[[ARCHITECTURE]] [[Buildings and [[Structures]]]] [[Moubray]] [[September]] [[Twelve]] [[Twenty]] [[athenaeum]] [[melbourne]] [[wiki-architecture]] # Melbourne Athenaeum The Athenaeum or Melbourne Athenaeum at 188 Collins Street is an art and cultural hub in the central business district of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1839, it is the city's oldest cultural institution. Its building on Collins Street in the East End Theatre District sits opposite the Regent Theatre, and currently consists of a main theatre, a smaller studio theatre, a restaurant and a subscription library. It has also served as a mechanics' institute, an art exhibition space, and a cinema. Architecture The Athenaeum is a restrained boom-style neoclassical three-storey building designed by architects Smith and Johnson with stuccoed facade with pilasters, label moulds, and bracketed cornice. It was completed in 1886 on the site of the original building of 1842, and is surmounted with a parapet with a niche [[Housing]] a statue by Richard Kretzschmar of Minerva (Athena, hence 'Athenaeum'), goddess of reason, wisdom, arts and literature. The building was added to the National Trust's Register of Historic Buildings in 1981 and is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register. History Early history In August 1840, the Melbourne Mechanics Institution acquired land spanning 110 feet along Collins Street and extending to Little Collins Street, for a sum of £285. The initial structure, a two-story brick building known as the Hall of Arts was completed in December 1842. The first President was Captain William Lonsdale, the first Patron was the Superintendent of Port Phillip, Charles La Trobe and the first books were donated by Vice-President Henry Fyshe Gisborne. Originally called the Melbourne Mechanics' Institute, it was renamed the Melbourne Mechanics' Institution and School of Arts in 1846. The Melbourne City Council met in the ground floor of the building until 1852 when the Melbourne Town Hall was built. The Institute received an annual grant of £150 from the government, and in 1854, an additional £5,000 was granted for construction of a new building, but from 1857, it had to rely on its own funds. By 1851, the membership count reached 488 individuals. Additionally, it served as the headquarters for the First Church of Christ, Scientist. Construction on the new building began in 1855, but only the front portion was finished. The rear hall, intended to be designed by Charles Webb, was deferred until 1871 and ultimately completed in 1872. Alfred Smith served as the architect, while Turnbull and Dick were the builders. The Institution changed its name to the Melbourne Athenaeum in 1872 During the period when its own church was being reconstructed, Scots Church utilized the premises as its temporary location. Among the office bearers of the institution in the nineteenth century was the author Marcus Clarke who was the chairman of the library committee in 1877. As now, a focal point was the library and by 1877, membership was 1,681 and in 1879 there were 30,000 visits to the library. In 1880 it was reported 'that the floor of the large hall was the only one in Melbourne expressly constructed for dancing'. The remodeled facade was finally concluded in 1886. The statue of Minerva, which was modelled by Richard Kretzschmar on that at the Vatican, was funded through Alderman Thomas Moubray's gift of 100 guineas. Theatre and cinema In October 1896, the first movie was shown in the Athenaeum Hall. This may not have been the first in Australia however, as a cinematograph was being demonstrated at the Melbourne Opera House in August. On 26 January 1901 Life in Our Navy, a 60,000 foot film of life on HMS Jupiter, was shown by G. H. Snazelle, who provided additional entertainment. The Hall became a regular venue for screening films and the premiere of The Story of the Kelly Gang by the Tait brothers, the world's first dramatic feature film, was at the Athenaeum in 1906. The theatre in its present form, a proscenium arch theatre with 880 seats on three levels, was created in 1924, for its lessee Frank Talbot by architect Henry Eli White. Renamed Athenaeum Theatre, it was one of the first venues in Australia to screen talking pictures, presenting The Jazz Singer in February 1929. From the 1920s to the early 1970s, the theatre was mainly used as a cinema. Talbot was lessee and manager from 1922 to 1936. The Melbourne Theatre Company (MTC) leased the theatre from 1976 to 