Australian Performing Arts Collection

The Australian Performing Arts Collection at Arts Centre Melbourne, formerly known as Performing Arts Museum (PAM), is the largest specialist performing arts collection in Australia, with over 780,000 items relating to the history of circus, dance, music, opera and theatre in Australia and of Australian performers overseas.[1]

Australian Performing Arts Collection
The APAC collection in storage
Former name
Performing Arts Museum
LocationArts Centre Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Coordinates37°49′13″S 144°58′6″E
Websitewww.artscentremelbourne.com.au/exhibitions-collections/australian-performing-arts-collection
-37.820278, 144.968333

History

Established in 1975,[1] the collection was originally known as Performing Arts Museum (PAM) and was planned as part of the Melbourne Arts Centre while that building was being complete.[2]

Roy Grounds had been appointed to design the Melbourne Arts Centre in 1959, and although he is said to have intended for a performing arts museum to be part of the building, he did not include a space for one in his original design brief. Instead, he had included a series of display cabinets around the building's foyers which would house collections.[3]

In 1975, a committee was set up to advise on the sources and types of material to be included in PAM.[4] At the time, the museum's name had not been finalised, and suggestions included Museum of the Performing Arts, Stage Museum, or Performing Arts Museum, with the later being decided upon in 1977.[4]

The Performing Arts Museum was officially launched by Premier Sir Rupert Hamer on 30 October 1978 with a display held at the nearby National Gallery of Victoria (NGV), where George Pusak, managing director of Mobil Oil, gave a cheque of $300,000 towards the museum's establishment.[3]

The NGV also hosted PAM's first major exhibition in 1981,[4] before PAM officially opened in 1982 with early exhibitions on Dame Nellie Melba and Bourke Street.[5][6] In its first year the museum had 47,000 visitors, four major exhibitions, six smaller exhibitions, and also showed exhibits in the buildings foyer.[3]

Now officially known as the Australian Performing Arts Collection (APAC),[7] the collection continues to be expanded,[8] and exhibitions created by or featuring collections from APAC have toured nationally and internationally.[9][10]

In August 2022, incoming Melbourne Arts Centre CEO Karen Quinlan announced plans to further showcase the Australian Performing Arts Collection and loan the collection to other Australian institutions.[11]

Exhibitions

The Australian Performing Arts Collection held exhibitions in the galleries throughout Arts Centre Melbourne (Gallery 1, Gallery 2, St Kilda Road Foyer Gallery and Smorgon Family Plaza). Exhibitions subjects have included AC/DC, Kylie Minogue, Geoffrey Rush, Peter Allen, and Nick Cave and have toured nationally and internationally. Since 2017, they have run the Australian Music Vault, a permanent exhibition and collaboration with the music industry.[12]

Collections

Ballet slippers in the APAC collection

Collections began being acquired before the Melbourne Arts Centre was built, officially beginning in 1979. Highlights include collections relating to musicians Nick Cave and Kylie Minogue, as well as the Australian Archives of the Dance, The Australian Ballet, Circus Oz, Juke Magazine, and more.[4] In 1975 an advertisement announced the Arts Centre Melbourne was preparing to receive theatrical memorabilia for their museum and were inundated with materials which were looked over by a group of volunteer archivists.[3] The collection was said to be unique at the time of its founding, because it didn't specialise and instead would collect anything to do with the performing arts.[3]

Many of the records, along with costume and set designs, audiovisual materials, and other papers pertaining to the New Theatre, Melbourne (1936-2000), and the personal papers of theatre director Dot Thompson, were acquired by APAC in 2001.[13]

Directors

References

  1. "Arts Centre Melbourne". Open House Melbourne. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  2. "A live museum.....for performing arts". Papua New Guinea Post-Courier. 23 March 1979. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  3. Fairfax, Vicki (2002). A place across the river : they aspired to create the Victorian Arts Centre. South Yarra, Victoria: Macmillan. ISBN 1-876832-13-4. OCLC 52868496.
  4. Van Stratten, Frank (1996). The Performing Arts Museum: A Chronology. Victorian Arts Centre Trust.
  5. "Advertising - NATIONAL LIBRARY OF AUSTRALIA MELBA TRIBUTE". Canberra Times. 22 May 1982 [22 May 1982]. p. 18. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  6. "Bourke St. flash-back". Australian Jewish News. 18 March 1983. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  7. Inside the Australian Performing Arts Collection, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 22 October 2020, retrieved 8 August 2022
  8. "Australian Performing Arts Collection welcomes Olivia Newton-John acquisitions". Australian Arts Review. 28 September 2020. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  9. sshalders (7 September 2018). "Kylie on Stage exhibition boosting visitor numbers". www.ararat.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  10. "Nick Cave's cave: exploring the musician's darkest recesses". The Face. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  11. Flux, Elizabeth (3 August 2022). "Incoming Arts Centre CEO warns of 'short-term pain' amid rebuild". The Age. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  12. Strong, Catherine (21 December 2017). "The Australian Music Vault moves the canon beyond pub rock". The Conversation. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  13. "New Theatre: Company history". Arts Centre Melbourne. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  14. PGAV. "Arts Centre Melbourne Farewells Janine Barrand". pgav.org.au. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
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