On Stage: National Library exhibition shines a spotlight on our performing arts

NLA-Tim-Webster-Stephen-Page-with-Poster-for-Praying-Mantis-Dreaming-1993Let the National Library of Australia entertain you when On Stage: Spotlight on our performing arts opens in Autumn 2022.

From Dame to Dame, actor to audience, musicals to magic, honky tonk to hip hop, visitors will see their old favourites, discover new ones and see some objects that have never before been on display.

Among the items featured in the exhibition are a striking image of Sir Robert Helpmann as Oberon in the 1937 Old Vic production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream – the face of the exhibition – while a large AC/DC poster is the centrepiece of another display.

Other artists, companies and performing arts industry icons featured include Bangarra Dance Theatre, J.C. Williamson, Peter Allen, Dame Nellie Melba and Tim Minchin. The exhibition also tells the story of those behind the scenes, whose artistry may not be so well known but whose roles are arguably just as important.

Opening the exhibition is a photograph taken by Daniel Boud of Ange Sullivan, Head of Lighting at the Sydney Opera House, preparing a ghost light in the Sydney Opera House during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Director-General of the National Library of Australia Dr Marie-Louise Ayres FAHA said that visitors from all walks of life would be entertained, inspired, challenged and moved by the exhibition.

“Our performing artists and storytellers are our escape, and having been starved of live performance over the past couple of years, turning this spotlight on the performing arts is  a way of acknowledging the enjoyment that it brings  to our lives,” said Dr Ayres.

“You may not think of the National Library when you reminisce about the band poster you had on your bedroom wall as a teenager, but the objects and moments captured in our performing arts collections are immense.”

Exhibition curator and Library curator of Rare Books and Music, Dr Susannah Helman, said the Library’s performing arts collections show how much Australians love live performance.

“As a big fan of live performance of all kinds, I thought I knew the history of Australia’s performing arts, but our collections have opened my eyes to the cultural lives Australians of the past could have known,” said Dr Helman.

“The Library’s performing arts collections are overwhelming in scope – an embarrassment of riches really – and only a selection can be displayed. In the exhibition, I’ve tried to represent key moments, productions and performers in our history, to give context to today’s performing arts scene.”

Other highlights among the photographs, posters, playbills, sheet music, costume designs, set designs, rare books and objects in the exhibition include the earliest document printed in Australia – a theatre playbill from 1796 – and a 153cm lagerphone with its ‘whacker’ – associated with the 1950s musical group, The Bushwhackers.

A smaller, companion exhibition, Circus: Roll up roll up, is currently on display in the Library’s Treasures Gallery until 19 June 2022.


On Stage: Spotlight on our performing arts
National Library of Australia, Parkes Place, Canberra
Exhibition: 4 March – 7 August 2022
Free entry

For more information, visit: www.nla.gov.au for details.

Image: Tim Webster, Stephen Page with Poster for ‘Praying Mantis Dreaming’, 1993 – courtesy of Tim Webster