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State Library of New South Wales State Library of New South Wales i(A52258 works by) (Organisation) assertion
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1 y separately published work icon The Best Cat, the Est Cat Libby Hathorn , Rosie Handley (illustrator), Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2021 23072082 2021 single work picture book children's

'A mysterious talking cat invites children through the grand doors of the State Library of NSW in Sydney. It’s the Est Cat, who wants to show them the biggest, the smallest, the strangest, the rarest and the gluggiest objects to be found there! They visit secret places, get followed by ghosts, spy special treasures and finally learn the Est Cat’s secret.

'This delightful tale introduces readers to some of the weird and wonderful artefacts of Australian history, where they live, and the people who look after them.'

Source : publisher's blurb

1 y separately published work icon The Diary Files State Library of New South Wales , Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2020 19694703 2020 website correspondence

Launched on 4 May 2020, The Diary Files was intended as an 'online community diary' to collect 'stories, poems, lyrics, thoughts and reflections of the people of NSW and beyond' during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. The State Librarian, John Vallance, noted in the press release for the launch of the project:

We want to document this year more than ever, so when researchers look back in 50 or 100 years’ time they’ll be able to access a rich and diverse slice of history and understand what it was like for people living through a pandemic.

Entries were up to 300 works, and took a range of forms.

Source: State Library of New South Wales press release, 4 May 2020.

1 1 y separately published work icon Living Language : Country Culture Community Ronald Briggs , New South Wales : State Library of New South Wales , 2019 17021778 2019 single work multimedia

'In Australia, roughly 90% of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages still spoken today are considered endangered, and many communities are doing extraordinary work to protect, promote and pass on their languages. These languages are at the core of our memories, our expression and our ability to sustain our cultures and identities, and their destruction has had profound on Aboriginal people in Australia since 1788.

'There were more than 250 languages spoken in Australia before 1788, and even more dialects. Our languages are among the oldest on the planet, and include ancient sign languages and non-verbal forms of communicating still practised throughout Australia.' (Exhibition introduction)

1 y separately published work icon Carved Trees : Indigenous Australian Poets Respond to a Photographic Collection of Traditional Denddroglyphs Jonathan Hill , Gayle Kennedy , Peter Minter , The Red Room Company (editor), Sydney : The Red Room Company State Library of New South Wales , 2011 8663707 2011 anthology poetry

'Poems are a response to the donation in 1978 to the State Library of NSW of the Clifton Cappie Towle collection. This collection includes more than a thousand photographs showing Aboriginal weapons and implements, rock art, ceremonial sites, shell middens and stone arrangements from all parts of NSW, all photographed between about 1920 and 1940. The State Library of NSW is presenting an exhibition of these works, containing some of the most beautiful, haunting images of carved trees collected by Clifton Cappie Towle before his death in 1946.' (Source: TROVE)

1 3 y separately published work icon ONE Hundred : A Tribute to the Mitchell Library Richard Neville , Paul Brunton , Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2010 Z1685180 2010 selected work criticism

ONE Hundred was published to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Mitchell Library, Sydney. The book ties in with the 2010 State Library of New South Wales exhibition that featured manuscripts, pictures, books and other objects from the library's collection.

1 1 y separately published work icon ONE Hundred State Library of New South Wales , Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2010 Z1672494 2010 website

'In celebration of our centenary the Mitchell Library presents ONE Hundred from 9 March - 16 June 2010. ONE Hundred reaches down into the riches of the Library's incomparable and internationally renowned collection and presents just one hundred items which tell, in their unique and surprising way, some aspect of the Australian and Pacific story.

'Founded on the personal collection of wealthy Sydney book collector, David Scott Mitchell, who also provided a sizeable endowment, the Library has been actively collecting for a century... Ranging in date from the late 1400s to 2008, the exhibition includes manuscripts, pictures, maps, books, oral histories, and objects: a rollcall of the famous and the notorious; the quiet achievers and the noisy larrikins; the conventional and the rebels; the remembered and the unjustly forgotten, all with a fascinating story to tell.'

Objects from the exhibition are displayed on ONE Hundred Online. The website also details the history of the State Library revealing 'some of the historic images and archival footage that tell the stories of both the Library and our nation'.

[Source: ONE Hundred, State Library of New South Wales, http://www.onehundred.sl.nsw.gov.au/ (sighted: 02/03/2010]

1 y separately published work icon SL : State Library of New South Wales Magazine SL Magazine; SL Cathy Perkins (editor), 2008 Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2008- Z1869083 2008 periodical (15 issues) Magazine for foundation members, friends and volunteers.
1 1 The Magic Pudding: Watercolours by Norman Lindsay State Library of New South Wales , 2008 collection art work

An exhibition of early illustrations from Norman Lindsay's original drawings for The Magic Pudding (1918) together with the puppet watercolours drawn for Peter Scriven's 1960 marionette puppet show of the children's classic. The exhibition also includes some of Scriven's puppets.

