Public art on campus

Curator's introduction
Public art has been integral to UNSW since its inception. From its earliest days, the University has engaged leading contemporary artists to work closely with architects on building projects and placed sculptures in its grounds.
In 1955, the first building to be opened on the Kensington campus included a major art commission. At over fourteen metres high, Tom Bass’s relief sculpture The Falconer at the entrance to the Old Main building was a public symbol of the values and aspirations of the fledgling university.
As the university grew, art was commissioned for more buildings: Douglas Annand’s abstract mosaic murals for the Dalton building (1958) complement its functionalist, modernist architecture; Herbert Flugelman’s large figurative sculpture was sited in the courtyard of the award-winning Phillip Goldstein Hall (1964), and Mona Hessing created a monumental weaving for the foyer of the Sir John Clancy Auditorium (1971).
All of these projects embodied the university’s commitment to integrate the latest contemporary art with the best of modern architecture on the Kensington campus.
The next phase of public art at UNSW came in 1992 as a result of the Campus Development Strategy, which recommended the placement of sculpture in the University’s grounds. With the assistance of the U-Committee, philanthropic funds were raised to purchase five new works, followed by two site-specific commissions, awarded to Bronwyn Oliver in 2001 and Kate Cullity in 2006.
The ongoing care and management of the University’s public art is shared by Estate Management and the Art Unit. In 2019, a joint program to revitalise campus art began with the restoration of Douglas Annand’s Dalton building stairwell mosaics. While some sculptures have been relocated as the campus continues to be developed, the recent refurbishment of Clancy Auditorium has re-established Mona Hessing’s tapestry as the centrepiece of the foyer.
The University founders’ belief in the importance of public art to provide students and staff with everyday encounters with art and culture continues to inform the UNSW campus development with the establishment of a Public Art Advisory Committee in 2018.Â
Elena Taylor
Senior Curator of Art, UNSW Art CollectionÂ
Useful links
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Melbourne artist Bruce Armstrong is well known for his roughly-hewn sculptures of animals and fantastical creatures which he began making after leaving art school in the mid-1980s. It’s her time now is characteristic of Armstrong’s works. The artist has used a chainsaw to carve the work from a single piece of River Red Gum, deliberately leaving the marks made by the chainsaw visible, believing this gives his work, ‘much greater feeling of being alive and vibrant, with not faults but features. Less can be more in finishing a sculpture or a painting’.
Armstrong’s monolithic works can have an imposing presence, and the artist has often spoken of his fascination with the monumental sculpture of ancient civilizations such as the Egyptians and Assyrians. However, they can also have a playfulness and child-like sensibility, appearing approachable and friendly. Placed at the entrance to Tigger's Place Early Learning Centre, It’s her time now acts as a kind of guardian figure, standing watch over the children as they arrive.
It’s her time now (1992)
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Artist
Bruce Armstrong (b. 1957)
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Medium / Dimensions
River Red Gum 138 x 103 x 97cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Purchased with funds from the U Committee, 1992
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Location
Tigger's Place Early Learning Centre 22 Botany Street, Randwick
Bruce Armstrong - It's her time now -
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Throughout his career, Australian sculptor James Rogers has used the sculptural technique of assemblage to create his works. Working predominately with recycled materials including scrap metal, Rogers joins these together, allowing each piece to retain its unique identity and evidence of a past life. Their worn surfaces, peeling paint and rust, adding character and a tactile quality to the final work.
°Â³ó¾±±ô±ðÌýThe bath is primarily an abstract composition, its title gives a clue to how the work can also be regarded. The tall vertical form suggests a figure standing under a shower, with the curvilinear forms conveying the idea of spraying water. The work has a strong linear quality, the effect akin to a three-dimensional drawing in space.
The bath (1990)
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Artist
James Rogers (b.1956)
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Medium / Dimensions
Mild Steel, Enamel Paint 215 x 91 x 46 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Purchased with funds from the U Committee, 1992
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Location
Gate 11 Entrance, outside the AGSM Building
James Rogers - The bath -
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In the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s Mona Hessing was at the forefront of a new generation of Australian women artists. She was highly regarded for her experimental tapestries which claimed a place for this traditionally female, craft-based practice within the male-dominated hierarchy of art.