1985 when the lease was taken over by various entrepreneurs who formed AT Management in 1997. The upstairs studio theatre ("Ath 2"), created from the former art gallery by the MTC, has been used as a theatre space and the venue for The Last Laugh Comedy Club after it moved from North Melbourne. Art gallery Artist Jo Sweatman recalled that it was Frederick McCubbin's wife Annie who first proposed the Athenaeum as a possible art gallery. In 1910 Walter Withers, Bernard Hall, Frederick McCubbin and John Mather approached Athenaeum secretary Reginald W.E. Wilmot to discuss its potential as a venue for exhibitions. Consequently the upper hall, previously used as a small museum, was installed with a lantern on the roof by architects Sydney Smith and Ogg, in order to light the art gallery. Officially established as The Athenaeum Art Gallery, it hosted the first exhibition of Frederick McCubbin's The Pioneer in 1904. After WWI had reduced the frequency of shows, in 1919 and after a complete refurbishment, the Australian tonalists staged their first group exhibition there, one of whom, Clarice Beckett, held nine solo shows there between 1923 and 1932, with a posthumous exhibition mounted there after her premature death. 'Jock' Frater held his first solo show there in 1923, marking his break from the Tonalists. The gallery was much in demand and artists had to book a year in advance. It showed paintings by Rupert Bunny, Hans Heysen, Albert Namatjira, Tom Roberts, John Rowell, Ernest Buckmaster, Constance Stokes and Arthur Streeton, before closing in 1971. The gallery also hosted talks by the Melbourne Society of Women Painters, including one in 1935 at which Mary Cecil Allen spoke. Exhibitions held at the Melbourne Athenaeum 1904, from 24 October: Australian Landscapes by John Mather 1906: Yarra Sculptors' Society: Eighth Annual Exhibition, Sculpture, Painting, Prints 1910: Yarra Sculptors' Society: Tenth Annual Exhibition 1910, October: Victorian Artists' Society' 1910: Wynnum School of Arts, Sculpture, Paintings, Prints 1910, 15 September–1 October: Paintings and Drawings by L. Bernard Hall 1911, 7–24 April: Frederick McCubbin 1911, 24 July–14 August: Rupert Bunny 1912, 14 August–1 September: Fred and Louis McCubbin 1912, 26 September–17 October: J. Mather's Paintings 1913, September: Twelve Melbourne Painters' 1915, from 4 March: Pictures by Hans Heysen 1916, 30 August–13 September: The late Mr.J. Mather's paintings 1917, 12–22 September: Australian Art Association. Fifth Annual Exhibition 1918, 6–20 July: Salon des Poilus. Exhibition of Pictures for sale in aid of the French Red Cross 1919 September, A Meldrum Group 1919, November: Margery Withers 1919 1920, 18–28 May: Norah Gurdon 1920 June, A Meldrum Group 1920, from 1 October: Australian Art Association, Annual Exhibition 1921: The Women's Art Club. Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculpture and Craft Work 1921 May, A Meldrum Group 1921, August: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1921, 30 October–5 November: Arthur Streeton. Sunlit suburbs of Sydney 1922, November: Group exhibition: Margery, Nancy & Meynell Withers 1923, 10–23 April: Norah Gurdon 1923 June: Clarice Beckett 1923 July, Twenty Melbourne Painters 1923, August: Women's Art Club 1923, August: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1924 May, Twenty Melbourne Painters 1924, 1–11 October: Women's Art Club 1924 September: Clarice Beckett 1925, 20–30 May: Norah Gurdon 1925, June: Women's Art Club 1925 July: Clarice Beckett 1925, from 3 September: Australian Art Association, Annual Exhibition 1925, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1925 September, Twenty Melbourne Painters 1926 July 20–31: Clarice Beckett 1926, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 8th annual exhibition 1926, 1–11 December, Women's Art Club 1927, 1–12 March: Rupert Bunny 1927, 28 April–7 May: Norah Gurdon 1927 July, Women's Art Club 1927 September: Clarice Beckett 1927, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1928, 6–17 March: Watercolours and woodcuts by E.W. Syme 1928 July: Clarice Beckett 1928, 11–21 July: Rupert Bunny 1928, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 10th annual exhibition 1928, October: Women's Art Club Annual Exhibition 1928 October, Melbourne Society of Women Painters 1929, April: Jo Sweatman 1929, July: Margery Withers 1929, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1929 October, Melbourne Society of Women Painters 1929 November: Clarice Beckett 