Friday, December 20, 2024

The Theft of Sparkly Bear from Brunswick

On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 the Sparkly Bear statue was stolen from the Barkly Square shopping centre in Brunswick. The Brunswick Voice reported that -
The life-sized brass statue of a bear riding a tandem bike was removed from the centre in the early hours of last Wednesday, September 11, and its whereabouts remain a mystery. Police believe the thieves reversed a truck into a laneway near Barkly Square about 4am. Three people got out of the truck and used an angle grinder cut through the base of the statue before lifting it with a crane onto the truck. They then fled into Barkly Street. Police said the statue is valued at $60,000. 

The report continues -  
The statue was installed in the laneway between the front and rear sections of the shopping centre in October 2018. It was made on a commission from the centre’s owners by Sydney-based sculptors Gillie and Marc Schattner. “We are absolutely shocked and heartbroken to learn that our beloved Sparkly Bear sculpture was stolen from Barkly Square,” the couple said in a statement to Brunswick Voice. “This piece was created with the intention of bringing joy and a sense of connection to the community, and to see it taken in such a way is devastating."

“We believe that public art plays a crucial role in fostering shared experiences and creating spaces where people can come together. We urge anyone with information to come forward, as we hope for the safe return of Sparkly Bear so that it can once again be enjoyed by the community.”


Sparkly Bear

This is a mean spirited theft of a delightful and loved sculpture which brought joy to people of all ages in the community. 


Sparkly Bear

Should you have any information about  Sparkly Bear, contact the police or please leave a comment below or see 'Contact us' tab for anonymous emailing.

Should you actually possess the item and wish to return it its rightful owners or custodians, please contact us.


References
Sparkly Bear Missing after Brazen Theft - Brunswick Voice September 18, 2024, read.
Sparkly Bear Arrives at Brunswick Square https://barklysquare.com.au/whatson/sparkly-bear/
The website of sculptors Gillie and Marc  https://gillieandmarc.com/products/sparkly-bear

Thursday, November 7, 2024

St Kilda Town Hall Gates

In July 1923 it was reported that the St Kilda City Council had purchased massive wrought iron double entrance gates which were in use at Corry, Sir Lauchlan Mackinnon's house in Toorak, for erection at the entrance to the town hall grounds. (1)  Sir Lauchlan Mackinnon (1848-1925) was one of the proprietors of The Argus newspaper and also the general manager. The gates were originally imported from England for Sir Lauchlan and marked the entrance to his mansion in Heyington Place. Corry, one of the finest homes in Toorak, was sold in 1922 and some of the land was sub-divided into magnificent residential allotments(2)


The only photograph we have of the gates.
The Argus, September 5, 1923 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article1985865

In 1924, extensive renovations were carried out internally at the St Kilda Town Hall and externally with the erection of the Portico and construction of a new drive. It was during this time that the gates were installed at the apex of the town hall triangular site, facing the intersection of Carlisle street and High street. (3)


The St Kilda Town Hall, c. 1930. You can see the location of the gates installed at the apex of the town hall triangular site, facing the intersection of Carlisle street and High street.
The building on the right, along High Street (Brighton Road) is the St Kilda State School.  The building to the top of the Town Hall is the Balaclava Methodist Church, which faces Chapel Street, on the corner of Carlisle Street.
St. Kilda Town Hall, c. 1930. Photographer: Sir W. Raymond Garrett. State Library of Victoria, see full image here http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/278495

Historian, J.B. Cooper, wrote about the Corry gates in his History of St Kilda 1840 to 1930
The Council, at this time, bought the massive wrought iron double entrance gates that had been in use at "Corry," the late Sir Lachlan Mackinnon's house, in Toorak. The gates were made by Bayliss of London, and they are wonderful examples of honest craftsmanship, in the difficult work of making wrought iron gates. Viewed from the City Hall's upper windows, as they stand, facing the intersection of Carlisle and High Streets, their fine iron work has the appearance that delicate lace patterns present when held up to the light. They are probably the finest wrought iron gates to be found in Melbourne. Examined closely they appear to be flawless. Even the keys of the gates are of solid British workmanship, with artistic mouldings, the like of which in key making is not seen today. (4)

