Chercheurs d’or en Australie; rue de Melbourne, No. 112, Serie 3

Glass slide showing four colour images of scenes from in and around Melbourne: an Australian gold diggers’ camp, Melbourne city, Indigenous men hunting kangaroo and native flora and fauna in the Melbourne Botanic Gardens.
https://nginx-develop-nfsa2.govcms7.amazee.io/sites/default/files/10-2016/melbourne_glass_slide_1405593.jpg
Title:
Chercheurs d’or en Australie; rue de Melbourne, No. 112, Serie 3
NFSA ID
1405593
Year
1895
Access fees

This beautiful glass slide provides an important pictorial record of how Australia and Indigenous Australians were depicted in the late 1800s.

The slide consists of four circular images that show an Australian gold diggers’ camp, Melbourne city, Indigenous men hunting kangaroo and native flora and fauna in the Melbourne Botanic Gardens.

The slide would have been projected using a magic lantern projector – the forerunner to the modern slide projector and digital projector.

Glass slides were a popular form of entertainment and education during the 18th and 19th centuries with extensive libraries of glass slides travelling around the world. Slides like this one would have been accompanied by a lecture.

This particular slide was made by the French company of Elie Xavier Mazo – a very successful slide maker who made and sold professional magic lanterns.

Notes by Beth Taylor