In 1970 Hessing was commissioned to create a 24-metre-long site-specific work for the new Sir John Clancy Auditorium. Hessing’s tapestry Banner is integrated perfectly with the building’s Brutalist architecture. Installed on a long, low wall above the entrance to the auditorium, the rich colours and dynamic texture of the woven and knotted wool provides contrast and warmth to the foyer’s austere concrete walls, and the vertical tapestry panels echo the rectangular forms of the ceiling coffers. The choice of a contemporary female artist for a work of this scale and prominence was a bold and forward-thinking decision by the University. Hessing had previously made a small woven wall hanging for Goldstein Hall, however the size and architectural integration of Banner place it among the University’s most significant public art commissions. The work took almost a year to complete, with Hessing engaging weavers in Panipat, India to hand-loom the 126 individual panels.
Banner (1971)
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Artist
Mona Hessing (1933- 2001)Â
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Medium / Dimensions
Wool, Silk 245.0 x 2375.0 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned in 1970 with funds from the U Committee
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Location
Clancy Auditorium, foyer
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For hundreds of years the study of the human figure has been central to the western tradition in art. Patricia Lawrence’s Torso turning engages directly with this tradition. It employs the torso format, where only the trunk of a figure, without arms, head or legs is represented. Lawrence’s work is stylised and abstract, yet still strongly figurative: a sequence of fluid curves and undulating hollows suggests movement while convex surfaces suggest the outward pressure of internal forces.
Patricia Lawrence began making sculpture when in her fifties and studied both in the USA and Australia. In 1990 Lawrence spent three months in Stockholm, Sweden where she began her sculptural investigations of the torso and head. She considers that sculpting the human figure is an endless fascinating challenge, her works contemplating the shared experiences of human existence through the physical shape of the body.
Torso turning (1993)
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Artist
Patricia Lawrence (b.1930)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 170 x 116 x 140 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Purchased 1993
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Location
North Chancellery Lawn
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A visit to Japan in 1976 influenced Augustine Dall'Ava's work significantly, beginning a life-long appreciation of Japanese art and culture. Aspects of Time reflects this interest in Japanese aesthetics and belongs to a series of works that are based upon the structure of a folding screen. The work consists of six hinged panels, each containing a harmonious arrangement of suspended elements including an anvil, a clock weight and river stones, that embody references to the passing of time. A work of formal beauty and conceptual clarity, Dall’Ava’s intention was ‘to invoke a feeling of peace and tranquility.’
Aspects from time was Augustine Dall'Ava's first public commission and one of the first non-figurative sculptures acquired by the University. Dall'Ava selected the original location at the end of the Anzac Parade walkway in 1980, but due to the extension of the Mall in 1997 the work was moved to the Vice-Chancellor's Courtyard within a Japanese-style garden. From Italian heritage, Dall’Ava came to Australia as a child. He studied sculpture at RMIT, Melbourne and is one of Australia’s most highly regarded sculptors.
Aspects from time (1981)
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Artist
Augustine Dall’Ava (b. 1950)
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Medium / Dimensions
Mild steel, stainless steel, enamel paint, river stones 210 x 503 x 60 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned with funds from the U Too Group and the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council, 1981
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Location
Vice Chancellor’s Garden
Augustine Dall’Ava - Aspects from time -
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Martin Luther King Jr (1929—68) was a Baptist minister who became the most visible spokesperson and leader in the modern American Civil Rights Movement. Drawing inspiration from his Christian faith and the peaceful teachings of Mahatma Gandhi, Dr King led a nonviolent movement to achieve legal equality for African Americans in the United States.Â
American sculptor Zenos Frudakis is well-known for his commemorative sculpture and portraits. His most famous work is the monumental Freedom sculpture in Philadelphia which symbolises the universal human struggle to break free. In 2017 he was commissioned by UNSW to create a portrait bust of Martin Luther King Jr and decided to incorporate a small version of the Freedom sculpture in the base of the work.
Martin Luther King’s quote ‘Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that’, is inscribed on the sculpture’s plinth.
Martin Luther King Jr (2018)
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Artist
Zenos Frudakis (b. 1951)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 71 x 53.5 x 30.5 cm
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Collection
Commissioned with funds from the United States Government and UNSW alumni living in the US, 2018
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Location
Library Lawn
Zenos Frudakis - Martin Luther King Jr -
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Nelson Mandela (1918—2013) was a civil rights activist who led a campaign of nonviolent protest against the South African government’s racist apartheid policies. After spending 27 years in prison for his political activities, in 1994 Mandela was elected President of South Africa in its first fully democratic election, becoming the country’s first black head of state.
