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Please note that not all presentations will be made available and suggest that those interested should keep an eye on this page as they are added. When searching for the presentations please look at the bottom of the speaker profiles to click onto their links. Follow Facebook Already Registered? How Did We Get Here? In his talk, Richard Offen will trace the history of the change in attitudes to the importance of both history and heritage over the last two hundred years, noting how we have moved from a seemingly total disregard of historic importance to one where communities work tirelessly to record and protect both their individual and communal histories, as represented by the heritage places of the area.
Should we be concerned by the blurring of the demarcation line? If David Lowenthal is to be believed, yes we should: A popular lecturer, Richard has been a regular broadcaster on both radio and television for many years and is probably best known in Perth for his Monday morning history spot on the ABC Breakfast Show.
Richard's other interests include bell ringing, playing the piano badly, he claims! ConnectionsUsing Port Arthur, Tasmania, on the World Heritage list, and a national heritage icon, this presentation will explore the importance of history in understanding and interpreting Heritage; in using heritage places to give people a deeper understanding of Australia's heritage in all its complexity and ambiguity; and its relevance to our present lives and beliefs.
Secondly, though Port Arthur is a large and complex site, the talk will demonstrate that the principles, policies and skills required to successfully conserve and interpret it have common application. This set of management tools encompasses a far wider range of skills than those commonly thought of as those of the historian or heritage practitioner.
Successful heritage management requires the active incorporation of community values, and the adoption principles of partnership and facilitation, rather than a top-down expert dictated style. The paper will also explore these connections. In she was appointed an Officer in the Order of Australia for her service to cultural heritage conservation. Cultural Heritage Landscapes —an integrating conceptCultural landscapes are the combined works of nature and humankind, expressing a long and intimate relationship between peoples and their natural environment.
Cultural landscapes - cultivated terraces on lofty mountains, managed grasslands, gardens, sacred places, archaeological sites - testify to the creative genius, social development and the imaginative and spiritual vitality of humanity. They are part of our collective identity. This paper will briefly examine the development of cultural landscapes and their identification, protection and management at national and international levels. Jane is joint author of Pastoral Australia: She has four decades of experience in national park, museum, historic site management and as a member on many heritage boards including the Australian Heritage Council.
She is currently involved in rural landscape conservation and is the Australian voting member of the ICOMOS international scientific committee on cultural landscapes. Managing cultural landscapes - connecting people to place. It examines the challenges of an integrated management solution that embraces the history and heritage of the Island within a commercially operated tourism enterprise.
Listed as an A-Class Reserve for its recreational qualities and natural environment, the Island has a multitude and diversity of cultural heritage values woven into its tangible and intangible fabric. Identifying the Island as a cultural landscape recognises that all these values are interrelated, underpinning the strong connection between people and placeBio: Identifying the Island as a cultural landscape recognises that all these values are interrelated, underpinning the strong connection between people and place.
These rich and varied culturalbackgrounds have allowed him, through his filmmaking,research and writing to explore culture, knowledge and diversenarratives. This is evident via his extensive film productions and academicwritings — including his PhD exegesis Wadjemup: Ballarat has a national and international reputation for its heritage. Mayor McIntosh has been a long standing advocate for Ballarat; her areas of particular interest have focused on the tourism, arts and events sectors. Mayor McIntosh has set a list of personal priorities for her Mayoral term which include activating the Central Business District and enhancing elements of its historical character; delivery of a suite of community infrastructure to communities in the municipality; support for development of the Railway precinct; progressing next steps on the agreed plan for the Civic Hall and development of an Emergency Services hub in the Ballarat Airport Precinct, to include a major upgrade to the north-south runway.
The Happy Museum Launched in April , the Happy Museum Project provides a leadership framework for museums to develop a holistic approach to wellbeing and sustainability. Whilst many museums appreciate their position at the heart of their community and combine scholarship, stewardship, learning and a desire for greater participation, the project shows that the context is now different. Tony Butler believes that museums are well placed to play an active part, but that grasping the opportunity will require re-imagining key aspects of their role, both in terms of the kinds of experience they provide to their visitors and the way they relate to their collections, to their communities and to the pressing issues of the day.
