of geological specimens and curios from the Government collection," photographs of historical interest, maps, furniture, applied art, books and artefacts, as well as landscapes by local artists intended to "popularise our town as a resort for artists and painters".
The committee included a "special feature" of "modern art, the only stipulation being that works of art, as well as all other exhibits, must relate in some way to Castlemaine or its district," and called for "historical curios, weapons, maps, manuscripts, medals, trophies, or any other article of local significance". An early supporter was Elioth Gruner. The exhibition thus established the principle of collecting of Australian art and of looking locally, for works connected to Castlemaine in some aspect, in contrast to a policy of concentrating on British and European art that was pursued by most Australian galleries of the period, in particular the National Gallery of Victoria purchases in Europe by L. Bernard Hall through the Felton Bequest.
Public meeting
Two years later, in October 1912, the first solo exhibition of paintings by a local resident, Elsie Barlow, wife of a Castlemaine police magistrate, was held in the reading room of the Mechanics Institute, raising hopes "that the Castlemaine public will have the same opportunity in this matter as is afforded to the Melbourne public, which now-a-days is rarely without an Art Exhibition".
Subsequently, a meeting at Barlow's Hunter Street home on 9 July 1913 proposed the creation of a permanent gallery for Castlemaine and approached the Mayor to "affirm the advisability of establishing a Museum and Art Gallery in Castlemaine" on 30 July at a public meeting of Mayors and Councillors from Chewton, Maldon, Metcalfe, Newstead and Mount Alexander with Col. Davies, Secretary of the Bendigo Art Gallery, Mr A T Woodward Director of the Bendigo School of Arts, Mr Bernard Hall, Director of the National Gallery of Victoria, Trustees of the National Gallery and Museum and the Old Pioneers Association, and with support of the local High School committee.
Winifred Brotherton, who took the minutes, emphasised the imperative of establishing a museum in which to preserve the heritage of the town, and the museum was later to be given her name in her honour.
Colonel Davis spoke from the experience of Bendigo Art Gallery where he was secretary, advising not to expect government funds such as they had received as the grant was only £2,000 to be divided amongst all the arts organisations, but to secure donations of pictures, be prepared to go into debt, and make use of loans from the National Gallery of Victoria. The housing of the gallery was considered and proposals included the cooking classroom of the Technical High School, the Market Building, the Town Hall, and the School of Mines.
Realisation
The gallery became a reality when Bertha Leviny of Buda homestead provided use of a room in a shop in Lyttleton St. for one year free of charge, and Bendigo Art Gallery offered a loan of paintings. A loan exhibition of 30 works in the Stock Exchange Room of the Town Hall launched the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum on 24 October 1913. Significant exhibitors who made donations of their work included Harold Herbert and Jessie Traill.
When the gallery moved into the room offered by Leviny in Lyttleton St., more donations were made. Bertha Merfield made generous loans of works from her collection to its inaugural exhibition, including paintings by Tudor St George Tucker, Alexander Colquhoun, George Clausen, Frederick McCubbin and Blamire Young. joined by direct loans by artists, and by the National Gallery of Victoria which contributed Franz Courtens' Morning, David Wynfield's Death of the Duke of Buckingham, Robert Dowling's Sheikh and His Son Entering Cairo; Hermann Eschke's Freshwater Bay, Isle of Wight; Cave Thomas' Canute Listening to the Monks at Ely; and Louis Buvelot's Summer afternoon, Templestowe.
The 1914 annual report recorded 30 memberships and a collection of 23 pictures with others on loan and a balance of £75. Initial opening hours in 1914 were daily from 3 to 5 p.m., and Wednesday and Saturday evenings from 7.30 to 9.30, changed later to weekdays 10 am to 12 pm and 2 to 5 pm, and Sundays 2 to 5 pm.
The next home of the gallery and museum, by June 1915, was in the rooms above the Castlemaine Post Office which it rented for £1 per annum, and where it remained until 1931 in three well-lit rooms: two small ones, and one measuring 9 by 5.5 metres (30 by 18 ft) which served as the main gallery. Nevertheless, the Victorian Government rejected their grant application of 1915 because the Gallery's tenure of its premises was not secure. Electric lighting was added in 1927.
The facility, proved popular, with attendances rising from 800 in 1920 to 3,600 in 1923. Many in 1928 came for a series of talks by John Shirlow intended to boost interest in the Gallery. Artists too were noticing it, as The Age reported in November 1923;
'Tis said that the reputation of this gallery is such that every artist of note throughout Australia has heard of the little gallery which so cherishes and encourages the work of Australian men and women that a renaissance of effort has been brought about among Australian painters.
