One of the largest private collections of Aboriginal bark art in the world , not many Territorians would be aware of its existence. It was built up over 25 years by the late Dr Edward L. Ruhe, a professor of 18th century English literature at the University of Kansas. Dr Ruhe became interested in Aboriginal art when he came to Australia in 1965 on a Fullbright fellowship at the University of Adelaide, travelling to Cape York Peninsula, Alice Springs and Darwin, visiting Maningrida.
Saturday, March 31, 2012
AMERICAN PROFESSOR'S DEEP INTEREST IN ABORIGINAL ART
One of the largest private collections of Aboriginal bark art in the world , not many Territorians would be aware of its existence. It was built up over 25 years by the late Dr Edward L. Ruhe, a professor of 18th century English literature at the University of Kansas. Dr Ruhe became interested in Aboriginal art when he came to Australia in 1965 on a Fullbright fellowship at the University of Adelaide, travelling to Cape York Peninsula, Alice Springs and Darwin, visiting Maningrida.
RAINTREE GALLERY'S HUGE CONTRIBUTION TO ABORIGINAL ART APPRECIATION IN AUSTRALIA & INTERNATIONALLY
Thursday, March 29, 2012
SHAMEFUL TREATMENT OF A REAL TERRITORY TREASURE . By Peter Simon
Showing signs of wear , this is one of a mountain of documents accumulated in the long struggle for justice by Ms. Shirley Collins who ran Darwin’s internationally regarded Raintree Aboriginal Art Gallery and was ruined by her involvement in the Bank of America Down Under Tour in the lead up to the Sydney Olympic Games .
On the recommendation of the Australia Council , the Australian Tourist Commission invited Ms Collins to participate in and represent Australia’s indigenous art and craft in an extensive tour of America in a replica of the Sydney Opera House . Indigenous art and craft from Northern Territory communities would be exhibited and sold throughout .
Ms Collins, principal of the Jarraman Arts Aboriginal Corporation sought a financial grant to mount the large venture ( eventually a $160,00 loan ) from the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commissioner (ATSIC). ATSIC ‘s business agents, Deloitte Touch Tohmatsu , commissioned Auslink international marketing consultants , to prepare the project plan.
It painted a highly profitable venture for Jarraman in what was seen as one of Australia’s largest ever overseas promotions . Expected outcomes and spinoffs were :
*Greater understanding of Australian indigenous culture.
*Introduction of two tertiary scholarships for young Aboriginal artists .
Frantic calls to the Australian Tourist Commission office in Los Angeles went unanswered. Bank staff were hostile and uncooperative . After three weeks, during which she hoped the distressing situation would change , in total despair, she was forced to pull out and return to Darwin.
"Having seen Shirley’s gallery in operation , and recognising the importance of the fact that it was one of only two Aboriginal owned galleries operating successfully in the country , I felt strongly that a different approach was necessary , rather than confiscation of the unsold art, and recovery of all investment monies.
"I took it upon myself to visit Canberra and speak with the deputy CEO of ATSIC. He indicated that they were reviewing the situation , but was obviously non-commital.
On several occasions Little Darwin posted the long history of the case and urged an unresponsive media, both locally and nationally, to look at her case . If a respected person like Morse, who investigated here case , described her plight as grossly unjust, surely members of the Fourth Estate should have been interested.
Several top rating radio and TV personalities did not bother to acknowledge receipt of info . Somehow, the Darwin ABC and the NT News both reported that she was SUEING the Federal government when in fact she was pursuing her application under the Act of Grace legislation. This had been knocked back by a public servant in Canberra who failed to advise Ms Collins and her claim adviser that he (public servant ) was both case manager and decision maker . The decision maker is required at law to be independent of the case manager and any other public servant involved in the case review.
Recently Ms Collins lamented that she had done nothing wrong, followed the advice and predictions of paid experts , entered into commitments in good faith , and had been let down by various people in high places, ending up crushed financially and in ill health .
FOOTNOTE: A three-day conference has just ended in Darwin where opportunities to promote indigenous art and business ventures to cash in on the Territory’s growing involvement with Asia and beyond were discussed. Nobody in government or anyone connected with organising the conference thought that Shirley Collins , with her vast experience and knowledge of mounting overseas exhibitions staging Aboriginal art and fashion shows throughout Australia, dealing with VIPs such as Lord McAlpine and Lady Susan Renouf, museums and private collectors should be invited to provide invaluable information .
