Australiana

Cultural, natural or geographical objects evoking Australia


title: "Australiana" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["culture-of-australia", "memorabilia", "national-identities", "symbolism", "iconography", "collecting", "antiques", "australian-art", "ephemera"] description: "Cultural, natural or geographical objects evoking Australia" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australiana" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Cultural, natural or geographical objects evoking Australia ::

::callout[type=note] the cultural concept ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/da/Marie-Celeste_de_Villentroy_in_Australian_flag,_ca._1920.jpg" caption="NAA Magazine]], Volume 3}}"] ::

Australiana is anything distinctive, symbolic or stereotypical of Australian culture, society, geography and ecology, especially if it is endemic to Australia or has reached iconic status, and refers also to the collecting and collections of such characteristic materials. It includes the people and their spoken accent, places, flora, fauna, and events of Australian history and their two- or three-dimensional images.

Documents and realia identified as Australiana become collectable and comprise anything made in Australia or especially made for Australian use. Australiana often borrows from Australian First Nations' cultures, or features stereotypes of white Australian settler and pioneer culture. It attaches to Australian identity in representing a nationalist ethos or sentiment.

Artefacts collectable as Australiana include furniture, pottery, glass, bottles, printed materials, metal and wooden objects, fabrics and aboriginal collectables. They may range from elaborate antiques such as engraved and/or silver-decorated emu eggs, to primitive or rural decorative arts, folk crafts, and make-do and improvised objects. Objects can be generically Australian, such as boomerangs, Akubra hats, and didgeridoos, or can be common objects with Australian cultural images displayed on them.

Australiana may also refer to art with an Australian style or subject, including paintings, ceramics, crafts and coins that depict Australian imagery. Certain Australiana has become cliché, or is considered kitsch.

Collections

Public Australiana collections are found in the state and national libraries and museums, and in university and government institutions.

The National Library of Australia holds specific collections of Australiana, including the Nan Kivell Collection.

The National Museum of Australia houses numbers of Australiana collections including the Terence Lane kangaroo collection, and that of Trevor Kennedy, begun as a private museum.

The Powerhouse Museum collections include Australiana amongst its international artefacts of scientific and technological interest, and holds exhibitions of Australian popular culture.

The State Library of New South Wales incorporates the Mitchell Library, founded on the efforts of its namesake, a collector of Australian print publications, and it houses the Sir William Dixson collections of books, maps, paintings, stamps, coins and manuscripts in the Sir William Dixson Collection, the Dixson Galleries (created in 1929) and the Dixson Library (1959).

The State Library of Victoria indexes its collections of ephemera, realia, and letters, newspapers, journals and books, to assist access to Australiana.

The University of Melbourne holds the Russell and Mab Grimwade Collection in the Potter Museum of Art, the Baillieu Library and University Archives.

Julie & Andrew Carter's Australiana Ceramics Collection is found in the Canberra Museum and Art Gallery, Canberra

Organisations

The Australiana Society

A national body The Australiana Society, an incorporated organisation based in Sydney, and with representatives on its board of directors from each state and territory, proclaims as its remit to "collect, study and preserve" Australiana: "art, decorative arts, antiques, historic items, collectables, buildings and sites, and portable heritage made in, or relating to, Australia." It publishes a quarterly magazine, Australiana, and in partnership with the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, where it was founded, the Society awards to a collector the Powerhouse Prize for Australiana.

Ephemera Society of Australia

Members of the incorporated Ephemera Society of Australia, founded in 1987, are devoted to the collection and preservation of common but transitory printed material such as labels, flyers and pamphlets, though the definition of ephemera has since expanded to contemporary material including zines and video. It publishes the Ephemera Journal of Australia.

International recognition

Australiana has become familiar or even iconic internationally through its export of cinema, television, visual and audio arts, travel industry promotions and publications, and through souvenirs sold to international, and interstate, tourists, such as snow globes or tea towels with Australian scenery or icons imprinted on them, or featuring the national colours of Australia (green and gold) derived from the nation's floral emblem, the Golden Wattle. Many iconic creatures or objects are represented as 'Big Thngs', novelty sculptures, which began in the mid-1960s with the Big Banana in Coffs Harbour, and which become tourist attractions.

Subjects

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/aa/Windrose_Outback_AUS.JPG" caption="Symbolism of the [[Outback]] way of life is common in Australiana"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b2/Meat_pie.jpg" caption="A typical Australian meat pie with tomato sauce"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5e/Mixed_Berry_Pavlova.jpg" caption="Although its country of origin is a contentious issue, the pavlova is a part of the Australian identity."] ::

People depicted in such artwork; Australian explorers, drovers, bushrangers, swagmen, Aboriginal Australians, diggers, stockmen, personify Australiana. Thus Surf Life Savers become symbolic of the nation's beach culture resulting from Australian populations being concentrated in regions on or near the coast, around the largely dry inland.