The insurance value of the collection rose in 1925 to £2,000, with a further 37 paintings gifted in 1926 by, among others, Arthur Streeton, George Coates, Dora Meeson, Jo Sweatman, and A.M.E. Bale, etchings by Martin Lewis, and purchases including The Dark Horse by George W. Lambert, and The Coming Storm by Blamire Young, as reported by Lieut. Col. Francis S. Newell, then President of the Castlemaine Art Gallery in Art in Australia of December 1926. Newell also commented on attendance by 5,248 visitors; "When it is remembered that the population of this town is about 7,000, the progress of this gallery is remarkable. The committee has now purchased a site for a new building, but more funds are needed before the project can be carried out."
Building
Since 17 November 1983 Castlemaine Art Museum is classified by The National Trust (revised 3 August 1998), which notes its significance as;
… an exceptional building in its intent and execution and … historically important as one of the earliest examples of the "modern movement" in provincial Victoria.
A building fund was set up in 1923 using a donation of £100 by Sir John and Lady Higgins. A site in Templeton Street was purchased for £1200 but later sold to acquire the present block in Lyttleton Street in 1927 for about £300. That year in a visit to Castlemaine the Hon George Prendergast enabled a deputation to seek a grant to augment the building fund, to which he offered £1000 on the basis of £1 for every £2 raised locally. Walter J. Whitchell promised £500 for the building fund should the balance be found when the fund held only £760. With the building costed at £3,500, an appeal for funds from the public was launched. Despite the onset of the Depression, £3,250 was raised in only six weeks from private individuals and companies the Bank of Australasia, Ball & Welch and Bryant & May, augmented by the promised State government grant of £1,000, and afterward a further £500. With furnishings, the total cost was £4,132.
Architect Percy Meldrum, who trained in the United States presented to a reluctant management committee a "modern and artistic" design for the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (as it was then named) in an American Art-deco style. The main gallery walls and those of both additional gallery spaces were naturally and indirectly lit from the concealed windows of a saw-tooth roof above suspended ceilings.
The entry steps are Harcourt granite, the parapet of Malmsbury bluestone, and Barker's Creek slate pave the forecourt, on which rest two cuboid planters decorated with panels showing native animals in a sympathetic style by textile artist and sculptor Michael O’Connell who also provided planters and ornaments to Buda's garden.
A "Jazz" style frieze that combines Egyptian and Central American motifs and fluting decorates the parapet, front wall and tympanum over the central front door, itself recessed behind ornate wrought-iron grille gates. The symmetrical facade includes a bas-relief in artificial stone featuring a female figure that symbolises Castlemaine surrounded, on the right, by two attendant gold-miners of the past, and artist and sculptor at left. It was designed and carved by Orlando H. Dutton (1894-1962), an English-born artist working in Australia after 1920.
Builder Frank Pollard completed construction between June 1930 and April 1931 for the Gallery and Museum's official opening, free of debt, It consisted of a main gallery 19.5 by 7.3 metres (64 by 24 ft) for the display of oil paintings, behind two smaller galleries for prints and water-colours flanking the entry, each approximately 7 by 6 metres (23 by 20 ft) and with the museum in the basement with storerooms. The opening was held on the 18th of that month by the Governor of Victoria Lord Somers at a ceremony conducted in front of a crowd at the entrance to the Gallery that flowed across the street. It was reported as far away as Canada that;
In opening the art gallery, in the presence of a very large gathering, Lord Somers said that he had been amazed at seeing a gallery and a collection so fine. He did not suppose that a gallery of those dimensions would be found in a town of that size anywhere else in the British Dominions. Extraordinary enthusiasm must have been shown to make the gallery possible.
Visitor numbers during 1933 increased to 10,000.
P. S. Markham and Professor Henry C. Richards, touring Australia on behalf of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, reported that the Gallery was "a credit to all concerned ... After Port Sunlight, where Lord Lever's art collection is housed, this small town has probably a better art gallery than any comparable town in the British Empire."
Additions
By 1938 space proved insufficient for special exhibitions and to accommodate the program of public galleries lending artworks and circulating exhibitions amongst them. At Castlemaine that necessitated dismounting the existing collection and storing while a temporary exhibition was on display. The burgeoning collection posed storage problems; in 1942 Sir John Higgins' bequest of his pictures, china, glassware and furniture, could not be housed and the committee was forced to make plans for extensions to be part-funded by his sister Catherine's bequest of £8,300. However, it was not spent due to war and post-war impediments to building.