ARCHIVES TO REMAIN IN TERRITORY
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
ECHOES OF RUSSIAN REVOLUTION IN DARWIN HOT AND COLD WAR
Monday, March 26, 2012
SURPRISE GIFT TO DARWIN PRESS CLUB
Sunday, March 25, 2012
SCOOP REPORT FROM ISHMAELIA / BANANAVILLE. By award winning bird chaser John Boot of the " Daily Beast"
Saturday, March 24, 2012
CIA RIGGED QUEENSLAND ELECTION
Thursday, March 22, 2012
IS THERE A MEDICAL STUDENT POSING AS A DUMB WAITER IN THE CAFE ? CHEF HAS OVERDOSED ON CRUMBS AND ICE !
Waiters in the outback are often twenty-something English, Scottish or Irish kids working in the middle of nowhere to get their visas extended. The government gives them an extra year if they work out here for at least three months. Their employers seem to think waiters don’t need to know anything about food or the serving of it, and these kids certainly don’t. On the other hand, given the very limited choice of crap on the menus, what is there to know? Dinners finish early, around 7.15pm when the chef turns into a bar patron.
“So what have you got?”
“Steak.”
“What about the Barramundi? Is it fresh?” He sighs with impatience. “I’ll ask.” A pause. He returns. “It’s fresh frozen in Yepoon (a town about 3000km away in Western Australia). It’s farmed, they freeze it and then we get it.”
Soon after dawn the landscape cringes in the sun’s heat, even in winter. There are no features along the horizon and it’s easy to believe you can see the edge of the world. Luckily the road never reaches it. Between Winton and Cloncurry the land is dead flat, as if ruthlessly sandpapered by a vengeful god. The lines of trees in yesterday’s landscapes were signals of creekbeds. Now they’ve disappeared. The land’s veins have dried up.
ROAD WARNING : As you read this dit , Burleigh is once more on the road making astute observations about the neurotic state of the luckiest nation in the expanded cosmos - heading to the leafy and sodden lair of old travelling companion, Peter Steedman , aka the Black Knight and a former MHR, who is down to his last Bentley and a pair of made in China perished gumboots .
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
KIWI UNDERBELLY CARTOONIST
Hodgson began cartooning in 1979 at The Christchurch Press where he was a commercial artist. He wrote that the newspaper’s mean, erratic, pitiful payment and constant rejections made him even more determined to crack their stony faces with a smile . “I never did and I don’t think anyone will ,” he said in the 1986 preface to the book, issued to mark an exhibition of political cartoons which toured NZ.
A political cartoonist for the NZ Listener magazine , he also drew a series with a very familiar title to viewers of a highly rated current (seemingly never ending ) Australian TV series - UNDERBELLY - for CITY VOICE , a Wellington based community newspaper . In it he took a satirical , offbeat look at the capital , at times mocking bogans, while also carrying attached messages to learn CPR to save lives and get HEP C injections . One explained why bogans have long arms , a subject of immense interest for Australia , seeing we have so many of the critters over this side of the Tasman . It seems their dangling limbs are ideal for carrying crates of beer and other bulk grog containers from liquor outlets. His drawing of aggressive HAPPY HOUR drinking sessions is familiar . One imagines deriding tattooed bogans in windy Wellington could be highly dangerous, but he survived somehow .
Against the 1990 Gulf War , he travelled to Iraq to join the Peace Camps, living between the armies in an attempt to prevent the American invasion .
Comic strip creations of his include the adventures of an environmentally friendly garden gnome who decides to drink his own toilet water to help the planet and attends a world sustainability conference where one of the delegates favours hemp underwear. Little Darwin strongly suggests readers Google TRACE HODGSON and look at his work as it could lift your spirits in these frustrating political times, although mining tycoons are supplying some unexpected laffs .
Monday, March 19, 2012
Sunday, March 18, 2012
BIRTHDAY BEAT
JOURNALIST SETS RECORD STRAIGHT IN CHAMBERLAIN CASE-By Peter Simon
On September 26 the NT News revealed that German scientists had cast grave doubts on crucial aspects of the forensic evidence against Lindy. The next day Collins visited Lindy in the Berrimah Jail for the first time.
"She's a remarkable woman with an incredible degree of inner strength. I went to meet her because it was time for me to meet her. It was the right thing to do," Collins told the newspaper after the meeting.
One month later, on October 27, the Sunday Territorian published an impassioned plea by Lindy for an inquiry. She had granted an interview to the newspaper (my editor Gary Shipway and myself) after being persuaded to do so by Collins.
On November 12 the Attorney- General, Marshall Perron, tabled a 107 page report by the Solicitor General, Brian Martin, dismissing the "new" evidence in the case.