The session will include examples of how museums have used Happy Museum principles in their strategic development and creative programming. It will also introduce delegates to simple evaluation tools to test the effectiveness of engaging audiences to these ideas. He repositioned the organisation as a social enterprise and led a major capital development programme. In he founded the Happy Museum Project, to create an international community of practice to explore how museums could contribute to a society in which well-being and environmental sustainability were its principle values.
Painting and drawing are the most obvious threads of portable cultural heritage that can help connect our valued places with their past. This presentation will focus on the art collection of the Royal WA Historical Society and demonstrate how portable heritage helps our understanding of history. Bio Dorothy Erickson has a multi-faceted career as an internationally exhibiting artist jeweller, curator, art historian, author and critic with associated practices in interior and garden design and heritage.
Since completing her PhD in Art history in she has published many articles and several books. The most recent Inspired by Light and Land: Designers and Makers in Western Australia: Dorothy has lectured at Curtin University, worked in the heritage field since and currently has a practice that advises institutions, audits collections, gives lectures, mounts exhibitions, arranges donations to institutions and fundraises to publish. Over the past four years the State Library has been involved in building the Western Australian New Music Archive — an online repository for digital collection items representing the history of experimental and art music practice in the state.
This collection represents not only Western Australian composition, performance and related activities, but also provides a snapshot of a community that has grown and changed over decades, following emerging genres and trends, incorporating new technologies, and existing around key individuals, groups, events and locations. The WANMA project has also provided an opportunity for the State Library to consider the ways in which it collects and represents music and associated creative practice, with a large element of that collecting hinging on access to the communities from which this creative practice emerges.
Bio Adam Trainer is a researcher, musician and broadcaster from Perth. He obtained his PhD from Murdoch University in , and has taught film studies, cultural studies and popular music studies at both Curtin and Edith Cowan Universities. He has published on the history of popular music in Perth, visual noise and the aesthetics of the sublime, and post-ironic musical aesthetics. Adam has been involved in the Perth music scene since the early s, as both a solo performer and member of numerous indie and experimental rock bands.
This presentation will provide an example of a rare artefact: Len's research has allowed the broadening of the understanding of the many unique characteristics of Australia's Aboriginal people and has contributed enormously to improving the appreciation of Aboriginal culture and heritage of the Southwest of Australia. Len has a Masters in Literature and Communications and his research interests are in the area of Aboriginal Studies, including Nyungar interpretive histories and Nyungar theoretical and practical research models.
More than 1, places have been entered onto the State Register since its formation in , including some of the most notable landmark buildings in Perth and Fremantle. This talk will look at the range of heritage places currently on the State Register, and explore the relationships that the register has with other heritage lists. Moss Wilson is an Archaeologist who has worked with private consultancies, local governments, the museum sector, and currently works with the Assessment and Registration team at the State Heritage Office.
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His interests include developing archaeological management for heritage places and the application of modern technologies to site recording. Not Just Pretty Buildings. The Branch provides registration services and educational information and is currently focussed on raising awareness about the new Associations Incorporation Act and supporting clubs and associations to meet their obligations.
The presentation is a brief overview of the new laws for incorporated associations highlighting some of the key changes and explaining the transitional processes. Libbee has worked in this area for 8 years and has been involved in developing educational resources for not-for-profit organisations including the INC Guide for incorporated associations, new law Transition Packs and the Associations Info newsletters.
There were many years of argument about the cost and the need but eventually it was completed in Whilst we may now take this connection for granted, it is important o reflect on the heritage it has left us. The presentation will summarise why it was necessary, what was the situation beforehand, what connections had been made between the rest of Australia. Maps and statistics will help to show how the trans-Australian railway has changed and been adapted in its use and its effects on our society.
By profession Geoffrey is a land surveyor and map-maker.