1960
Impetus for a new extension did not gather until 1956, when the possibility of an internal paved courtyard for sculpture was considered. But only in 1959 was a decision reached to complete the project though the cost had risen to £16,000, beyond the means of the Gallery. The Bolte ministry promised a subsidy on a pound for pound basis and in late 1960 the adjacent Presbyterian Church donated a strip of land for driveway access to the rear of the building, enabling work to commence. The resulting Higgins Gallery was opened on 23 September 1961, by Dr Leonard Cox, Chairman of Trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria, and it included storerooms, work areas, and shelving and sliding racks for storage of artworks.
1973
A third space for special and temporary exhibitions was funded by a gift of $12,500 from the Stoneman Foundation after which it is named, and a State Government grant of $26,000 and was opened by Premier Rupert Hamer on 14 September 1973, on the occasion of the Gallery's sixtieth anniversary.
1987
Renovations and additions completed since include a storeroom and workspace areas, added in 1987 and named the A & B Sinclair Building Extensions, after inaugural Director Beth Sinclair and her husband, and were opened by the Hon Race Matthews MLA, Minister for the Arts. This renovation included an extension to the Museum below, named the Percy Chaster Building for his bequest to the gallery.
2000
Grants from the Department of Communication, Technology and the Arts were distributed by the Federal government for the Centenary of Federation in 1999, denounced by some commentators as pork-barrelling, from which Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum received $2,000,000 for upgrades and redevelopment by architect Allom Lovell. The 1973 addition at the rear of the building was gutted and turned into the temporary exhibitions gallery with international museum standard climate and lighting controls, and security systems enabling Castlemaine to borrow major national and international works and travelling exhibitions. The high vaulted ceiling naturally lit via UV-filtered skylights has a hidden shutter system to permit blacking out for exhibitions that require artificial lighting only. An artificially lit small prints and drawings gallery is, since 2020, set aside for CAM's Orbit program; a series of exhibitions by artists who live and work in Central Victoria. Other works included a conservation studio for the treatment and restoration of works of art and historical documents, renovation of the Gallery and Museum shop, and a substantial mezzanine at the rear of the building for new offices, and a research library, the latter named after A. G. Lloyd-Stephenson whose bequest added substantially to its collection of art books. During these year-long renovations, the Gallery and Museum were temporarily relocated to the Gallery's old quarters above the Post Office. Completed in late 2000, the extensions were opened on 6 October by the Hon Peter McGauran, Federal Minister for the Arts and Centenary of Federation.
Forming the collection
Policy
While its building was assertively Modern, attitudes prevailing during the 1930s and 1940s meant that the collection of works within remained conservative. One artist, and one of the wealthiest, associated with the Gallery, A.M.E. Bale was vehement in her distaste for anything 'modern,' echoing the views of then National Gallery of Victoria director James Stuart MacDonald who, of the 1939 Herald exhibition of contemporary French and English painting sponsored by Sir Keith Murdoch, proclaimed, 'They are exceedingly wretched paintings ... putrid meat ... the product of degenerates and perverts ... filth'. A demonstration of these conservative values was the Gallery's 1933 commission to have painter W B Mclnnes travel to England to paint portraits of the Duke and Duchess of York (later King George VI). Numbers of 20th-century artists represented were members of the conservative, anti-modernist Australian Academy of Art (1937–1946), while others joined its rival the Contemporary Art Society.
It was not until 1946 with the purchase for 175 guineas (A$13,000 in 2020) of Desolation, painted the same year by Russell Drysdale, a dark expressionist work, that this attitude changed. When added to existing holdings of 105 oils, 57 water colours and 76 etchings, drawings and prints, the purchase was welcomed by Clive Turnbull, since 1942 the Murdoch-appointed art critic at the Herald, who considered the cost ...
... a good price by any Australian standards. The gallery's committee has shown its enterprlse and the courage of its convictions in buying what ranks as a "modern" work. "Desolation," as this large oil is called, is one of the series painted by Russell Drysdale — in some peoples' view the most significant of all contemporary Australian artists — after his visit to the erosion country of New South Wales last year. In rich, dark colors, it is typical and good Drysdale of this period. The foreground is dominated by a huge twisted tree form. A picture of the power and quality of this one obviously presents considerable difficulties in hanging in a small gallery it is destructive of neighboring works which are merely pretty or superficially representational, and one hardly supposes that the placing of it will be entirely satisfactory until there are enough works of kindred character and quality to keep it company Castlemaine is to be congratulated on having obtalned this picture.
Even so, the purchase coincided with that of Rupert Bunny's semi-allegorical 1932 Stepping Stones, and the policy remained still to prefer figurative studies, landscape and portraiture, but to permit semi-abstract works.
