Mildura 平均房价House 价格比去年上升7% . 周边地区Mildura Median RentThe House rent is 上升2% .
| A199 Cureton Avenue, Mildura | 距离: | 477.1 公里 to CBD; 253.7 公里 to Dimboola Station [公共交通] |
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地图位置 | 街景 | 周边成交价 | 改建申请历史: | | 被市政府指定为 Victorian heritage | Last updated on - February 12, 2007 The large ceramic mural, by Douglas Annand, was commissioned in 1952 and installed in 1953 beside the central door of the Mildura Base Hospital Nurses' Home which had been opened in January 1951, a building in mid-century 'International modern' style. It is a rare example of public art commissioned for a country public hospital in Victoria. It is also a significant example of work by a major artist/designer who worked in a variety of media. Annand was considered to have made an enormous contribution to the development of Australian modernism. The work comprises 63 square tiles, each 14 inches square [35.56cm]; 7 tiles horizontally and 9 tiles vertically, the whole work being approximately 2.5m by 3.1m. The colourful work depicts a female figure pouring water from a pitcher over the ochre-coloured land; elements include a white-coloured river and trees, figures and buildings. The ceramic mural by Douglas Annand is significant for aesthetic/architectural reasons in view of his acknowledged reputation as one of Australia's most innovative artist/designers, who produced murals in paint, glass, ceramic, metals and mosaic as well as paintings, sculpture, relief and graphic design for posters, books, etc, approaching all he created with freshness and vigour. This mural illustrates his innovative and sophisticated approach to the conjunction of art and design. The mural achieves a solution in harmony with - and contrasts to - the architecture. The ceramic mural by Douglas Annand is significant for historical reasons because it is one of the earliest site-specific ceramic murals completed within the modernist idiom in Australian art and because it is one of the very few ceramic murals in Australia - all the more unusual in that it is located in a country city. The ceramic mural by Douglas Annand is significant for social reasons because it represents one of the few commissions given by architects for murals in the 1950s in Australia and one of remarkably few in a hospital. Its subject matter illustrates the period in which it was designed and because the artist interspersed a multitude of indigenous matter with items of civic interest to complete the design. The ceramic mural by Douglas Annand is significant for technical reasons because the artist used what was, in Australia at that time, an unusual medium - painted ceramic tiles - and it is executed on what was a substantial scale for that time. Classified: 01/05/2007 File Note: December 2008: Building demolished. Mural stored at Mildura Arts Centre. | | 2015年02月27日 | Variation of Licence | (Source: Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation, 申请编号: 55350A02) |
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