But the NT News, on Nov 14, announced on its front page that Lindy would be released within a few days. The announcement was dismissed by Perron after talks in Canberra with former Federal Attorneys General, Senators Gareth Evans and Peter Durack.
There the case rested for the rest of 1985 despite efforts to keep the controversy going by Collins and by Lindy´s then husband, Michael Chamberlain, who also crusaded tenaciously for her release.
In January 1986, the NT News and Sunday Territorian carried several reports indicating rising speculation about Lindy´s fate. The NT News published that the South Australian chief forensic scientist, Dr Andrew Scott, was about to blow the findings of the Territory Solicitor General, Brian Martin, apart. The Sunday Territorian obtained evidence that Scott would say Martin had been "selective in the presentation of his evidence" and described Martin´s interpretation of a report by German manufacturers, Beringwerke, on the blood reagent used in the Chamberlain case as "preposterous."
It looked as if events were shaping up yet again as a battle between forensic scientists and their various conflicting interpretations of evidence. And, in all probability, that is how the continuing Chamberlain saga would have developed but for a bizarre incident which quickly unravelled the case.
On February 3, the NT News carried a brief report about an English tourist who had accidentally fallen to his death at Ayers Rock. His body was found at the foot of the great monolith. It had been partly devoured by dingos and one of his hands had been eaten away.
The find sparked a grisly search for the missing parts of the body and, on the same day, police recovered a tiny, dirty, sand impregnated matinee jacket near the tourist´s dead body. The jacket belonged to Azaria Chamberlain.
Lindy´s lawyer, Stuart Tipple, flew to Ayers Rock where he gave a press conference attended by more than 40 media representatives from all over Australia. Tipple anticipated Lindy´s early release on the basis of new evidence and this in fact happened next day.
The immediate events leading to her freedom were every bit as gripping as those which led to her imprisonment and they were described in detail by the Sunday Territorian on February 9 (the newspaper in fact had been preparing a careful report of Scott´s analysis of forensic evidence which now, of course, became irrelevant.)
I am not going to go into the detail of various meetings between Police Commissioner, Peter McCauley, with Brian Martin and with Chief Minister Ian Tuxworth on February 7 because it is probably unimportant for your task.
Enough to say that just after 11:00 am that day a letter was written explaining the Government´s intentions to Bob Collins. At 12:45pm the Chief Minister actually took the unprecedented step to phone the NT News to alert the managing editor that Lindy was likely to be released that very same afternoon.
At 1:00 pm Cabinet met with the Administrator, Commodore Eric Johnstone, for an emergency Executive Council meeting to formalise Lindy´s release.
At 4.20pm, her meagre belongings in a suitcase, she left jail for good and spent the night with friends and well wishers in suburban Nightcliff. Significantly and understandably, the only outsider she agreed to see was Collins.
FOOTNOTE : Alcorta wrote a book , above, about the dramatic chain of events which at the time were just as sensational as the Azaria Chamberlain affair , if not more so – THE DARWIN REBELLION of 1911-1919. In this uprising unionists stormed Government House and forced the Administrator, Dr Gilruth, to secretly slip out of town aboard a naval gunboat . Also forced to quit town aboard ship were three members of the organisation set up to run the Territory after Gilruth’s ignominious departure ; closure of Vesteys meatworks followed soon after , a huge economic blow to the tiny town . In the preface to the book , Alcorta wrote that it had started as a doctoral thesis and almost ended as a novel as he discovered so much fascinating material. It is easy to see why it would have made an epic novel . In his book THE FRONT DOOR- Darwin 1869-1969, Douglas Lockwood described the events during the eight years that Dr Gilruth was in office as ones involving demonstrations against authority not seen since the armed rebellion at the Eureka Stockade 60 years earlier. NEXT : The Chamberlain Case archives.
Friday, March 16, 2012
VALE MARGARET WHITLAM : HEAD AND SHOULDERS ABOVE THE CROWD
Thursday, March 15, 2012
UNTOLD ASPECTS OF THE AZARIA CHAMBERLAIN CASE -By Peter Simon .
In his dramatic opening address at the 1982 Darwin trial , Ian Barker, QC , said :
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Wednesday, March 14, 2012
RUBBISH WARRIOR CLEANS UP CITY HALL
Monday, March 12, 2012
GOVERNMENT FAILS TO ACT ON CYCLONE PREPAREDNESS SHORTCOMINGS
Sunday, March 11, 2012
ABC BOGUS BOOKS COMPLAINT
An irritating aspect of Jennifer Byrne's First Tuesday Book Club on TV is the obvious phoney backdrop of bookshelves with fake books , no title visible on the spine of any "volume". We all know the ABC is short of folding stuff, but surely it can arrange for Bob the Builder to knock up a real bookshelf in play school or romper room ? And all those REAL review copies that flood in to Aunty would soon fill the shelving. The set designer should be taken out and either pulped or burnt by men in brown shirts.
