Australian Object

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Aboriginality
Aesthetic Movement
art
art history
art practice
Australia
Australian Modernism
Awabakal
boardgame
boomerang
breastplates
Brisbane
Britain
caption cook
Casuarina Glauca
Category=AGA
Category=JBCC2
Category=JBSL11
ceramics
Chinese diaspora
colonial
colonization
contemporary
correspondence
craft
D'harawal
decolonial
design
dispossession
Dong Son drum
ecology
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
exhibition
expatriate artists
feminism
First Nations
Furniture design
identity
imitation
Indigenous
Indigenous Australia
interiors
Iran
James Wallis
Joseph Lycett
Ken Done
Lachlan Macquarie
massacre
material culture
maternalism
memorial
memory
migrant
migration
mirrorwork
modernism
museology
nationalism
natural history
Newcastle
Nicolas Galanin
object
othering
Pacific Rim trade
Palawa
photography
postcard
postcolonial
primitivism
provincialism
queer
refugee
San Francisco
sculpture
shell art
shells
shellwork
Sydney
Sydney Biennale
Thomas Woolner
Victorian design
video
Vietnamese
visual culture
weaving

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350507838
  • Weight: 740g
  • Dimensions: 162 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This boundary-breaking volume examines an array of objects that, in various ways, complicate narrow definitions of art and Australian identity. It shows how each object has informed and enriched contemporary Australian personal and political life in complex, often overlooked ways.

Featuring essays and object case studies by leading and emerging art historians, artists, curators, historians and anthropologists, The Australian Object offers a material intervention into Australian art and cultural histories by highlighting objects that expand definitions of art, nationhood and identity. It employs an object-led approach that combines art history’s attentiveness to form and meaning with material culture’s concern for use, materials and patterns of movement, incorporating methodologies from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Knowledge systems, art-making, museology, post- and de-colonialism, ecology, design and theology. Focusing on the useful, mobile and multi-sensory aspects of objects, contributors follow their trajectories across cultures, times and places, and through international networks of trade and migration, connecting Australia with China, Vietnam, Iran, England, France and the USA.

The book is divided into five thematic sections: Living Objects, Collecting Objects, Migrating Objects, Monumental Objects and Immaterial Objects. Rather than chronological or geographical groupings, these sections articulate the shared material qualities of objects and their place in a network of makers and users. Furniture, ceramics, photo-montage, signage and boardgames are newly examined as material agents shaping social, cultural, political and religious life in Australia and beyond. Accordingly, the very term 'Australian object’ is called into question as writers propose divergent frameworks that emphasise connection and interchange, bringing to light the material culture that Australia has shaped, denied and inspired.

Molly Duggins is Lecturer in Art History and Theory at the National Art School, Sydney, Australia.

Mark De Vitis is Lecturer in Art History at the University of Sydney, Australia.

Georgina Cole is Lecturer in Art History and Theory at the National Art School, Sydney, Australia.