SCHOOLS & UNIVERSITIES

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Showing 49–96 of 99 results

Showing 49–96 of 99 results

Antique Prints of Australian Schools and Universities

This category brings together original antique prints, engravings and illustrations depicting Australian educational institutions — from the colonial grammar schools and church schools established in the first decades of settlement through to the universities, technical colleges and state secondary schools of the Federation era. These works document the development of formal education in Australia across the 19th and early 20th centuries, providing a visual record of the buildings, people and ceremonial occasions that defined institutional educational life in colonial and post-colonial Australia.

The illustrated press of colonial Australia — the Illustrated Sydney News, the Illustrated Australian News, the Australasian Sketcher, the Australasian and their counterparts — produced engraved views of notable schools and university buildings that served both as architectural documentation and as celebrations of colonial civic achievement. The construction of a new school building, the opening of a university hall or the holding of a prize-giving ceremony were occasions that attracted illustrated coverage, generating prints that record specific moments in the history of specific institutions alongside the broader visual record of Australian educational development.

The great colonial grammar schools established the model for secondary education across the Australian colonies. Sydney Grammar School, Melbourne Grammar School, Geelong Grammar School, Scotch College, King’s School and their counterparts in other states were depicted in prints that celebrated their architectural ambitions and their identification with the educational ideals of the British public school tradition. Views of their buildings, chapels, playing fields and classrooms document the physical environment of elite colonial education at a formative moment in its development.

The colonial universities — the University of Sydney, founded in 1850, the University of Melbourne, founded in 1853, and their successors in other states — attracted particular illustrated attention as symbols of colonial intellectual aspiration. Their sandstone buildings, modelled on the great collegiate architecture of Oxford and Cambridge, were depicted in prints that emphasised both their architectural achievement and their role as foundations of a learned colonial society.

Antique prints of Australian schools and universities are collected by institutions, alumni and collectors of Australian colonial social and educational history. They represent a relatively rare area of Australian historical print collecting that rewards specialist attention.

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