The ABC standards/ ethics / modesty department should also provide the leg tossing Jennifer with a mother hubbard to cover up her distracting gams . This viewer recently saw, for the first time , the BLOCK BUSTERS AND BEST SELLERS show in which Byrne’s guests were Di Morrissey, Lee Child , Matthew Reilly and Bryce Courtenay. It was hard to concentrate on their profound advice about writing , publishing and marketing , especially on how to sell a million , when the host , in a short skirt, crossed and uncrossed her legs, revealing what seemed to this pop-eyed viewer, due to deteriorating eyesight and other enfeeblements, an embossed colophon or a tattooed frontispiece .
Friday, March 9, 2012
BRAVE MAN NEXT PRESIDENT ?
FISCAL FROLICS-TORIES IN DANCE OF THE SEVEN VEILS & GROUP FLOGGINGS
Thursday, March 8, 2012
DEATH OF DARWIN SUN WORSHIPPER
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
GOVERNMENT HOUSE SHIP SALVAGE
Salvage operations are underway to remove the Italian cruise ship Costa Bundle which ran aground in the Government House swimming pool. Our exclusive photo shows the large ship rammed up against the building . Our tip is that the ship will be placed in a new water park to be built at Tennant Creek before the elections. The Administrator has been given an inflatable executive swimming pool and a vice-regal rubber ducky so that she can maintain her cool while splashing about like Esther Williams on the front lawn watched by camera clicking tourists . The Costa Bundle was filled with 457 visa workers .( See earlier DARWIN SHIPWRECK .)
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
LIGHT FANTASTIC CONTINUES IN MASONIC VILLAS
The halogen lights , because they pump out a lot of heat, were going to be removed, then it was decided not to remove them, instead put hoods on them, directing heat downwards.A notice handed out at the time said that while the hoods were being put in place the "electricians " would be on the lookout out for " non compliant or unsafe cabling " which would also be rectified.
The latest bulletin states some down lights may need to be repositioned and some ceilings may need follow up repairs . Why this is so, is not explained . Little Darwin raised this issue , not followed up by the local media , with a post on January 29 headed PUZZLING MASONIC HOMES LIGHTS ISSUE .WorkSafe has been asked to state EXACTLY what is the situation in light (no pun intended) of conflicting previous notices and the obvious questions that need to be answered by this latest statement.
Monday, March 5, 2012
CHURCHILL GIVES TELSTRA & QANTAS THE FINGER IN OUTBACK ODYSSEY
People talk about the value of brands and how easily they can be compromised. Two examples come to mind, Qantas and Telstra. From an unassailable Australian brand Qantas has for years sown the seeds of its own destruction through its execrable service in the air and on the ground, and its increasingly poor mechanical performance. I don’t fly Qantas anymore. It’s an accident waiting to happen.
Second example: Telstra. I’m repelled by the brand, I loathe how Telstra has treated me in the past. If I must contact Telstra for any reason whatsoever I know the experience will be the pits. In Longreach I try to buy a pre-paid Telstra SIM card for my unlocked phone. After standing in a queue for 20 minutes, I am treated to:
"Is your phone unlocked?"
"Yes."
"Does it accept G3 services?"
"Don’t know. It’s a brand new phone. I need a Telstra SIM card so I can make calls. I want this deal here: Talk & Text, it..."
"Are you connected to Telstra?"
"No, but I’ve come to Telstra because your coverage is good out in the Kimberleys."
"Did you know you need G3?"
"I just want to make calls, and I‘m willing to pay."
"It’s not as easy as that."
"What? Restrictive what?"
"Forget it."
Winston Churchill knew about the "shock of the new", so like me he must have been travelling with five guys in four-wheel-drives. It’s going to be this way until the women fly into Kununurra in WA. In a sense, we are sharing a single cabin. One of us is dedicated to technological gimmicks; one apparently dedicated to beer; one a newcomer to Australia, wide-eyed and unsure how to withstand the blokey rubbishing; and two others who’re wondering why they’re with the other three. Habits are exposed which irritate some but mean little to others. Only girly-men care about the wet towels on the floor, the milk left out to go off, the strewn cans, the bottles...travelling in the outback isn’t for the pedantic, yet most are infected with the belief that their own knowledge is far superior to anyone else’s.
But it’s only transitory. Everyone shows goodwill and pitches in. With a bit of psychotherapy the other four guys could begin to seem human.