Funding
Lack of funds has historically handicapped the Gallery's acquisitions of significant works of art. After WWI it survived on subscribers, door takings and a government grant of £20 per annum, and finances were particularly strained when it had found a permanent home during a period coinciding with the Great Depression, when all government funding was withdrawn until 1935. Nevertheless, bequests were forthcoming, such as that for the portrait of Edna Thomas, by John Longstaff, funded from the will of F. McKillop, editor of the Castlemaine Mail. It relied also on direct donations of works, such as Billy McInnes's large canvas Ploughing and etchings by Norman Lindsay given by Sir Baldwin Spencer, and Dame Nellie Melba's gifts of a portrait of her father David Mitchell by Hugh Ramsey and Frederick McCubbin's Golden Sunlight. Locals contributed to special subscription funds in order to secure desirable works unlikely to be donated, as they did in 1925 for Charles Wheeler's The Last Ray.
Other works have been acquired by exchange; for example The Australian War Memorial's provision of duplicates of two Will Dyson lithographs in return for an Eric Kennington portrait of Hughie Edwards, the highly decorated Second World War airman. The Australian Government's Taxation Incentives for the Arts Scheme provided for other donations.
In 1916 an annual state government grant of a mere £30 ($2,836.00 value in 2020) was " ... to be spent on pictures, and pictures only". By 1937 this had been raised to £100, with the municipality contributing only £6.
In 1980, former Director Perry wrote in complaint to James Mollison of the National Gallery of Australia objecting to one of its purchases at auction when both galleries were the only bidders beyond $11,000 for Margaret Preston's 1925 Still Life, which went to Canberra for a record price of $17,000. Perry felt the richer rational gallery should have withdrawn to let the work through to a less prosperous smaller institution.
Government funding tended to be piecemeal; deputations to MPs during the war years and another during the Depression received minor dispensation, $319 from the Australia Council in 1985 was given for "purchase of crafts for public display and permanent collection", and in 1987 Minister for the Arts, Race Mathews, announced minor capital grants including $60,000 approved to enable the Castlemaine Art Gallery to extend its storage space. The Gallery and Museum received $2,325 in 1988, and then two years later a further $6,000, from the Australia Council for the Arts Visual Arts/Crafts Board for collections development, and in 1997, part of $2.5m through the state government's Victoria Organisations Funding program, shared with seven other arts institutions.
Collection
The Collections may be searched online.
Museum collection
The museum, housed in the basement, presents the history of Castlemaine and its region in objects, maps, models, diaoramas, photographs and prints, including a large group of hand-coloured lithographs from watercolours by S. T. Gill; pithy vignettes of life on the goldfields. Historical glassware and ceramics, much brought to Castlemaine by its European immigrants, extends from the Roman era. Local fauna is represented by taxidermy specimens. Items of Victorian-era fashion are also displayed, and locally-produced arts and crafts is represented in early-to-mid 20th-century enamelware and silver.
Gallery
The gallery has always specialised in Australian art as the gallery's constitution stipulated in 1913, emphasising "... the cultivation of a taste for the Fine Arts by the collection and exhibition of works of especially Australian Artists..." Accordingly, at its opening in 1931 it held 155 pictures, 26 added only the year prior, and the total predominantly Australian, and now the collection spans the periods Colonial, Impressionist, Early Twentieth Century Modernism, Mid-Century Modern, Postmodernism, and Contemporary in varieties of media.
Earlier artists include Louis Buvelot, Fred McCubbin, Tom Roberts, Arthur Streeton, Violet Teague, May Vale, Walter Withers, Ethel Spowers, David Davies, Rupert Bunny, Max Meldrum, Ethel Carrick, E. Phillips Fox, Jessie Traill, John Russell, Christian Waller, Hugh Ramsay, Clarice Beckett, A.M.E. Bale, Arthur Lindsay and John Longstaff.
Modernists include Margaret Preston, Clifford Last, Ola Cohn, Roland Wakelin, Joy Hester, Russell Drysdale, Judy Cassab, Fred Williams, Klytie Pate, John Brack, Albert Tucker, John Perceval, Clifton Pugh, Lloyd Rees, Danila Vassilieff, and Roger Kemp.
More contemporary artists include Rick Amor, Ray Crooke, Rona Green, Betty Kuntiwa Pumani, Peter Benjamin Graham, Fiona Orr, Robert Jacks, Jeffrey Smart, Diane Mantzaris, Ian Armstrong, Jenny Watson, and Brian Dunlop.
Indigenous art
First Nations art is progressively being transferred from the Museum to the walls and display cases of the Gallery, and its collection is being actively expanded. In 2019 Tiriki Onus, of Yorta Yorta and Dja Dja Wurrung heritage and University of Melbourne Associate Dean Indigenous Development and Head of the Wilin Centre for Indigenous Arts and Cultural Development, became the premier First Nations appointment to the CAM Board. The Art Museum's Strategic Plan released in 2019 and current until 2023 declares;
During the life of this Plan, CAM will consult with Traditional Owners towards increasing its engagement with and relevance for Traditional Owners and other Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists and audiences.
