Art history is replete with works whose prior existence is affirmed only by text, most commonly through titles and descriptions in catalogues, but also by passing mentions in other sources. A significant Australian colonial illustration of this phenomenon of textually surviving lost art concerns ‘Several Paintings on Panel’, described in detail by a colonial witness, which depict scenes intended to convey government messages to Indigenous Tasmanians during the Vandemonian War. These descriptions do not match the better known and frequently reproduced Tasmanian Picture Boards, typified in Figure 1, which survive in several archives around the world and have been the subject of considerable study and commentary. Their iconographical recovery is, we argue, an important correction to the imagery of frontier relations in 1820s and 1830s Van Diemen’s Land specifically and colonial Australia more generally.
History
Publication title
Aboriginal History
Volume
41
Pagination
3-21
ISSN
0314-8769
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
Australian National University, Dept. of History
Place of publication
Australia
Rights statement
Copyright 2017 ANU
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in history, heritage and archaeology