In 2012 South African sculptor Maureen Quin was selected to create a bust of Mandela for UNSW. Quin’s larger than life sculpture depicts Mandela in an informal pose, smiling and leaning forward as though engaged in conversation. His shirt is engraved with images of African animals to represent his deep love for his country.
Nelson Mandela (2013)
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Artist
Maureen Quin (b. 1934)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 80.9 x 36.2 x 72.4 cm
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Collection
Commissioned 2012
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Location
Library Lawn
Maureen Quin - Nelson Mandela -
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Mahatma Gandhi (1869—1948) led the successful campaign for India's independence from British Rule and is considered the father of his country. Gandhi is esteemed for his doctrine of non-violent resistance and he continues to inspire human rights movements around the world. This work was presented by the Government of India to celebrate the close ties between India and UNSW and the people of NSW.
Delhi-based sculptor Ram V Sutar grew up in Dhulia, a village in northern Maharashtra, and studied art in Mumbai. He is well-known for his sculptures of Gandhi which have been installed in more than 200 cities across the world. Sutar is the designer of the Statue of Unity, the world's tallest statue with a height of 182 metres in the state of Gujarat, India. In 2016 Sutar was awarded the Padma Bhushan by the Government of India.
The base of the sculpture is engraved with Gandhi's quote ‘An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind’.
Mahatma Gandhi (1975 cast 2010)
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Artist
Ram V Sutar (b. 1925)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 78 x 97 x 50 cm
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Collection
Gift of the people and Government of India to the people and Government of NSW and UNSW, 2010
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Location
Library Lawn
Ram V Sutar - Mahatma Gandhi UNSW -
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This plaque commemorates the contribution of Joseph Bourke, first bursar of the University, to the development of UNSW. Tom Bass sculpted the bronze relief portrait of Bourke, which is mounted on the central standing stone behind the pool. Located beneath a canopy of a mature jacaranda, the fountain offers a place of respite and reflection within the quiet garden courtyard.
Joseph Ormand Aloysius Bourke (1967)
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Artist
Tom Bass (1916—2010)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 30 x 24 x 4 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned 1966
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Location
Morven Brown Courtyard
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Formed in the Philippines in late 1994, the Sanggawâ art collective was well known for its activist art and mural painting projects. Translating as ‘to work as one’, their collaborative practice sought to interrogate and critique the socio-political conditions of the Philippines during the 1990s, highlighting issues such as injustice and corruption. Depicting political and religious personalities, their works juxtaposed images of power, privilege and greed with suffering and poverty in a highly expressive, figurative style.
In 1995 five members of Sanggawâ; Elmer Borlongan, Karen Flores, Mark Justiniani, Joy Mallari and Federico Sievert came to Australia to accompany an exhibition of their work at the Ray Hughes Gallery in Sydney. Coinciding with the opening of the exhibition, the group was invited to paint a mural on the UNSW campus. The finished mural was the largest ever created by the group and one of only two works by Sanggawâ to remain in Australia. It reflects a moment of intense collaboration and belief in the power of art as a driver of social change.
Photography: UNSW ArchivesÂ
Paloob Sa labas (Getting into the out) (1995)
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Artist
Sanggawâ (est. 1994)
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Medium / Dimensions
Painted mural
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Collection
Commissioned by UNSW in 1995
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Location
Central Lecture Block
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At the age of fifteen, Herbert ‘Bert’ Flugelman came to Australia from his native Vienna as a refugee from Nazism. After the Second World War Flugelman studied sculpture in Sydney before travelling in Europe and America for several years. On his return in the late 1950s, Flugelman worked in a highly expressive, semi-figurative style, of which his Six figure group is an important example. This work draws heavily upon the example of the great British sculptor Henry Moore whose sculptures were concerned with the interior and exterior space of the body, and similarly Flugelman has created openings in his figures which are revealed internal forms. In response to its intended placement, Flugelman’s sculpture is essentially frontal, the figures placed in a line, to create a rhythmical movement of mass and void. While Flugelman achieved success with works in this style, a few years later his work changed radically when he began creating large-scale, minimalist sculptures in stainless steel for which he became well-known.