Portraits of Australian artists
Portraits of Australian artists by Australian photographers Max Dupain, David Moore, Richard Beck, Jack Cato, Pegg Clarke, Connie Christie, Sonia Payes, Michel Lawrence, Joyce Evans, Mina Moore, Jacqueline Mitelman and Olive Cotton and others form another specialist concentration in the collection initiated by previous Director Peter Perry.
Buda historic home
Separate from the Art Museum, but under the guardianship of the trustees of the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (CAGHM), Buda holds on display domestic items, decorative art, furnishings, artworks, books and personal effects of the Leviny family from the 1850s up until 1981, after Hilda Leviny's death, when the home and garden were opened to the public. Clothing and accessories, documents, correspondence, diaries and photographs preserve the family's history and the eras in which they lived.
Hungarian Ernest Leviny, a practising gold- and silversmith, arrived on the Castlemaine goldfields in 1853 and the collection of his work is notable. Arts and Crafts style articles of embroidery, woodcarving and metalwork on display throughout the house and garden were produced by the Leviny daughters.
Also in the Buda collection are original artworks by mostly early twentieth century Australian artists including William Blamire-Young, Margaret Preston, Lionel Lindsay, Mildred Lovett, Ursula Ridley Walker and Alice Newell, studio pottery from the 1920s and 1930s by Klytie Pate, Philippa James and John Campbell, and hand-printed textiles of Melbourne artists Michael O’Connell, Frances Mary Burke and Lucy Newell.
Gallery of selected works
- Tom Roberts, Reconciliation, 1887
- John Ford Paterson, Fernshaw, 1896
- John Longstaff, Portrait of Edna Thomas, c. 1900
- E Phillips Fox, Bathing Hour, 1909
- Frederick McCubbin, Golden Sunlight, c. 1914
- Clarice Beckett, Wet Evening, 1927
Management
Volunteers administered and managed the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum for the first six decades of operations, opening Monday-Sunday 1-5pm and 2.30-5pm Sunday, but for a period having to close for lack of a caretaker. In 1962, the requirements of the Regional Galleries Association of Victoria necessitated the appointment of professional staff. This transition to being a managed cultural organisation was handled largely by Beth Sinclair (1919–2014) who, when she moved to Castlemaine in 1953, was introduced to the Gallery by her husband Alec who was on its committee. As reported in 1948 by Castlemaine Technical School lecturer in Art Colin Hunt to an audience at Horsham interested in repeating the success of Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum;
Women have been active in their support of the movement from its inception. They have contributed substantially to its success during the formative period, and are still active in committee. One holds the office of vice president and another leads the selection committee.
Using her background in secretarial work she volunteered to catalogue works and organize the office systems. In 1963 Castlemaine hosted a meeting of the Victorian Public Galleries Association, and in May, Sinclair was able to announce that Castlemaine had secured its rating as one of four 'A' class regional galleries and would retain its government funding.
Sinclair was appointed the Gallery's first Director in 1969, and was the first woman to be a public gallery director in Australia. She was rigorous in her management of the collection and the daily running of the Gallery, and established a network of individuals and organisations all over Australia for purchases and loans of artworks and a regular schedule of exhibitions. A significant acquisition of contemporary art, made in her first year as Director, was Fred Williams' Silver Landscape, painted 1968 In 2000, after her retirement in 1975 and in celebration of the extensive renovations Sinclair donated her personal collection of Australian art, including watercolour landscapes by Reginald Sturgess, works by Rick Amor, E. W. Syme and other painters, which was presented in the inaugural exhibition The Beth Sinclair Donation of Australian Art in the new temporary exhibitions gallery. The north-east corner gallery was named in her honour.
When Sinclair retired, and on her recommendation, after he and his twin brother John, who had been collecting since their teens, held a 1974 exhibition of their collection of Australian paintings, the committee appointed Peter Perry as the next Director, at 23 years old the youngest in Australia, into the role he was to serve for thirty-eight years before his retirement in 2014. He was assisted by the Gallery's first curator Lauretta Zilles from 1986 to 1995 and Kirsten McKay, 1995 to 2014. In interview, Perry acknowledged the importance of women in the history of the gallery and its collection;
"The gallery was founded by women in 1913. They were women artists here or wives of local dignitaries and their war cry was 'No art, no culture; no culture, no nation'. We also had the first woman director appointed to an Australian public gallery: Beth Sinclair. It's not that we've pushed women artists. We just have that tradition and it's always been there. I've tended since my earliest days in the '70s to support research of women artists."