But he has also been interested in railways as long as he can remember, photographing and recording the changing railway scene since and having his first rail history book published in , his most recent a history of passenger rail travel in WA. In latter years he has used his professional expertise to further his research of railways and places in WA with the research and publication of historical gazetteers. Geoffrey Higham is a long time member, and currently publications editor, of Rail Heritage WA and his main areas in the society are preparing and publishing society's journal "The Westland" and various books, and assisting with sales and website.
Showcasing heritage collections via interactive digital storytellingJoint presentation with Dr. Its aim is to tell the story of a physical museum object collection based on research conducted about what happened with this heritage car collection between and in Western Australia published in the appended academic peer-reviewed journal article: Heritage of the Markham car collection: Estrangement with the West Australian motoring community.
A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals, 12 1 , The use of graphical visualization techniques improves the interpretation in a narrative context, hence helps to convey information and deliver a better understanding of a story. Archival resources and various media elements were used to develop the interactive virtual museum environment production to create affect and offer visitors an immersive experience. Beata Dawson is a Ph. Before she moved to Perth, Australia she partially completed her postgraduate degree in Library Informatics , and had qualifications in Foreign Trade and Customs Administration , , as well.
She previously worked in foreign economics area, and as an educator, and is currently working in information management. She has conducted research in educational history, child protection, drug prevention, and in the information field: Architectural history sources in conservation practice. This paper will show how historic materials in archives have been used to inform conservation practice. Key examples will illustrate how documentary sources have been compared with the real physical evidence on site in the processes of understanding and conserving significant places.
Now a consulting architect in conservation, Honorary Research Fellow and lecturer in architectural conservation at UWA, and author of a series of books on Western Building Construction: Connecting the Nation The building of railways has always been about connecting people and places thus providing better transport links. In WA many lines were built to encourage development in agricultural areas. This idea of supporting development was seen as recently as the construction of the railway to Mandurah when Transit Oriented Design drove the creation of new communities.
However the construction of one railway was more about connecting people to other places outside WA and reducing the feeling of isolation felt by Western Australians. Building the Trans Australian railway was a massive undertaking through country that did not provide for the numbers of workers transported into it or for the supplies for their operations. I will explore how this connection was built, some of the places that were created and how people have lived in, and travelled through, this landscape.
Prior to this, she was Coordinator Heritage, Museums and the Arts at the City of Wanneroo and is very interested in community participation in museums and industrial heritage. Philippa has a long association with railway history and preservation in WA. A past president and life member of Rail Heritage WA she is committed to highlighting the social history and interpretation of rail heritage.
She is a published author on railway history and writer of conservation plans for railway vehicles. Tales of the Unexpected from the State Archives Collection. If so, this presentation is for you.
Even if you are an experienced researcher this presentation will be of value. SRO Senior Archivist Damien Hassan will talk about items held in the archives collection that are weird, wonderful or simply not known about. Find out historical curiosities you never knew about WA, your city and perhaps even your own backyard. Along the way, learn how to locate archival records that support your own research interests, and discover the true breadth and richness that is the State Archives Collection.
The collection documents all manner of government activities and interaction with its citizenry. With over 2 million Colonial, State and Local government records in the collection, there remain untapped sources of information to support new interpretations of Western Australian heritage and history.
Damien is currently managing several large scale digitisation projects for the SRO. She will also explain what the test is for registration as a charity and how eligible societies can apply to register. In this role she chaired or co-chaired reviews into the regulation of the not-for-profit sector , the design and governance of regulatory bodies in Victoria , and Victoria's Indigenous Employment Strategy She participated in state, national and international efforts to improve the quality and equity of school education.
She has chaired or served on a number of education, health and government boards. Susan's significant achievements and leadership were acknowledged in when she was appointed Member of the Order of Australia for service to education through a range of executive roles, development and implementation of curriculum policy, to international Initiatives and resources for educators in the Pacific region, and to the community.