Six figure group was UNSW’s third major public art commission for a new building. Placed on a plinth in a shallow pool in the courtyard of Goldstein Hall, Six figure group is an integral part of the building’s design, the rough texture and organic shapes of the sculpture providing a contrast to the functional modernist architecture. In 1964 Goldstein Hall was awarded the prestigious Sir John Sulman Medal by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects.
Six figure group (1964)
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Artist
Bert Flugelman (1923—2013)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 240 x 432 x 59 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned 1963
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Location
Goldstein Courtyard
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With their suggestion of movement and growth, Bronywyn Oliver's sculptures evoke the vitality of living forms. In 2001 Oliver won the UNSW competition for a sculpture for the recently completed International Square. The artist drew inspiration from both the natural plantings and the architectural geometry of the surrounding buildings to propose a simple yet powerful statement for the site. Globe is one of Oliver’s most successful works, self-contained and in harmonious relationship with its setting. In the form of a sphere and made from welded copper wire, its intricate construction resembles the interlocking veins of a leaf and creates a spiralling motion across the surface of the work. While its size and simplicity give it a substantial presence, its open construction gives it transparency and a sense of lightness. Since it was installed in 2002, Globe has become an iconic landmark of the Kensington campus.
Oliver is regarded as one of Australia’s most significant sculptors who made a unique contribution to this art form. She had a long association with UNSW: from 1977 to 1980 she studied at Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education, which later became UNSW Art & Design, and in 2006 received the Dean’s Award for Excellence.
Globe (2002)
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Artist
Bronwyn Oliver (1959–2006)
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Medium / Dimensions
Copper 300 cm (diam.)
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned with the assistance of the U Committee, 2001
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Location
International Square
Bronwyn Oliver - Globe -
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Jock Clutterbuck’s works convey an esoteric mysticism echoing the ancient Greek and Islamic worlds. He creates abstract patterns and sequences, often using linear forms to reference architecture whose titles are suggestive of ancient monarchs, religious and mythic figures. Parousia is an ancient Greek word meaning the physical presence of a person, and the prospect of the arrival of that person, especially an emperor or king. Clutterbuck’s title provides an insight into the imposing figurative character of his work which stands at almost two and a half metres high. An open, linear sculpture, it consists of a flat oval form raised on three legs, one in front of the others, giving an impression of forward movement.
To make the work the artist constructed a full-size model from blocks of polystyrene. This was used to create a mould into which molten bronze was poured. In this process the polystyrene was burnt out, leaving rough edges and a pockmarked texture on the bronze. The artist chose to leave these marks and coloured the sculpture with a blue/green patina to resemble the appearance of an ancient artefact. He has stated, ‘I am much more fascinated by things that are very old than by where we are currently. They are intensely human. I have great respect for these early cultures.’
Parousia (1992)
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Artist
Jock Clutterbuck (b.1945)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 245 x 250 x 95 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned with funds from the U Committee, 1992
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Location
Ainsworth Lawn
Jock Clutterbuck - Parousia -
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Fountain figure was Tom Bass’s second commission for UNSW, coming only a few years after his success with The Falconer. Within the peaceful Chancellor’s Court adjacent to the Old Main Building, a single reclining figure, face turned to the sun, rests dreamily on one elbow beside a small pool, while water trickles from a shell in her outstretched hand into a bronze dish. The figure is gently simplified in the archaic style for which Bass was renowned, and this work was greatly admired during the early years of the University.
Bass’s early life was marked by poverty and hardship. He left school at the age of fifteen at the height of the Great Depression and served in the Australian Army during the Second World War. After his discharge he was able to attend art school aided by a scholarship for returned servicemen and women. Bass eventually became one of Australia’s most recognised and sought-after sculptors, creating over sixty public art works during his long career.Â
Fountain figure (1959)
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Artist
Tom Bass (1916—2010)
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Medium / Dimensions
Electrolytic Copper 72 x 186 x 87 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned 1958
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Location
Chancellor's Garden
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Falconer was the first work of art acquired by the University. It was commissioned in 1953 for the façade of the first building constructed on the new Kensington campus. At over 14 metres high, this monumental copper relief sculpture was intended to symbolise the aspirations of the fledgling institution.