Perry also introduced musical recitals in the Gallery, and talks with presenters including James Mollison, then director of the National Gallery of Australia; and Dr. Eric Westbrook, then Director, Ministry of the Arts, for a champagne brunch talk on appreciation and enjoyment of art. In 2022 Perry was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for his service in the museums and galleries field.
List of directors
- 1969 to 1975: Beth Sinclair
- 1975 to 2014: Peter Perry OAM
- 2014 to 2017 Jennifer Kalionis
- 2019: Naomi Cass (Director, CAM Renewal)
Renewal
In 2015, gallery members, for the purpose of accountability and compliance voted for the gallery to become incorporated. However a consequence was that income from the SR Stoneman Foundation a major annual philanthropic endowment, which had been worth $30,000 per year over 13 years, was lost due to its condition that the Gallery remain unincorporated. Thus, due to lack of funds, the Art Museum faced a forced closure on 11 August 2017. It was saved when a town hall meeting in Castlemaine on 2 August announced a $50,000 gift from the Macfarlane Fund, launched concomitantly in honour of the late businessman Don Macfarlane, for whom the gallery was his favourite, and given on the condition of greater support from Mount Alexander council. Combined with a $250,000 donation by an anonymous couple, by fundraising efforts amongst local supporters, and a government grant, the money meant the gallery would remain open to the public giving time for sustainable revenue to be sourced, though difficulties, as identified by The Institute of Community Directors Australia, remained.
Naomi Cass, previously director of the Centre for Contemporary Photography, was appointed Director, CAM Renewal, in January 2019, and reopened the gallery, free of charge to visitors at the request of the benefactors and, after some refurbishment in November, in December launched the Strategic Plan for Castlemaine Art Museum 2019–2023 – connecting people through Art, History and Ideas In the 2019-20 financial year the budget returned to surplus.
Outreach
In 2019, CAM commenced a pilot inclusivity program to engage with three communities impeded in attending and enjoying CAM; First Nations young people, people with disability, and young people at risk. Participants were recruited through Nalderun, the Mount Alexander Shire Disability Advocacy Group, the local hospital and local school teachers. Ideas were received concerning solutions to increasing accessibility and relevance.
In 2021 the Art Museum updated its website, including online access and searching of its collection. Reflections, a series of commentaries on works from members of the gallery's community is included.
From 2020 the Museum held 'Orbit;' shows by significant local artists in its Benefactor's gallery, moving later to the Sinclair gallery, and in 2022 commenced a series of public 'Terrace Projections;' digital video projected onto its facade during night-time hours.
Awards and prizes
As early as 1928 Castlemaine Art Gallery offered a generous acquisitive prize of 40 guineas (A$3,484.70 value in 2020) for "the best oil or watercolour painting submitted, the works to be judged by Sir John Longstaff". The biennial $3,000 James Farrell Self Portrait Award was founded in 1991, but is longer being held. The biannual Clunes Ceramic Award, jointly offered by the Art Gallery of Ballarat and the Castlemaine Art Museum with a total prize money of $5000 was last opened in 2019 and was then postponed. In 2021Castlemaine Art Museum continued to encourage artists with the following awards:
Experimental Print Prize
Established in 2019, a biennial, non-acquisitive prize. Open to Victoria-resident artists resident in Victoria, an anonymous local donor provides three prizes: $10,000, $5,000 and $3,000 for an emerging artist.
Len Fox Painting Award
The Len Fox Painting Award is the Castlemaine Art Museum's $50,000 biennial acquisitive award and among the richest in the nation. It is awarded to a living Australian artist to commemorate the life and work of Emmanuel Phillips Fox, the uncle of Len Fox, partner of CAM benefactor Mona Fox.
Associations
CAM is a member of the Public Galleries Association of Victoria and is accredited by the Australian Museums and Galleries Association.
Exhibitions
Main article: List of exhibitions at the Castlemaine Art MuseumPublications
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1953), Castlemaine Art Gallery and Museum, The Gallery, retrieved 22 September 2021
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1972). An exhibition of fifty chairs of the 19th and early 20th centuries: catalogue. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 220905271.
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1973), Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, retrieved 22 September 2021
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1976). A. E. Newbury: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 16th Oct. – 28th Nov., 1976. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 739118794.
- Bale, A. M. E. (Alice Marian Ellen); Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1977), A.M.E. Bale: Castlemaine Art Gallery, 11th September-30th October, 1977, Castlemaine Art Gallery, retrieved 22 September 2021
- Clark, Marc; Victorian College of the Arts; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1978). Marc Clark: sculptures 1968–78. Warrnambool, Vic.: Warrnambool Art Gallery. OCLC 223143468.
- Newell, Lucy (1978). The Newell family. Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 221717594.