'All works on paper are by Norman Lindsay (1879-1969). Items 1-15 are watercolours purchased in 2008. Items 16-19 were received by bequest of Sir William Dixson in 1952. Puppets were produced for the Magic Pudding puppet show by Peter Scriven (1930-1998) and are kindly lent by SBW/NIDA Archives and Performing Arts Collection.'

Source: The State Library of New South Wales website, http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/
Sighted: 07/01/2009

1 y separately published work icon A Grand Obsession; The D. S. Mitchell Story Elizabeth Ellis , Paul Brunton , Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2007 Z1477579 2007 single work biography
1 10 y separately published work icon Magnificent Obsession : The Story of the Mitchell Library, Sydney Brian Hinton Fletcher , Crows Nest Sydney : Allen and Unwin State Library of New South Wales , 2007 Z1455144 2007 single work biography 'The Mitchell Library is based on the collection of David Scott Mitchell, Australia's first and greatest collector of Australiana. The Library was opened in 1910 with the exceedingly generous endowment of 70,000 pounds from David Mitchell, and many thousands of items have been added to the Library since it opened. The collection continues to grow and now contains over 800,000 objects, documents, and books. The Library is a major centre for research into Australian history and culture, and this book, detailing the Mitchell's history and the significance of its collection, documents an important though unsung Australian institution.'--(Publisher's blurb).
1 y separately published work icon AtMitchell Elaine Stewart (editor), 2005 Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2005-2008 Z1883391 2005 periodical (7 issues) Magazine for foundation members, friends and volunteers.
1 1 Miles Franklin : A Brilliant Career? State Library of New South Wales , 2004-2005 collection diary correspondence

'The personal diaries of Miles Franklin - displayed for the first time along with letters, literary papers, photo albums and personal belongings - reveal the secrets and little-known stories of one of twentieth century Australia's literary greats. Although Miles Franklin published 15 books in her lifetime, she increasingly feared that nothing she wrote would match the success of her astonishing first novel, My Brilliant Career, published in 1901.

This exhibition highlights Franklin's little-known career overseas, including her pioneering work with the Women's Trade Union League in Chicago from 1908 to 1915 and as a cook in Macedonia during World War I.'

(Source: The State Library of New South Wales website, http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/exhibitions/miles/)

1 y separately published work icon The Life of Quong Tart, or, How a Foreigner Succeeded in a British Community How a foreigner succeeded in a British community Margaret Tart (editor), Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 2003 Z1879069 1911 single work biography
1 9 y separately published work icon The Journal of Annie Baxter Dawbin : July 1858 - May 1868 Annie Maria Baxter Dawbin , Lucy Frost (editor), St Lucia : University of Queensland Press State Library of New South Wales , 1998 Z371548 1998 single work autobiography
2 12 y separately published work icon My Congenials : Miles Franklin and Friends in Letters Miles Franklin , Jill Roe (editor), Pymble : Angus and Robertson State Library of New South Wales , 1993 Z9140 1993 anthology correspondence biography

'Miles Franklin wrote the first of these letters at Brindabella in 1887, over a decade before she started My Brilliant Career, the novel that famously propelled her out of the bush and on to Sydney and the world. The correspondence follows her to the Women′s Trade Union League in Chicago, to war work in the Balkans, to a return to writing in London, and finally home in the 1930s.

'After her nearly thirty years away, the letters now more than ever allowed Miles to share with "her congenials" - friends in England, Europe, the USA and Australia - experiences, memories and, above all, her commitment to Australian literature. The last letter in this collection was written only sixteen days before her death.

'As well as Miles Franklin′s own witty and provocative correspondence, the selection includes letters from her life-long friends, such as Alice Henry and Vida Goldstein, Katharine Susannah Pritchard, Dymphna Cusack and Beatrice Davis.

'Selected and edited by Jill Roe, the letters crackle with the surprises of a life richly lived.' (From the publisher's website, second edition.)

1 1 y separately published work icon Me and My Place : A Notebook of First Ideas from the Sydney Writers' Festival Young People's Workshop Series Sydney : Sydney Writers' Festival , 1992 Z1025177 1992 anthology poetry short story

'The stories and illustrations appearing in this book are the work of young people who attended the Me and My Place series of workshops at the State Library of NSW, during the Sydney Writers' Festival in 1992.'

(Source: Introduction to Me and My Place : A Notebook of First Ideas from the Sydney Writers' Festival Young People's Workshop Series.)

1 y separately published work icon Guide to the Papers of May Gibbs in the Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 1990 Z1547527 1990 single work bibliography
1 y separately published work icon Upfront Helen Cumming (editor), Elaine Stewart (editor), Jade Richardson (editor), 1989 Sydney : State Library of New South Wales , 1989 Z1883431 1989 periodical (9 issues) Journal of the friends and supporters of the State Library of New South Wales.
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