In commissioning a large public sculpture in a modern style, Vice-Chancellor Philip Baxter signalled his vision for the University as a forward-thinking institution which aimed to educate the full human being. It was an extraordinary opportunity for the young sculptor Tom Bass, as in the years following World War II, public commissions on this scale were rare. Herbert Read's poem The Falcon and the Dove provided Bass with the starting inspiration for the complex symbolism of the work: the falcon for reason and the dove for beauty, the horse as the emblem of industry and the falconer for technology, while the constellation represents research and the arrow points to new directions of thought. All elements are connected by the rays of the sun, indicating that the aesthetic factor should be considered in all the activities of the University.
Falconer (1955)
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Artist
Tom Bass (1916–2010)
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Medium / Dimensions
Copper 1400 x 550 x 20 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned 1953
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Location
Old Main Building
First Graduation Ceremony on the Kensington campus and opening of the Main Building, UNSW, 16 April 1955
Tom Bass - Falconer -
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Melbourne-based sculptor Andrew Rogers concerns himself with the land. His massive geoglyphs, created of local stone by teams of volunteers in vast desert spaces around the globe, attest to this preoccupation. According to Rogers ‘they form a unique set of drawings upon the Earth’.
±õ²ÔÌýScreen he appears to have worked in reverse, seemingly reinterpreting topographic diagrams; rendering them as disconnected slabs then overlaying them, one upon the other, to create a bronze relief of abstracted contours and hollows. The geographic references continue in the sculpture's colouration: one side is patinated an intense turquoise as if suggesting the Earth's formation beneath the oceans, while the verso replicates the green and ochre of dry land.
Screen (2002)
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Artist
Andrew Rogers (b. 1947)
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Medium / Dimensions
Bronze 250 x 230 x 20 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Presented by the artist through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program, 2006
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Location
Physics Lawn
Andrew Rogers - Screen -
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In 1955 just as construction began on the new Chemistry building (the second building on the Kensington Campus) Senior Government Architect Harry Rembert undertook an international study tour to Europe and America to investigate innovations in laboratory design and educational architecture. His subsequent report admired the ‘blending of architecture, sculpture, painted and glass mosaic murals’ and the creation of an ‘atmosphere of informal friendliness and fitness for purpose, both restrained and beautiful’.
As a result, Sydney artist and designer Douglas Annand was commissioned to create two large-scale glass mosaic murals for the Dalton Building. At that time, Annand was at the peak of his career. He had begun in the 1930s with commercial art, and later turned his energies towards large-scale architectural projects, receiving numerous commissions and awards. For the three levels of the stairwell, Annand designed four roundels, three of which are repeated with slight variations.
They are set into a white tiled background and appear to float on the walls of this light and airy modernist space. In muted tones of greens, greys and browns, Annand’s abstract designs resemble cell-like structures or naturally occurring forms. Annand created the roundels in his studio, with help from his daughter-in-law Suzanne Annand and assistant Mitzi McColl, which were transferred to the stairwell wall. The final work epitomises the integration of art and architecture that informed the early planning of the UNSW campus.
Annand is considered one of Australia’s most significant modernist designers. The Dalton Building mosaics are some of his most significant architectural commissions to remain in situ and are outstanding examples of post-war modernist design. In 2019, a major conservation treatment of the stairwell mosaic was undertaken.
Dalton building stairwell mosaic (1958)
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Artist
Douglas Annand (1903-76)
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Medium / Dimensions
Glass tile mosaic mural
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned 1957
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Location
Dalton Chemistry Building
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Douglas Annand’s second, and more spectacular, set of mosaics for the Dalton Chemistry Building - now JG’s Café - features brightly coloured glass tiles from Florence, Italy.Â
Annand’s mosaics were commissioned for both sides of the two large duct panels in the then-undercroft of the Dalton Building. In 1998, the undercroft was enclosed, and the mosaics are now a distinctive interior feature of JG’s Café.Â
Annand's elaborate and colourful mosaics have an affinity with astronomy and explosive chemical reactions in space. Outer space had long fascinated Annand and he produced these works around the time of the launch in October 1957 of the first artificial Earth satellite into space, Sputnik 1.
One mosaic is signed and dated 1958 although the mosaic was not completed and installed until January 1960.
The original sketches for these mosaics are now held in the Museum of Applied Arts & Science, Sydney, and the NSW State Archives.
Dalton building undercroft mosaics (1960)
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Artist
Douglas Annand (1903—76)
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Medium / Dimensions
Glass tile mosaic mural Four panels: each 367.5 x 568 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned 1957
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Location
JG’s Café
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The arid desert landscape of UNSW’s 39,000-hectare Research Station at Fowlers Gap, 1200km west of Sydney and an hour’s drive north of Broken Hill, has been an enduring inspiration for Peter Sharp. His first visit was as a postgraduate student in 1991 and since this time he has returned many times as the course convenor of UNSW Art & Design’s annual field trips.