- Ellis, Stanley J. (1979). The school of Stanley J. Ellis: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 5th May – 3rd June, 1979. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. OCLC 1058493426.
- Notes, nocturnes & harmonies. Castlemaine Art Gallery. 1980. OCLC 222029063.
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1981), Two centuries of Australian bird illustrations, Castlemaine Art Gallery, retrieved 23 September 2021
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1981), Aspects of Castlemaine, 1854-1980: [exhibition] Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, 25th. October – 23rd. November, the Art Gallery & Historical Museum, retrieved 23 September 2021
- Perry, Peter (1982). E. Phillips Fox & Ethel Carrick: an exhibition of impressionist paintings. publisher not identified. OCLC 222032057.
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- Perry, Peter (1986). R. W. Sturgess, water-colourist, 1892–1932. Beth Sinclair. : Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 0-9598066-3-6. OCLC 21594920.
- Evergood, Miles; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum; Jewish Museum of Australia; Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House) (1988), Miles Evergood, 1871-1939: retrospective, Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, retrieved 22 September 2021
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum; Perry, Peter; Sinclair, Beth (1988). Seventy-five years: 1913–1988. Castlemaine, Vic.: The Gallery. ISBN 978-0-9598066-4-9. OCLC 222849742.
- Leason, Percy; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1989). Percy Leason, 1889–1959: centenary exhibition. Castlemaine, Vic.: The Museum. OCLC 22859102.
- Pubs and breweries of Castlemaine and district. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. 1989. OCLC 221511151.
- Craig, Sybil (1990). The Sybil Craig Bequest: 13 July – 5 August, 1990. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. OCLC 222843220.
- Zilles, Lauretta (1991). Maladies, medicos & miracle cures: a guide to the history of medicine in Castlemaine and district from 1851 – c.1950. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. OCLC 221334617.
- Lindsay, Arthur J. (1991). Arthur J. Lindsay, 1912–1990: retrospective. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. OCLC 221782696.
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1991), A catalogue of Australian ceramics, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, ISBN 978-0-9598066-5-6
- Herbert, Harold B.; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1992). Harold B. Herbert watercolours, 31 October – 6 December, 1992. Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
- Stavrianos, Wendy (1994). Wendy Stavrianos: mantles of darkness. Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 222005695.
- Bush, Charles; Davies, June; Palmer, Jock; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1994), Charles Bush: self-portraits 1936–1986: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 3 September-2 October 1994, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, ISBN 978-0-646-19872-9
- Flynn silver, past and present: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 6 March – 10 April 1994. Bendigo, Vic.: Richard Cambridge Printers. 1994. OCLC 221782605.
- Dent, John (1994). John Dent: retrospective 1973–1993: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 29 October – 4 December, 1994. Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. Castlemaine, Vic.: The Gallery. ISBN 0-646-21117-X. OCLC 35831072.
- McKay, Kirsten; McKay, Kirsten; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1995), Women printmakers 1910-1940: in the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, ISBN 978-0-646-23161-7
- Murphy, Phyllis (1996). Historic wallpapers in Australia, 1850–1920. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9598066-6-3. OCLC 38757268.
- Perry, Peter W. (1996). Max Meldrum & associates: their art, lives and influences. John R. Perry, Max Meldrum. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 0-9598066-7-9. OCLC 38415991.
- Armstrong, Ian; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (1999), Ian Armstrong retrospective 1941-1998, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, ISBN 978-0-9587299-1-8
- Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (2001). Fraser Fair: a retrospective. Peter Perry. Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 0-9587299-3-X. OCLC 935586136.
- Griffin, Murray, ed. (2001). Murray Griffin – the journey: a retrospective 1922–1980; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, 27. May to 1. July 2001; Eastgate Gallery, Hawthorn, Victoria, 25. July to 24. August 2001. Castlemaine. OCLC 314370902.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Lewis, Martin (2002). Martin Lewis: stepping into the light. Kirsten McKay. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 0-9587299-4-8. OCLC 155794636.
- Davies, June (2002). A tribute to June Davies. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9587299-5-6. OCLC 225428434.
- Stoneman, Stuart R. (2003), Highlights from the Stuart R. Stoneman art collection, Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum, retrieved 22 September 2021
- Colquhoun, A. (2004). Alexander Colquhoun: 1862–1941: artist and critic. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9587299-8-7. OCLC 62545517.
- Geelong Art Gallery; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum; Carrick Hill (Springfield, S.A.: House); Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery (2005), Venezia Australis: Australian artists in Venice, 1900-2000: a touring exhibition of oils watercolours, prints, drawings and photographs, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, ISBN 978-0-9757388-0-1
- Craig, Sybil (2006). Sybil Craig 1901–89: modernist painter. Kirsten McKay, Geelong Gallery, Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery. Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 0-9757388-1-X. OCLC 225240436.
