
Episode 9: John Olsen's Opera House Mural
11 Jul ABC's blog | Email this page | 78 reads
Tuesday, 05 August
6.50pm
The National Library of Australia is the country's largest reference library with over nine million items in its collection, including a surprising number of art works. Yet visitors to the library glimpse only a fraction of the collection with many fragile items unable to be placed on permanent display.
Former director of the National Gallery of Australia, Betty Churcher, presents an insider's guide to some of the library's art treasures, which are rarely on public display. From her unique vantage point, Churcher makes intriguing historical connections between paintings and engravings, photography, manuscripts and artefacts, illustrated journals and diaries.
These are fascinating tales about the creative process and the works themselves that offer a tantalising insight into Australia's culture and heritage.
Episode 9: John Olsen's Opera House Mural
John Olsen's visual diary documents his progress on the biggest commission of his career, the Sydney Opera House mural. Spanning 10 years from 1972, Olsen's diary follows the evolution of his famous mural, which was inspired by Kenneth Slessor's epic poem Five Bells, a tribute to a friend who drowned in Sydney Harbour. Slessor's own 1937 notebook sits alongside Olsen's diary, detailing the gradual process of constructing an epic poem. Olsen guides Churcher through the creation of his mural, and the marine world of Sydney Harbour, to reveal another treasure - a hidden corner of the painting rarely seen by the public.

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