Australiana includes commercial products and brands which due to marketing, their endemic origins, or the mythology or nostalgia attaching to them, evoke "Australianness". Advertisements and posters depicting these brands often develop value as Australiana as well. The following themes are examples of Australiana:

Aboriginal culture

Animals

Businesses

Clothing

  • Akubra hats are a staple of country people but are also seen in cities at election time on the heads of Australian politicians. Les Hiddins also known as The Bush Tucker Man was famous for the unique shape of his akubra hat.
  • Driza-Bone coats were popularized in the movie The Man From Snowy River which showed groups of men on horseback wearing long Driza-Bone coats chasing after brumbies in the Victorian Alps.
  • RM Williams boots
  • Speedos, colloquially known as Budgie smugglers, are swim briefs that have been brought to attention of the Australian public through images of surf life savers, Australian men and women swimmers at the Olympic Games and more recently the then prime minister Tony Abbott who was photographed wearing them.
  • Ugg boots made simply from sheep skin and worn from the 1800s. The most recent version created by Australian surfer Brian Smith to keep his feet warm, and worn all over the world by Australians in the 1970's. Brought to notice by the enforcement of trademark disputes to prevent the generic use of the term.

Food

Music

People

Places

Products

Publications

A range of magazines, contemporary and historical, specialise in and promote Australiana and 'Australianness', and are in themselves collectible. {{columns-list|colwidth=15em|

Sport

References

References

  1. Lisa Keane Elliott. (2018). "Who was the Archives' flag girl?". [[National Archives of Australia.
  2. (2021-09-29). "‘An idealised Australian ethos’: why Bluey is an audience favourite, even for adults without kids".
  3. (2005). "Carters's Collecting Australiana: a guide to Australian Antiques and Collectables". John Furphy Pty Ltd.
  4. Turner, Graeme. (2020-07-22). "Making It National: Nationalism and Australian popular culture". Routledge.
  5. (2009). "Crossing cultures: conflict, migration and convergence ; the proceedings of the 32nd International Congress in the History of Art, the University of Melbourne, 13 - 18 January 2008". The Miegunyah Press.
  6. Winkworth, Kylie. (1991). "Packaging the Past? Public Histories". Melbourne University Publishing.
  7. http://www.coolabah.com/oz/denmark/index4.cfm An article about Australiana
  8. Newell, Melody. (2024). "Kitsch Sites: Mythmaking and the Snowy Mountains Scheme". UNSW Sydney.
  9. "Nan Kivell Collection {{!}} National Library of Australia (NLA)".
  10. Allen, Craig. (2020-09-16). "National Museum of Australia drops $8m on largest private collection of Australiana". ABC News.
  11. "On the box: great moments in Australian television 1956–2006". Powerhousemuseum.com.
  12. (27 March 2011). "The 80s Are Back – ended on 27 March 2011". Powerhouse Museum.
  13. State Library of New South Wale. (2023-02-13). "Sir William Dixson collection".
  14. Gatehouse, Blair. "Research Guides: Australiana Index: Scope of the index".
  15. Matulick, Shelley. (2025-02-10). "The Russell and Mab Grimwade Bequest is an extensive collection of cultural material from the estate of Sir Russell and Lady Grimwade.".
  16. http://www.australiana.org.au/
  17. (2020). "Australiana Society Incorporated Constitution 2020".
  18. (2017). "Collecting for the Nation: The Australiana Fund". NewSouth Publishing, University of New South Wales Press Limited.
  19. (February 1995). "Special Announcement". Australiana.
  20. "Ephemera Society of Australia Inc. — paper collectables".
  21. "Ephemera Journal of Australia". Ephemera Society of Australia.
  22. Wilkins, Britt. "The rise and rise of Bluey".
  23. Williams, Cameron. (October 2019). "Top dogs: The ABC's 'Bluey' and Australian children's animation". Australian Teachers of Media Inc. (ATOM).
  24. "International Arts Tourism: Connecting cultures {{!}} Creative Australia".
  25. Clarke, Amy. (2017). "Australia's big dilemma: regional/national identities, heritage listing and Big Things". Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand.
  26. Cozzolino, Mimmo. (1980). "Symbols of Australia". Penguin.
  27. http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/summary_0199-6115_ITM An article about Australia brands
  28. Wilkins, Britt. "The rise and rise of Bluey".
  29. Williams, Cameron. (October 2019). "Top dogs: The ABC's 'Bluey' and Australian children's animation". Australian Teachers of Media Inc. (ATOM).
  30. "Tasmanian Tiger".
  31. "Newly discovered footage of last-known Tasmanian tiger released".
  32. "VIDEO: Bush Tucker Man: The man with the most memorable hat in Australia goes digital".
  33. "The Surprising History Of The Aussie Ugg Boot".
  34. "Of Meat Pies and Football, an Australian Love Story".
  35. "The Best Australian Beer Brands".
  36. "Gallipoli landing".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

culture-of-australiamemorabilianational-identitiessymbolismiconographycollectingantiquesaustralian-artephemera