Showcasing heritage collections via interactive digital storytellingJoint Presentation with Beata Dawson. We begin with a presentation of the story then share insights on the skill sets required for creating such productions. Pauline studies how information is perceived and used in organizations and communities. With this focus in mind, she completed her Ph. The Remembering Them Project: A collaboration to mark the Centenary of World War 1. With funding from Lotterywest for assistance comprising a display case and panels as well as curatorial and research support, historical societies, museums and local governments stretching from Wyndham to Esperance, Kalgoorlie to Derby, Bencubbin to Margaret River and Bunbury to Sandstone have been developing their own exhibitions and using their own voices to commemorate local people in the centenary celebrations.
Our panel is keen to tell you more about working in this collaborative way. WA Museum's project officer for Remembering Them and has been working with the project since October Has been working in WA's heritage industry for more than fifteen years and, since , has been one of the team of researchers employed by the Royal WA Historical Society on the project. Joint presentation with Marcia Schneider. The Historical Panoramas website was launched in June and showcases a selection of wide-angle views of Perth and Fremantle dating as far back as The panoramas provide a vivid view into the past of these two cities, and unlike individual photographs, the photographic panoramas provide a very good way to understand the physical layout of a cityscape.
The project was conducted collaboratively between Curtin University and the State Library of Western Australia, with the additional support of a number of organisations. The built environment of these two cities has changed remarkably over a period of nearly years and the website allow users to fade between different years, jump between currently twelve different locations, and in many instances contrast the historical view with a modern day view from the same location.
By presenting the images via an interactive platform it allows us to promote public interest and engagement with Perth's rich history. The website supports users who may have a professional or a casual interest and has had over unique visitors since the site was launched. We are planning to increase the scope and detail of the site over time.
He has a strong background in stereoscopic 3D imaging, visualisation, 3D reconstruction, 3D cameras and displays, video electronics, underwater vehicles ROVs , and engineering software development, with applications in offshore oil and gas, and maritime archaeology. Creative Advertising and Graphic Design, accompanied by a minor in front-end web coding.
Marcia continues to work in collaboration with the HIVE collating both the historical and modern day photographs into an ever-expanding virtual tour. This paper details how a specialist heritage team, an appointed Noongar Advisory Panel as well as 21 local government authorities worked together in a project led by the National Trust of Australia WA over 18 months to produce a model for working with natural, Aboriginal and historic heritage in a whole of river approach. Gina Pickering combines 16 years cultural heritage experience and qualifications with a broadcast television background at the National Trust of Australia WA as a Project Manager, Interpretation and Communications Officer.
She has developed interpretation plans for state listed heritage places in WA since and has managed and delivered interactive and linear productions for interpretive centres, museums, and public spaces in Western Australia and Queensland since As Editor, Gina has been responsible for delivering national and state based publications for the National Trust of Australia since She has written and directed a range of short documentaries over the past decade including Jellyfish Chronicles - emotional connections to the Swan and Canning Rivers in It is an extremely significant collection previously considered by few other than genealogical researchers.
Four highly accomplished early career classical guitarists have recently been artists in residence at East Perth Cemeteries. They were asked to respond to themes and stories that arose from their consideration of the graves and associated historical documentation.
More than 1, places have been entered onto the State Register since its formation in , including some of the most notable landmark buildings in Perth and Fremantle. The humble sign is often seen as the most straight-forward solution, but there are other ways to share our stories. After completing his degree and PhD in sustainable development at Murdoch University he had the opportunity to work with Oxfam on community fisheries project in Cambodia. Moss Wilson is an Archaeologist who has worked with private consultancies, local governments, the museum sector, and currently works with the Assessment and Registration team at the State Heritage Office. The audience engagement initiative is intended to build the capacity of collecting organisations to connect diverse audiences with the rich collection resources available in their own community. Tony Butler believes that museums are well placed to play an active part, but that grasping the opportunity will require re-imagining key aspects of their role, both in terms of the kinds of experience they provide to their visitors and the way they relate to their collections, to their communities and to the pressing issues of the day.