±õ²ÔÌýThe things you pick up 2 Sharp creates a unique dialogue between two elements: a 1.5 tonne, 1.4 billion-year-old metasedimentary rock from Fowlers Gap, and a simple forked structure, reminiscent of a tool used for some redundant or long-forgotten purpose, fashioned from recycled eucalyptus. Sharp describes the sculpture as a metaphor for how the Fowlers Gap landscape has been activated and studied for more than fifty years. ‘When you travel around the property you will often find manmade objects that are the remnants of experiments or scientific studies — I wanted the viewer to experience this visual conundrum with the natural and manmade.’ While there is a dry sense of humour in the title of the work, it also reminds us how we are compelled to keep objects that carry within them the memory of a place or experience.
In 2016 the artist donated the sculpture to UNSW with assistance from UNSW Faculty of Science, to mark the 50th anniversary of scientific research at Fowlers Gap. Enlarged versions of drawings made by Sharp where the rock was collected were applied to the windows of the Chemistry building behind the sculpture to create a link back to the Fowler’s Gap site.
The things you pick up 2 (2014)
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Artist
Peter Sharp (b. 1964)
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Medium / Dimensions
Metasedimentary rock, Eucalyptus, 100 x 600 x 150 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Presented by the artist through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program, 2016 with assistance from UNSW Faculty of Science
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Location
Union Rd between the Chemistry and Business Schools
Peter Sharp - The things you pick up 2 -
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For a period of six months beginning in October 1976 and continuing into 1977, sculptor Anne Ferguson carved Waterfall on the UNSW campus, allowing staff and students the opportunity to watch an artist at work and to witness the slow emergence of the sculpture from the stone.
Ferguson carved vertical lines around the two-tonne pink Tarana granite column for rainwater to flow, in the same way ‘the wind and the rain carves grooves into the rocks in the bush’. The work reveals Ferguson’s long-standing interest in the landscape and the lightness of her touch. She has aptly been described as ‘an artist of subtle suggestions rather than grand statements.’
Waterfall was initially situated at the northern side of the Anzac Parade Gate. It has been relocated several times and was installed in its current position in the garden at the rear of the Business School in May 2022.
Waterfall (1977)
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Artist
Anne Ferguson (b. 1939)
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Medium / Dimensions
Granite 190 x 67 x 67 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Gift of the artist, 1977
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Location
College Road near Business School
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One of Australia’s most celebrated sculptors, Ron Robertson-Swann’s monumental sculpture Vault, installed in Melbourne’s City Square in 1980, was for a time Australia’s most controversial work of art. In the 1960s Robertson-Swann had studied in London at St Martin’s School of Art with highly influential British sculptor Anthony Caro who had developed a new approach to sculpture. On his return to Australia in 1968 Robertson-Swann shot to prominence for his own hard-edged abstract works painted in bright industrial colours, that continued Caro’s spatial investigations.
North down is characteristic of Robertson-Swann’s style. Constructed of curved, straight and circular shapes in an elongated horizontal arrangement, it is intended to be placed on the ground. The relationship of elements and their reduced points of contact creates linear movement and suggests improvisation and chance. The use of satin-finished automotive paint draws each of these shapes together, so as the eye does not rest on one section but traverses along the whole without distraction. North down was made after a visit to Tasmania in 1982, partly inspired by the artist’s visit to an undulating seaside farm near Devonport.
North down (1982)
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Artist
Ron Robertson-Swann (b. 1941)
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Medium / Dimensions
Painted mild steel 92 x 277 x 84 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Purchased with funds from the U Committee, 1991
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Location
Science & Engineering Building
Ron Robertson-Swann - North down -
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Guruwaal is a collaborative integrated artwork guided by Aboriginal Knowledge Holders and Custodians of the area local to UNSW. Uncle Greg Simms (artist), Aunty Marjorie Dixon (cultural advisor) and Uncle Assen China Timbery (cultural advisor) worked with Danièle Hromek and Samantha Rich to interpret narratives of the place of UNSW. Aboriginal community engagement was also undertaken by Michael Hromek from WSP’s Indigenous Services Team with the La Perouse community to understand the narratives and histories of the Country on which UNSW is located on the western Kensington campus.
