IDNO
LS.109064.TC1
Description
On Catalogue card: "Australia. 82.17.
(Tribe not identified) Megalithic industry:
9 slides [82.13-21], showing various stages in axe-making." [manuscript in ink]
On Catalogue Card for duplicate image P.176.ACH1: "Grinding by rubbing a stone axe."
A Birpai man sitting on the beach and grinding a stone axe by rubbing it. The background consists of sand, pebbles and shells. [WV 18/3/2009]
Place
Oceania Australasia; Australia; New South Wales; in or near Port Macquarie
Cultural Affliation
Birpai
Named Person
Photographer
Dick, Thomas
Collector / Expedition
Date
1910 - 1920
Collection Name
Teaching Slide CollectionHaddon Unmounted Collection
Source
Coghlan, T. A. (Agent-General of N.S.W.)
Format
Lantern Slide Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
Exhibition: Digital copies of all of Thomas Dick’s photographs were returned to the Port Macquarie Hastings Council for their following collaborative project and exhibition:
Black & White: Selections from the Thomas Dick Collection
Port Macquarie Hastings Council.
The Thomas Dick collection of images was a collaborative effort between the photographer (Dick) & a group of Birapi Aboriginal people during 1910 - 1920. These staged photographs show the same Aboriginal families staging traditional activities within the local landscape of the Port Macquarie-Hastings area. The exhibition & catalogue of the collection was produced in partnership with stakeholders from the Aboriginal families, the Birpai Land Council and the descendants of photographer Thomas Dick and Port Macquarie-Hastings Council. Support was received from the Australian Museum & the Powerhouse Museum Regional Services & the project was funded by Council and Arts NSW. [Source: www.hastings.nsw.gov.au, JD 3/7/2010]
Related Collection: The Australian Museum acquired a collection of 140 negatives by Thomas Dick in 1941. See ‘The Australian Museum Magazine’. March 10, 1941. [Photocopy supplied by Liz Gilroy, JD 3/7/2010]
Bibliographical Reference: Isobel McBryde ‘Thomas Dick’s Photographic Vision’ in Ian Donaldson & Tamsin Donaldson, Eds, 1985. Seeing the First Australians (Unwin Hyman). [JD 8/12/2006]
Bibliographical Reference: Bloomfield, Geoffrey, 1981. Baal Bora: The End of Dancing. [JD 8/12/2006]
Biographical Information: Thomas Dick took photos between 1905 and 1923, although in Bloomfield’s books they are labeled as having been taken in the 19th century.
Thomas Dick took these photos over several years. He would head off into the bush with his 5 Birpai ‘informants’. He clearly developed a relationship with them as it is the same people and sometimes their children in all of the images.
Dick’s images tend to be taken as sets or series. Each series documents a ‘traditional’ activity of the Birpai people. Some examples we have are of making heliman shields, fishing, digging and cooking pippies, climbing trees, and making canoes. He also photographed a series of Aboriginal portraits. I have only seen copies of these portraits in Bloomfield’s book and he lists them as being held in Cambridge. The images were taken around Port Macquarie and the Hastings river in New South Wales.
Part of the problem with locating his images and glass plate negatives is that there is no record of exactly how many he took. He drowned in 1927 and after his death his wife, who didn’t approve of his activities, purportedly threw much of his collection, his glass plate negatives and photos down a well.
Isobel McBryde notes in her article ‘Thomas Dick’s Photographic Vision’ (Ian Donaldson & Tamsin Donaldson Eds. Seeing the First Australians), that Dick sent copies of his images to Cambridge in the 1920s.” [Source: Anna Bradbury, researcher for Port Macquarie-Hastings Council and the Birpai and Bunyah Land Councils, 7/12/2006] [JD 8/12/2006]
Date: The Date field was previously recorded as being “1905 - 1927” based on the research by Anna Bradbury, but this date range was narrowed to 1910 - 1920 during the Port Macquaire Hastings Council project (See Exhibition and Bibliographical reference). The Date field has been amended accordingly. [JD 14/4/2011]
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Aboriginal Visual Histories Project, Monash University. [Wonu Veys 18/3/2009]
FM:243714
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