The residency included the commission of an original composition as an additional contemporary response to the collection. Documented through a series of vlogs, Sound from the Ground culminated in evocative performances in the church at the Cemeteries. The music, both historical and contemporary, performed in a heritage place and surrounded by the inspirational graves, has formed a fully immersive and unique experience. From its initial conception, Sound from the Ground has been underpinned by a number of aims that include the desire to attract new audiences, enhance awareness and understanding of the significance of the collection and help ensure its relevance to contemporary society.
In addition the project has challenged notions of how collections may be understood and what they might mean, and demonstrates how a collection may inspire artistic endeavour. Sound from the Ground has revealed new and unexpected layers of significance and inspired audiences to consider the collection as more than just a source of genealogical information. It has also left a musical legacy for contemplation and consideration by audiences now and in the future. Sarah has been with the National Trust of Western Australia since and holds the position of Director, Conservation. Her academic qualifications are in anthropology and museum studies which are a perfect combination for the conservation and interpretation of heritage places.
Sarah has a particular interest in quirky and unexpected twists that can challenge perceptions of heritage and heritage practice. Historical Narratives — A platform for engaging the next generationHistorical narratives present a platform for weaving History skills, English and critical information literacy.
Central to achieving this is accessing State Library collections. While many of the curriculum skills in Humanities and Social Sciences, questioning and researching can be drawn from these State Library workshops, there is also a wide scope for integrating the development of critical information literacy skills. The State Library collection is free and is increasingly available online. Kate has taught English and Science and now delivers the State Library education program.
The Significance of the Coolbaroo Club as Potential Heritage Tourism, Education and Community Development in PerthIn assessing the Aboriginal heritage experiences and places in Perth that are available to visitors and locals alike, two categorisations become clear.
What is identified and explored in this presentation through an assessment of the Aboriginal heritage currently on offer within Perth, is that there is an underrepresentation of positive heritage places that demonstrate Aboriginal and European contact or places of urban, Aboriginal heritage. The Coolbaroo Club provides an example of this type of positive Aboriginal heritage associated with European built heritage and culture. Established in by a group of both Aboriginal and Euro-Australian activists, the Coolbaroo League was an organisation that supported and fostered Aboriginal community development through weekly dances and social gatherings at various European-built halls of Perth.
Gemma discusses how the Coolbaroo Club has previously been presented in Perth and draws on experts on the subject who have written about and who have curated exhibitions on the place to understand reactions that the general public have had towards the Coolbaroo Club and whether it could be further pursued as a more permanent heritage space. By drawing on transnational comparisons the successful ways in which to present the Coolbaroo Club more permanently in Perth are explored.
Gemma is a recent graduate from the University of Western Australia, completing her Bachelor of Science: Archaeology and Anthropology in before her Masters of Heritage Studies in Topic - To be Confirmed Bio: On returning to Australia in he became a partner of Howlett and Bailey Architects.
His practice merged with the Cox group in and he was elected Chairman of the National Executive Committee in This project will not result in an exhaustive history of the State. Instead it will be a concise document that provides an overarching framework that identifies the key events and stories which have shaped Western Australia.
It will inform the next stage of the project, which is to compile a hierarchy of themes and key stories that are of primary and secondary importance in shaping the State illustrated by examples. Clare Menck has worked as a professional historian for over 16 years since graduating from the University of Western Australia in with first class Honours. She has been engaged on numerous research projects as a consultant historian, whilst also spending several years as a Heritage Officer at the State Heritage Office.
However, the management of archaeological sites, particularly those dating from the historical period in WA, has largely been undertaken in an ad-hoc manner. To provide greater clarity and consistency in this important area, the Heritage Council has developed guidelines for the management of this rich and valuable resource. Although developed with a view to ensuring sites which have been entered in the State Register are managed appropriately, the guidelines will also assist other agencies, groups and individuals in the management of Western Australian archaeological sites.