Guruwaal draws upon the narratives and histories of the local Aboriginal community and is connected to the knowledges of place and the deep histories of Country that are embedded within the community. The overarching story recognises that for the local mob, as saltwater people their totem is the whale. The whale bones on the concrete area shows the design the La Perouse community uses to paint themselves up with for ceremony and dance. ‘Guruwaal’ means whale in the local language, spelled like this to reflect the way the word is to be said.
Guruwaal (2021)
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Artist
Uncle Greg Simms (Gadigal/Dharug) with guidance by Aunty Marjorie Dixon (Bidjigal) and Uncle Assen Timbery (Bidjigal) and interpretations by Danièle Hromek (Budawang/Yuin) and Samantha Rich (Wiradjuri)
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Medium / Dimensions
Engraving in concrete paving, counter-relief on wooden bleachers
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Collection
Commissioned 2021. UNSW Art Collection
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Location
Alumni Park West
The animals represented on the wooden stairs, who belong to this place, are revealing that the site used to be swampy, or bitterwater, the brackish water that sits between salt and freshwater. Nearby is sweetwater or freshwater for drinking. The animals are showing the journey from saltwater to sweet through the brackish water, revealing this as a meeting place that brings people together from many places. The artists wanted all who visit this place to know that Aboriginal peoples, including students, staff and visitors, have belonging here as do all people who come to this place.Â
The designs on the bleachers are from drawings by Uncle Greg Simms and depict a catfish, platypus, sea turtle, long-necked turtle, gecko and snake as well as grinding grooves and billabong water holes.
On the bleachers, planter boxes contain Eastern Suburbs Banksia Scrub, an important ecological community to much of the eastern parts of Sydney, returned to place as a reminder of the importance of including spaces for non-humans to inhabit places that have become covered by concrete, brick and glass.Â
Uncle Greg Simms is well known as an activist for reconciliation, a traditional woodcarver, a storyteller and an educator for Aboriginal culture. Uncle Greg’s heritage is Gadigal (whale people) of the Dharug nation and Gundungurra (water dragon lizard people). Uncle Greg grew up in La Perouse and lives in Western Sydney.Â
Aunty Marjorie Dixon is a Bidjigal Elder living in La Perouse. Aunty Marjie is Uncle Greg’s older sister who brought Uncle Greg up from a young age. Aunty Marjorie was a cultural advisor for this project.
Uncle Assen China Timbery is a Bidjigal Elder living from La Perouse. Uncle China is the cousin of Aunty Marjie and Uncle Greg, and the nephew of Aunty Esme Timbery, after whom the Esme Timbery Creative Lab is named. Uncle China was a cultural advisor for this project.
Dr Danièle Hromek is a Budawang woman of the Yuin nation. She works as a spatial designer, cultural designer and researcher considering how to Indigenise the built environment. Her work contributes an understanding of the Indigenous experience and comprehension of space, investigating how Aboriginal people occupy, use, narrate, sense, dream and contest their spaces.Â
Samantha Rich is an architectural designer of Wiradjuri and European heritage with experience across art, residential, health, and civic projects. Sam has a deep passion for the social and cultural factors that influence the design of space in particular working with First Nations Communities to translate their narratives and perspectives into built form.Â
Uncle Greg, Aunty Marjie and Uncle China are Danièle’s Elders by blood, via the connections the La Perouse community has with South Coast mob. They have a strong relationship and have worked together extensively in the past including on pedagogical projects, art and design projects and are currently working on publishing Uncle Greg’s life story with Magabala Books. Samantha and Danièle are collaborating on other projects as well as well as being members of Deadly Djurumin, a group of Indigenous women trained and working in the built environment.Â
Alumni Park is a space on UNSW's western Kensington campus recently revitalised to provide new recreation facilities for students and staff, embrace the history of the land and its people, and recognise the contribution of alumni. Guruwaal was developed within the landscape and architectural framework designed by McGregor Westlake Architecture and Spackman Mossop Michaels following consultation with local Elders.
The images in this artwork embody cultural knowledge of members of the La Perouse Aboriginal community. It was created with the consent of custodians of the community, including the Elders named above. Dealing with any part of the images for any purpose that has not been authorised by the custodians is a serious breach of the customary laws of the La Perouse community and may breach the Copyright Act 1968). For enquiries regarding the permitted reproduction of these images, contact Danièle Hromek.