Fourteen years later in August 1938, the St Kilda Council adopted an extensive scheme for beautifying the grounds surrounding St. Kilda town hall. (5)  The scheme, which included the removal of the Corry gates, had been prepared by Hugh Linaker, one of his last projects before his death at the age of 66 in October 1938. Amongst other projects, Linaker had undertaken the landscaping around the Shrine of Remembrance, designed the Pioneer Women's Memorial Garden and had been engaged by Sir John Monash to advice on the planning of Yallourn. (6)

There wasn't, however, unanimous support for the removal of the Corry gates, as the following report attests -
Cr. Moroney said he regretted that it was intended to remove the ornamental iron gates on the Brighton-road and Carlisle-street frontages. They were fine specimens of the iron workers' art, and had been an embellishment to the grounds for many years. It would be vandalism to remove them. Even if the hedges and fences were taken away the gates could remain.
Cr. Mitty: they are a relict of the past.
Cr Moroney: Yes. That is why I want remain. I also do not approve of the removal of old and beautiful trees from the grounds. Some of them were planted by distinguished people.
The Mayor (Cr. Dawkins): A number of the old trees will remain, and those removed will be replaced by other trees
. (7)

The gates were removed but they were to be stored for possible re-erection elsewhere(8)  We have no information as to whether the gates were ever used again. What happened to these gates, the fine specimens of the iron workers' art?

Should you have any information about this item's history or location, please leave a comment below or see 'Contact us' tab for anonymous emailing.

Footnotes
(1) The Argus, July 12, 1926, see here.
(2) Obituary of Sir Lauchlan Mackinnon - The Argus, December 5, 1923, see here; Sale of CorryThe Argus, December 13, 1922, see here.
(3) The Argus, September 5, 1923, see here.
(4) Cooper, John Butler The History of St Kilda from its first settlement to a city and after 1840 - 1930, v. 2 (St Kilda City Council, 1931), p. 62.
(5) The Age, August 16, 1938, see here.
(6) The Argus, October 11, 1938, see here.
(7) The Age, August 16, 1938, see here.
(8) The Age, April 1, 1939, see here.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Lion Statues at the State Library of Victoria

In 1862, Redmond Barry, a Judge of the Victorian Supreme Court, and a man who promoted the interests of  Victoria's cultural institutions, purchased a pair of statues of  lions in London, to be displayed at the Public Library in Swanston Street (now known as the State Library of Victoria.) In October 1863 they featured in an illustration of the vestibule of the Public  Library.  


The Lions in 1863
Vestibule of the Public Library, published in The Australian News for Home Readers, October 21, 1863.
State Library of Victoria IAN21/10/63/1

The Lions were later installed on either side of the flight of steps leading to the main entrance of the Library.


The Lions, pictured with Sir Redmond Barry's statue, 1887.
Statue of Sir Redmond Barry. Photographer: Charles Rudd
State Library of Victoria image H39357/111


Forty years after they were installed there was a move to have the Lions replaced. The Before Felton website notes that -  The statues were already targeted for replacement by 1907, when Bernard Hall [the Director of the National Gallery of Victoria, which shared the Library building]  entered into correspondence with famed French sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840-1917), about the possibility of his producing one or two large bronze lions for the library steps. Hall had already selected two Rodin sculptures in the first batch of Felton Bequest acquisitions in 1905 (when he and Rupert Bunny met the sculptor at his Paris studio). In a letter to Rodin of March 1907, Hall described the existing statues at the top of the library steps as “decrepit” and “falling to pieces,” and sent a photo of the intended site. This project fell through; but in 1909 the NGV purchased a small bronze of Rodin’s “Crying lion” (Le lion qui pleure).