Briefly working at the State Heritage Office in , Kelly returned to UWA to complete a PhD in historical archaeology examining the global, national, and local contexts of late nineteenth- to early twentieth-century gold mining settlements in the Upper Murchison, WA. Whilst completing her PhD Kelly also worked as an archaeological consultant , completed a UWA teaching internship , and worked as a lecturer and tutor at UWA In June Kelly commenced her role as a Senior Heritage Officer with the State Heritage Office where she continues to provide archaeological management advice across the agency and to external stakeholders.
A few may be able to go back further by connecting to well documented lineages such as European aristocratic families or Jewish rabbinical lines. However, this does not tell us much about the family. Study of their religious, political, social and economic situation will provide context for family events, how and why ancestors moved across town or around the world, changed employment, why foreigners were married or children died. Recent DNA testing advances are providing new means of tracing genetic lineage linking with previously unknown relatives.
He is a fourth generation Australian with all of his ancestors in South Australia before from England and Prussia. In , the National Trust in WA developed a new program in conjunction with the Department of Corrective Services to train prisoners in these technical skills. Several projects on Trust properties were identified which allowed prisoners to learn and complete conservation works under quality trainers.
This presentation will discuss recent projects successfully trialled. These were treated as a typical program of works with normal building site requirements, a client National Trust , a builder the trainers and the prisoners, all nearing release as employees with real work volume targets and quality of work. Some of the prisoner trainees showed exceptional aptitude for their new skills thereby contributing to their future employment opportunities.
This outstanding partnership has resulted in multiple benefits: Quality conservation works completed on National Trust places. Providing potential workers with conservation trade skills to meet a need by conservation builders. Providing job skills, experience and work ethics to prisoners nearing release. Typically projects of several weeks are completed in one or two weeks providing cost savings that enable more conservation work from available funding. Heritage places of significance to local communities are being conserved by trainees from local prisons.
The Trust has more projects planned this year and is keen to continue the conservation training partnership which provides tangible benefits to all involved.
Following two years employment with a small heritage architectural firm Eric joined the National Trust of Australia WA. The real satisfaction for family historians is not just in following the bloodlines — but in filling out the character — or at least the background and circumstance of our ancestors. But how do we shed light on the lives of our ancestors? What were their interests, what conditions did they live and work under; were they active in sport or community; did they write to the newspaper; indeed, could they read and write?
Some of these things we may never discover - but it is surprising how much you can surmise from contemporary narratives and the records of individuals living in similar circumstances. Leonie has many years' experience working at the State Library as a Reference Librarian and is now one of the Subject Specialists in the Heritage Team. Amongst other duties she has responsibility for producing training seminars, talks and articles researched from the Library's heritage collections. Leonie's own family research has uncovered two pensioner guards and a WA convict.
Her family history still presents many mysteries. Dealing with Indigenous photographic archives in a digital age. How do we as Indigenous Australians benefit from these historical photographic collections of Aboriginal peoples today? This paper will discuss the Returning Photos: Australian Aboriginal Photographs from European Collections Project which is facilitated at UWA but collaborates with four European Museum partners overseas which house these historic photographic collections.
The projects aims are to inform Indigenous groups and communities across Australia that these collections exist and that we have made them digitally accessible to people online. Donna has worked with Indigenous people, groups and organisations throughout Western Australia and the broader Australian Indigenous community, particularly within the fields of arts, history, cultural heritage and native title.
Of particular significance, Donna was employed by the Berndt Museum of Anthropology in to facilitate the digitisation, restoration and repatriation of Indigenous photographic collections back to the communities from which they were taken. This has resulted in her current employment as a researcher at the University of Western Australia whose main task is to repatriate the Indigenous photographic collections housed in four European institutions back to their communities of origin. Connecting the Past and the Future: This is in part because the energy embodied in the existing building stock is significant.
In fact, in Australia it has been calculated as been equivalent to ten years of the total energy consumption for the entire country. If you are sure that this product is in violation of acceptable content as defined in the agreement or that it does not meet our guidelines for General Access, please fill out the form below.
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