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In her hands is a powerful reminder that the UNSW Kensington campus is located on the land of the Bidjigal people.
Designed by Indigenous UNSW Art & Design alumni Carmen Glynn-Braun, Dennis Golding, and Kirra Weingarth, it was commissioned to celebrate the naming of the new Creative Practice Lab building after respected Bidjigal Elder and shellwork artist Esme Timbery.
The artists have said of their work:
In her hands celebrates the passing of Indigenous cultural practices from Bidjigal elder Esme Timbery to four living generations of her family. Through her hands, Esme shares the magic of shellwork with the women in her family, represented by the young hands of Esme’s great-granddaughter Jiyah-lee Bell. This continuation signifies the importance of transferring culture through physicaloral tradition to sustain intergenerational knowledge.
An important aspect of this mural is the rhythmic topographical lines that reference the La Perouse headlands and sandstone. These canvass the location of the Timbery family's rich cultural traditions. Across the wall bold colours bring this mural to life, celebrating and echoing Esme’s signature colours. You can see hues of pink, yellow and pearlescence, which reflect Esme’s unique artistic expression.
In her hands (2019)
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Artist
Carmen Glynn-Braun (Kaytetye/Ammatyerre), Dennis Golding (Kamilaroi/Gamilaraay), Kirra Weingarth (Biri/Juru)
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Medium / Dimensions
Painted mural 800 x 1600 cm
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Collection
Commissioned 2019
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Location
Esme Timbery Creative Practice Lab
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In the 1960s British sculptor, Anthony Caro, introduced a radical new approach to sculpture which was hugely influential over the following decades. Welding together pieces of brightly painted, industrially produced steel, his works were arranged on a horizontal plane and considered the open spaces in-between and around the structure as equally important elements of the work. Caro rejected the traditional placement of sculpture on a pedestal, insisting that his work have a direct relationship to the ground.
Geoffrey Ireland’s early work The bridge show the impact of Caro’s ideas, creating both ‘open’ and ‘closed’ forms in a complex spatial arrangement. Seen from different sides, the work changes remarkably, from a long horizontal shape, to a more condensed vertical. Ireland has used stainless steel which is left unpainted, and this material gives the work a strong industrial association.
Traditionally sculpture has been placed on a single plane and generally on a flat surface, however The bridge is designed to be placed upon a sloping site, so that it emerges from the incline and appears to move downwards, thus involving itself with the landscape. The bridge was originally sited on a grassy embankment outside the Electrical Engineering Building and was relocated to the edge of Pool Lawn in 1997.
The bridge (1981)
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Artist
Geoffrey Ireland (b.1948)
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Medium / Dimensions
Stainless steel 187 x 596 x 276 cmÂ
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Presented by the Monomeeth Association upon the retirement of Prof. Sir Rupert Myers with assistance from the Visual Art Board of the Australia Council, 1981
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Location
Pool Lawn
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Kate Cullity’s Seeing the wood for the trees was the winner of a UNSW sculpture competition in 2006 for a site-specific work as part of The Sir Anthony Mason Garden. This garden honours the great contribution made by Sir Anthony to UNSW, who served as Chancellor between 1994 and 1999.
In her proposal, environmental artist and landscape architect Cullity wrote:
Sir Anthony Mason's career exemplifies a great capacity for lateral, clear, rationale; an ability to creatively reinterpret precedent and apply new meaning. Like the forest that is closed to the eye but open to movement, Mason has the ability to ‘see the wood for the trees’, to be able to navigate through what appears, at first, to be dense and opaque.
Cullity envisioned the garden installation as a ‘forest of vertical, tapered, rusted, mild-steel forms arranged to allow a multitude of experiences of opaqueness and transparency.’ The completed work includes seventeen of these forms in various heights, perforated in patterns derived from the microscopic cellular structure of tree trunks, amid climbing plants and ground cover.
Seeing the wood for the trees (2007)
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Artist
Kate Cullity (b.1956)
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Medium / Dimensions
Weathering steel, concrete, granite, plantings 17 elements, approximate installed dimensions, 550 x 2500 x 1000 cm
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Collection
UNSW Art Collection. Commissioned for the Sir Anthony Mason Garden, with assistance from the U Committee and UNSW Faculty of Law, 2007
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Location
The Sir Anthony Mason Garden, adjacent to the Law Building
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