1930, August–September: Ernest Buckmaster 1930 September, Twenty Melbourne Painters 1930 October: Clarice Beckett 1930 October, Melbourne Society of Women Painters 1931, from 1 July: Seven Australian Painters 1931 September, Twenty Melbourne Painters 1931 October: Clarice Beckett (show opened by Max Meldrum) 1931 October, Melbourne Society of Women Painters 1932, July: Margery Withers 1932 September, Twenty Melbourne Painters 1932 October: Clarice Beckett 1933, 9–20 May: Jo Sweatment. Australian landscapes, Athenaeum Gallery, 1933, 4–15 July: Rupert Bunny 1933 September, Twenty Melbourne Painters 1933, 27 October –11 November: Australian Art Association, Annual Exhibition 1933: An exhibition by Melbourne Painters in aid of Hermannsburg Water Supply Central Australia 1934, 27 February–10 March: Exhibition of Paintings by the late E. Phillips Fox and Ethel Carrick 1934, 31 July–11 August: Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by Members of the Contemporary Art Group 1934, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 16th annual exhibition 1934 October, A Meldrum Group 1934, 17–22 December: Oscar Binder, Exhibition of etchings 1935, 30 April–11 May: Jo Sweatman (catalogue) 1935, 6–17 August Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1935, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1935, 17–28 September: Jane Wilkinson Whyte. Work: old and new 1936, 18 April–2 May: Annual exhibition of the Victorian salon of photography, incl. Julian Smith, Spencer Shier and Athol Shmith 1936, 14–25 July: Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1936, 11–22 August: Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by Members of the Contemporary Art Group 1936, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 18th annual exhibition 1936, 8–19 September: Dorothy Whitehead 1937, May: Jo Sweatman (catalogue) 1937, 12–24 July: Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1937, 10–21 August: Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by Members of the Contemporary Art Group 1937, 30 November–11 December: John Gardner, Oil Paintings, Prints 1938, 19–30 July: Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1938, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1938, 26 September–8 October: Dorothy Whitehead exhibition 1939, 21 August– 2 September: Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1940, from 5-–16 March: Maud Glover Fleay and Annie Gates 1940, 19–22 March: Exhibition in support of the Red Cross 1940, 20–31 August: Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1941, from 23 August: Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1943, 20 April–1 May: Josephine Muntz-Adams: Exhibition of paintings 1959, from 1 June: Len Annois. The Yarra Valley from Studley Park to Templestowe. 1942, from 23 July: Exhibition by Members of New Melbourne Art Club 1943, 18–29 May: Jo Sweatman 1944, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters 26th annual exhibition 1945, 22 May–2 June: Jo Sweatman 1945, October: Twenty Melbourne Painters 1946, 3–14 September: Twenty Melbourne Painters Society 1947, May: Jo Sweatman 1947, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters, Athenaeum Gallery, 1947 1948, September: Twenty Melbourne Painters, Athenaeum Gallery, 1948 Proposed demolition and replacement It was listed in 1948 as one of the key sites for the modernisation of Melbourne. Plans were prepared for a modern building including as new library and gallery, however the development did not proceed. Subscription library Membership of the Athenaeum's subscription library peaked at 7,579 in 1950, after the State Library of Victoria ceased lending of its books in 1939. Membership reduced over the subsequent decades to 1,600 by the mid-1980s, and 750 by the late 2000s. Membership is now increasing. Today Today, the Athenaeum Theatre is used for theatre, comedy and music performances, including as a principal venue for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival and Melbourne Opera. The Wheeler Centre for Books, Writing and Ideas presents discussions and talks at the theatre. The subscription library has a 30,000-strong collection and hosts regular events, talks, book clubs and a screen club. See also List of theatres in the Melbourne City Centre List of heritage listed buildings in Melbourne References External links Athenaeum Theatre website Melbourne Athenaeum website Melbourne Athenaeum archives website Melbourne Athenaeum at AusStage Time-Line History of the Melbourne Athenaeum.