National Museum of Australia
The National Museum of Australia is a national public museum in Canberra, Capital Territory, Australia. It is operated and funded by the federal government of Australia. It was formally established by the National Museum of Australia Act 1980.
The museum profiles 50,000 years of Indigenous heritage, settlement since 1788 and key events including Federation and the Sydney 2000 Olympics. It holds the world's largest collection of Aboriginal bark paintings and stone tools, the heart of champion racehorse Phar Lap and the Holden prototype No. 1 car. The museum also develops and travels exhibitions on subjects ranging from bushrangers to surf lifesaving. The National Museum of Australia Press publishes a wide range of books, catalogues and journals. The museum's Research Centre takes a cross-disciplinary approach to history, ensuring the museum is a lively forum for ideas and debate about Australia's past, present and future.
The museum's innovative use of new technologies has been central to its growing international reputation in outreach programming, particularly with regional communities. From 2003 to 2008, the museum hosted Talkback Classroom, a student political forum.
The museum did not have a permanent home until 11 March 2001, when a purpose-built museum building was officially opened. It is located on Acton Peninsula in the suburb of Acton, next to the Australian National University. The peninsula on Lake Burley Griffin was previously the home of the Royal Canberra Hospital, which was Royal [Canberra Hospital implosion|demolished in tragic circumstances] on 13 July 1997.
Architecture
As designed by architect Howard Raggatt, the museum building is based on a theme of knotted ropes, symbolically bringing together the stories of Australians. The architects stated: "We liked to think that the story of Australia was not one, but many tangled together. Not an authorized version but a puzzling confluence; not merely the resolution of difference but its wholehearted embrace." The building is meant to be the centre of a knot, with trailing ropes or strips extending from the building. The most obvious of these extensions forms a large loop before becoming a walkway which extends past the neighbouring AIATSIS building ending in a large curl, as if a huge ribbon has haphazardly unrolled itself along the ground. Known as the "Uluru Axis" because it aligns with the central Australian natural landmark, the ribbon symbolically integrates the site with the Canberra city plan by Walter Burley Griffin and the spiritual heart of indigenous Australia.The shape of the main entrance hall continues this theme: it is as though the otherwise rectangular building has been built encasing a complex knot which does not quite fit inside the building, and then the knot taken away. The entirely non-symmetrical complex is designed to not look like a museum, with startling colours and angles, unusual spaces and unpredictable projections and textures.
Though hard to precisely categorise, the building can be seen as an example of Charles Jencks' "new paradigm". Some characteristics of Deconstructivism can also be identified.
The organising concept of the scheme using the idea of a "tangled vision" incorporates a variety of references including:
- Bea Maddock's Philosophy Tape
- Jackson Pollock's Blue Poles
- Boolean string, a knot, and Ariadne's thread
- The Aboriginal Dreamtime story of the Rainbow Serpent making the land.
- A Burley-Griffin designed cloister at Newman College, Melbourne
- The Sydney Opera Houseboth the parts designed by Jørn Utzon, and sections designed by the other architects
- The shell curves of Félix Candela
- The Hall is evocative of Eero Saarinen's terminal at the John F. Kennedy Airport in New York
- The arc is like a piece of work by Richard Serra
- The Garden of Australian Dreams is meant to evoke a range of different cartographies
- The walls use selected fragments of the word 'Eternity'evoking the story of Arthur Stace who for thirty years chalked this single word on the pavements of Sydney
- The most controversial quotation is a reference to the Daniel Libeskind's Jewish Museum Berlin, Germany which opened in 1999
The exterior of the building is covered in anodised aluminium panels. Many of the panels include words written in braille and other decorative devices. Among the messages are "mate" and "she'll be right". Also included were such controversial words and phrases as "sorry" and "forgive us our genocide". These more controversial messages have been obscured with silver discs being attached to the surface making the braille illegible.
Among the phrases in braille are the words "Resurrection city". The phrase may refer to the clearing of the former Canberra Hospital to make way for the museum or it could be a reference to reconciliation between Indigenous Australians and European settlers. The phrase is used as a label in tiles on another of Raggett's buildings, the Storey Hall in Melbourne. Raggett says of that message: "I guess that tries to be some big sort of theme for this building as well and its sort of set of memories."
It was built by Bovis Lend Lease and completed in 2001.
Art critic Christopher Allen described it as "undoubtedly the ugliest example of official architecture in Australia... a painful example of inept, clumsy and gratuitous form justified by kitsch symbolism".
Hail storm damage
A severe thunderstorm hit Canberra on the afternoon of 29 December 2006 and caused roof damage to the administration section of the museum. The ceiling collapsed under the weight of hail. The damage exposed power cables and left two centimetres of water on the floor. The water also damaged several paintings by a Sydney artist which were associated with an exhibition about Australian lifesavers. However, the main part of the building was unaffected and nothing from the museum's collection was damaged. The building was re-opened to the public a day later. The damage was expected to cost at least A$500,001 to repair.Building works 2012/13
In 2012, building works commenced on a new cafe and administration wing.The new cafe opened in late 2012. It overlooks Lake Burley Griffin and offers both indoor and outdoor dining. The relocation of the museum's cafe freed up the vast entry Hall for the display of large objects from the museum's collection, including vehicles.
The new administration wing, which links the main building with the existing administration building, was completed in mid-2013. The new building is clad in brightly coloured tiles arranged in a QR code pattern.
Collection
The museum's collection, known as the National Historical Collection, includes over 210,000 objects. The collection focuses on three themes: the culture and history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, Australian history and culture since European settlement in 1788, and interactions between people and the Australian environment. Notable objects include:- Various items relating to the death of Azaria Chamberlain, including a yellow Holden Torana
- Bicycles owned by Australian cyclist and winner of the 2011 Tour de France, Cadel Evans
- Navigational instruments used by Captain James Cook
- The Sir Douglas Mawson collection, including four items relating to the British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition in 1931, including three proclamations relating to claiming land in Antarctica, and a food canister.
- Medical equipment used by ophthalmologist Fred Hollows
- A holey dollar, the first currency minted in Australia
- Netball memorabilia of Liz Ellis, who played in the Australia national netball team
- Olympic medals won by John Konrads at the 1960 Rome Olympics
- Props from children's television show Play School
- An Australian flag found in the ruins of World Trade Center after the September 11 attacks
- The fleece of Chris the sheep, a merino ram that became internationally famous in 2015 after being found wandering, and later shorn of a record amount of wool fleece
Past exhibitions
''Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters''
On 15 September 2017, the exhibition Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters, referencing the creation myth of the Seven Sisters that is common to many groups in the Western and Central Deserts, was launched at the NMA. It was instigated by aṉangu people, and was a collaboration with Aboriginal elder|Aboriginal elder]s who are custodians of the Dreamtime story. The exhibition included a huge painting called Yarrkalpa — Hunting Ground, which symbolically depicts the area around Parnngurr in Western Australia, showing the seasons, cultural burning practices and Indigenous management of the land and natural resources. In June 2022, the work was projected onto the Sydney Opera House as part of the Vivid Sydney festival.The exhibition ran until February 2018, and travelled to Berlin, Germany, in 2022 and is due to be shown in Paris, France, in 2023.