An Edwardian Summer
Sydney lawyer and identity Arthur Wigram Allen, a tirelessly enthusiastic photographer, was fascinated by the social and technological changes occurring during his lifetime. His talent for amateur photography produced extraordinary pictures that offer a fresh insight into the Edwardian years in Sydney.
The Edwardian era was sandwiched between the great achievements of the Victorian age and the global catastrophe of World War I. The death of Queen Victoria in January 1901 heralded a new century of significant inventions and social changes, including powered flight, the rise of the motorcar and a new federated Australia.
An Edwardian Summer presented a selection of Arthur Allen's beautiful images, depicting intimate moments with family and friends, motoring and harbour excursions, theatrical celebrities, bush picnics, the introduction of surf bathing on Sydney beaches, processions, pageants and mass celebrations, and new freedoms in fashion. Most had never before been published, and they form an unrivalled personal pictorial record of these rapidly changing times.
The exhibition also included artworks by Rupert Bunny, Ethel Carrick Fox, Arthur Streeton and Grace Cossington Smith, examples of male and female fashion including evening and day wear, motoring ensembles and children's dress-up costumes, jewellery and accessories, furniture and decorative embellishments characteristic of the Edwardian era.
In association with the State Library NSW
Supporter: Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences
Sponsors: Allens Arthur Robinson, Avant Card
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An Edwardian Summer: Sydney through the lens of Arthur Wigram Allen
A talent for amateur photography produced extraordinary pictures that offer a fresh insight into the Edwardian years in Sydney