Even earlier than this, John Swan, R.A. (1847-1910), English painter and sculptor was reported to have been commissioned to provide replacements for the Lions. The Argus of November 7, 1925, noted -
The spacious approach to the Public Library presents a most favourable site for sculptural decoration. What has been done already so well does not, however, by any means exhaust the possibilities of the position. The late John Swan, R.A., had designed and partly modelled a wonderfully fine pair of animal bronzes (a speciality of his) to take the place of the zinc productions which for so long tried to look like representations of lions and to act as decorations for this part of the terrace. His death, unfortunately, prevented this commission from being carried out, and his "Lion Roaming" and "Lioness Removing Her Cubs to Higher Ground" (a variation of his "Deluge" group) were lost to us. The site calls for some such artistic emphasis, and we can but hope that nothing less fine will be allowed to take their place, even if we have to wait half a century. 


One of the Lions in 1918
Statue of Joan of Arc, outside the State Library of Victoria, taken 2/3/1918.
State Library of  Victoria image  H5361


From 1924 there were various newspaper articles reporting on the status of the Lions - 
The Argus, August 29, 1924 - Among the subjects considered at the meeting of the trustees of the Melbourne Public Library yesterday afternoon, when the president (Dr. Leeper) presided, was the question of removing the statuary lions which guard the entrance to the museum. These statues, which were erected in 1862, are now in a dilapidated condition. The matter was referred to the building committee for report.

The Sun News-Pictorial, September 1, 1924 - Monuments of Neglect - The king of the jungle would feel rather downcast if he met this lion full of cracks guarding the entrance to the museum. The trustees of the Melbourne Public Library are considering the question of removing the statues erected in 1862. 

The Sun News-Pictorial, October 25, 1924 - Board a Swanston-street tram, alight at the wrought-iron gates of the library and art gallery, walk up the shallow steps, past the weather-beaten stone lions and statues of St. George and Joan of Arc. 

The Trustees made their decision and the fate of these tired, dilapidated Lions was sealed and they were removed from the Public Library forecourt and delivered to the Zoo in Royal Park. 

Karen Rawady, historian at Zoos Victoria, has provided Vanished Victoria with information about this process -
From the minutes of the Zoological and Acclimatisation Society of Victoria.
December Meeting 1924: "Two metal lions at the entrance to the library might be done away with, Mr Armstrong, Secretary of the Public Library Trustees informed him; if Zoo wants them, trustees said they could have them. Wilkie inspected them, several big cracks in the figures. Offer of metal lions accepted with thanks."

February Meeting 1925: "Lions received from the public library, dilapidated, but when position found, they can be fixed up."

The State Library of Victoria website notes that they were displayed at the Zoo until the early 1960s and then removed as part of a major clean-up and haven’t been sighted since. However Ms Rawady speculates that they may never have been on display at the Zoo - There is no further mention of the metal lions in the minutes or annual reports. The Society was quite strapped for cash in the 1920s so this might explain both why they accepted the donation from the Library in the first place but also why they may never have found a position in the grounds if there was no money to fix them up.....I have not seen the metal lions in any of the photos in our collection so far. 

We are now left with two mysteries -  were the Lions ever on display at the Zoo and secondly, where are they now?  

Should you have any information about this item's history or location, please leave a comment below or see 'Contact us' tab for anonymous emailing.


We had a cake made of the lion statue and plinth for our 2024 AGM. This cake is all edible, and was amazing. It was made by Atomic Cakes in Spotswood



Acknowledgment
We are grateful to Karen Rawady for her information. The minutes of the Zoological and Acclimatisation Society of Victoria, as quoted, were published in The Zoo Story: the animals, the history, the people by Catherine de Courcy (Penguin Books, 1995).