- Braund, Dorothy; A'Beckett, Jan; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum; Hamilton Art Gallery (Vic.) (2006). Dorothy Braund: retrospective. Castlemaine, Vic. ISBN 978-0-9757388-2-5. OCLC 225138812.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Baldessin, George; Turner, Dick; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (2007). European sensibilities: George Baldessin and his circle: printmaking in Melbourne during the 1960s and 1970s. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9757388-4-9. OCLC 225428312.
- Kovacic, Katherine (2007). The art of the dog. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9757388-3-2. OCLC 225438828.
- Klein, Deborah; Soumilas, Diane (2008). Deborah Klein: out of the past 1995–2007. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 298663997.
- Ramsay, Donald (2008). Donald Ramsay: artist in a landscape. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery. ISBN 978-0-9757388-8-7. OCLC 277184336.
- Courier, Jack; Stocky, Catherine; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. Jack Courier (1915-2007) : lithographs (Limited (500 copies) ed.). Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 653970903.
- Chippindall, Tom (2010). Associates of Rupert Bunny. Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9757388-9-4. OCLC 682514952.
- Edwards, Annette (2010). Annette Edwards: ... a lifetime of mark making. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9807831-2-4. OCLC 780532076.
- Kovacic, Katherine (2010). Archie & Amalie Colquhoun. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9807831-0-0. OCLC 608149359.
- Perry, Peter W.; McKay, Kirsten (2011), Scottish painters in Australia, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, ISBN 978-0-9807831-3-1
- Shaw, Peggy; McKay, Kirsten; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (2011). Peggy Shaw: a retrospective. Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9807831-4-8. OCLC 822892917.
- Perry, Peter; Bale, A. M. E. (2011). A. M. E. Bale: her art and life. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9757388-7-0. OCLC 793570972.
- Moncrieff, Greg (2011). Greg Moncrieff: now and then – : a survey exhibition of selected paintings, screen prints and mixed media works from 1974 to the present. Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 760034537.
- Crichton, Richard (2012). Richard Crichton: profile selected works: July 1 – 29, 2012. Hawthorne, Vic.; Castlemaine, Vic.: Eastgate & Holst; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-646-58042-5. OCLC 806368976.
- McKay, Kirsten (2013). Shimmering light: Dora Meeson and the Thames. Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9807831-5-5. OCLC 873675981.
- Singleton, Barry (2013). A retrospective exhibition of ceramics from 1970-2013 by Barry Singleton: Castlemaine Art Gallery. 16.03.2013 – 26.05.2013. Ray Hearn, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. Castlemaine. ISBN 978-0-9807831-6-2. OCLC 1004506372.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Amor, Rick; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (2013). Rick Amor: from study to painting: 1 June – 28 July 2013. Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9807831-8-6. OCLC 903203825.
- Meyer, Bill; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (2014). Nurturing the place. Bill Meyer. ISBN 978-0-9593138-0-2. OCLC 897490496.
- Middlemost, Thomas (2015). Inking up: a group exhibition of prints by Clayton Tremlett (curator), Rona Green and Deborah Klein. Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 927074958.
- Riley, Ginger; Alves, Tim (2015). Ginger Riley: the boss of colour. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 920461202.
- Pilgrim, Catherine; McNeil, Peter (2015). Making history: hidden world of the Leviny women. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC 1158894182.
- Contemporary Australian Silver & Metalwork Award 2015. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum; Buda Historic Home and Garden Inc. 2015. ISBN 978-0-9924753-2-1. OCLC 938380301.
- Bill Henson landscapes. Place of publication not identified: Castlemaine Art Gallery &. 2016. ISBN 978-0-9924753-3-8. OCLC 948632099.
- Clayton Tremlett: beard and influence. Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. 2016. ISBN 978-0-9587299-0-1. OCLC 954226415.
- Nixon, John; Cox, Emma; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (2017). John Nixon: experimental painting workshop. Castlemaine Art Gallery & Historical Museum. ISBN 978-0-9598066-1-8. OCLC 982656702.
- Castlemaine Art Museum, (Compiled by) (2021), 2021 Experimental Print Prize : Catalogue for the exhibition held at Castlemaine Art Museum 20 November 2021 – 28 February 2022., Castlemaine Art Museum, ISBN 9780645128437
- Tyndall, Peter (2021). Peter Tyndall : Sinclair+gallery. Catalogue for Peter Tyndall's exhibition 'SINCLAIR+GALLERY', Castlemaine Art Museum 2021-2022. Castlemaine: Castlemaine Art Museum. ISBN 9780645128413.
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