References
Before Felton: Collection of the State Library of Victoria to 1904, complied by John Gregory  https://www.beforefelton.com/
The Argus, August 29, 1924, read here.
The Sun News-Pictorial, September 1, 1924, read here.
The Sun News-Pictorial, October 25, 1924, read here.
The Argus, November 7, 1925, read here
The Sun News-Pictorial, December 21, 1934, read here.
Weekly Times, January 12, 1935, read here.

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Carlo Catani Memorial at Trafalgar

The Warragul Gazette of September 17, 2024 reported on the theft of several bronze plaques from around the Trafalgar area including the plaque honoring Carlo Catani and the memorial to the Moe Swamp pioneers, both attached to a rock plinth on Willow Grove Road. 

Carlo Catani (1852-1918) was the Chief Engineer of the Victorian Public Works Department and amongst his many responsibilities was the drainage  of the Moe Swamp. The Moe Swamp paralleled the main Gippsland railway line from Darnum to Moe.

The Catani memorial was the work of sculptor, Stanley Hammond (1913-2000) and was installed in 1988 by the Trafalgar Bicentennial Community Committee. 


The Carlo Catani  plaque, the work of Stanley Hammond, stolen in September 2024
Photo taken May 2021 and © VanishedVictoria

This is yet another example of the senseless, selfish and anti-social theft of public art and whilst it is relatively easy to replace the Moe Swamp plaque if the Catani memorial is not found, then a suitable replacement would be difficult and expensive to recreate.

If you have any information on this theft, please contact the Warragul Police on (03) 5622 7111.


The Catani  plaque and the Moe Swamp Pioneer's plaque.
Photo taken May 2021 and © VanishedVictoria

All that remains is the rock.
Photo taken September 2024 and © VanishedVictoria


More information on Carlo Catani's work on the Moe Swamp

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Big Frog Mural, Murrumbeena

The Big Frog mural in Murrumbeena  by artist Anthony Breslin was installed on the side of the building, located on the corner of Murrumbeena Road and Railway Parade, and officially 'unveiled' on June 5, 2021. It is 50 metres long.  On July 29, 2024 the mural was removed.

The mural is based on The Story of Big Frog  from Anthony's book Brezania, and represents the confluence between Big Frog, a character who follows his dreams from growing up in a little pond to performing all around the world, and Murrumbeena’s Indigenous roots and historically swampy landscape. (1)


Murrumbeena Big Frog Mural, posted by Alpha on Flickr

The project was organised  by the Rotary Club of Caulfield to celebrate 100 years of Rotary and was funded by the City of Glen Eira and community donations.

The building has recently changed hands and the mural removed.  The tenant of the building is reported as saying that the new owner wanted the mural removed, however this was disputed by a spokesman for the owner who said  We had no knowledge of the arrangements with council, the artist and with anyone, this came as a big surprise. The owner is happy for the mural to go back to its original position, we are happy to play ball in every possible way. (2)


The empty wall after Big Frog was removed.
Photographer: Gemma Scerri, Moorabbin Kingston Leader, August 5, 2024

This happy mural which brought much joy to the community has still not been re-installed. Murals are popular expressions of public art, but this case does raise the question of what protection they have if they are painted on a  private building and ownership of the building changes hands.

We will update this story when Big Frog has returned.

Footnotes and Sources
(2)  Devastated locals want answers after Murrumbeena mural ‘Big Frog’ disappears by Gemma Scerri
Moorabbin Kingston Leader,  August 5, 2024 (see here)

Thursday, July 4, 2024

The theft of Garry the Gorilla

Whilst not exactly 'high art' this is a good news tale of a well-loved sculpture that was stolen from a retirement community in St Helena, which is north of Eltham, but was found and has now been reinstalled.  The story is from The Guardian of July 3, 2024. 

Mysterious disappearance of Garry the gorilla leads police helicopter to Melbourne back yard
A month after it was allegedly stolen, Victoria police will return a beloved gorilla statue to its rightful home at a Melbourne retirement village after using its air wing to find “Garry” in a back yard. Garry, a 1.5-metre statue, was reported stolen from the Leith Park retirement village – north-east of the Melbourne CBD – on 6 June. Police said in a statement they were not willing to “cop this kind of monkey business” when the statue was reported stolen, so investigators “threw their all” into locating Garry.

After “extensive investigations”, police narrowed in on a residence in Reservoir, roughly a 20-minute drive from the retirement village. The force’s air wing was called in for the task, and helicopter pilots spotted the statue in a back yard. A search warrant was executed at the residence on Monday, and police were set to return Garry to the entrance of Leith Park on Wednesday afternoon.

Tim Nelson, the executive manager of marketing for Abound Communities, which owns the retirement village, said residents were excited about Garry’s return, with one woman even baking cookies. “One of our residents bakes cookies with her grandson and takes the cookies over to Garry, so I spoke with Robyn this morning and Robyn’s already baking cookies ready to take back when Garry arrives this afternoon,” he told Guardian Australia.

Nelson said it was a resident who first noticed Garry was missing last month. They said “G’day” to him in the morning, but when they returned in the afternoon, Garry was not there. Police said that investigations into the alleged theft remain ongoing, and anyone who witnessed anything suspicious or who has CCTV footage is urged to contact Crime Stoppers.

Garry, who is 1.5 metres high was donated to the retirement village, along with two other African animals, by Northcote Pottery.  


Garry the Gorilla
Image: Victoria Police

Update: The Herald -Sun reported on July 6, 2024 that a man has been charged with the theft of the gorilla and a number of other offences and will face the Heidelberg Magistrates Court on  August 30.

References
Mysterious disappearance of Garry the gorilla leads police helicopter to Melbourne back yard from The Guardian,  July 3, 2024, read here
Police recover and return Garry the stolen gorilla, Victoria Police website July 3, 2024 read here.

Friday, January 26, 2024

The vandalism of the Captain Cook statue, St Kilda

The statue of Captain James Cook, in the Catani Gardens St Kilda, was the victim of  Australia Day vandalism in the early hours of January 25, 2024. The statue was sawn off at the ankles, discarded on the grass and the plinth was graffitied. The Police are investigating. 

The statue was made in England by John Tweed, from the same cast as the statue installed in the town of Whitby in England, where Yorkshire born Cook lived for nine years from the age of seventeen. The pedestal and the bronze plaques were made in Victoria. Andrew Stenhouse, a local businessman who lived just opposite the Gardens on Beaconsfield Parade, donated  £500 towards the cost of the statue and this was supplemented by other donations. The statue was unveiled on December 1, 1914. 

The vandalism was a disrespectful act towards the statue of a man who came from a humble background and became one of the greatest explorers in history, though had never set foot on what would become Victoria, and whose life ended in 1779 in a brutal Hawaiian altercation, where he was buried at sea.

 The Premier of Victoria, Jacinta Allen, has been quoted as saying We'll be working with council to repair and reinstate the statue in St Kilda.

Two days after the  statue was vandalised, a monument to Captain Cook in the Edinburgh Gardens in North Fitzroy was also toppled and  graffitied. The Police are also investigating this incident.

UPDATE - In February 2025 the Captain Cook Statue was restored.


The Captain Cook statue, St Kilda foreshore.
State Library of Victoria Cyril Stainer collection of glass lantern slides, Image H2013.223/36


The plinth of the statue, with boots still attached. 
Image: © VanishedVictoria, taken January 26, 2024.


The plinth of the statue
Image: © VanishedVictoria, taken January 26, 2024.


The Captain Cook Society website notes that there are 124 monuments or memorials to Captain James Cook world-wide. In Australia there are 41: 7 statues, 3 obelisks, 5 cairns, 9 plaques, 1 marker and 16 other memorials

Sources