Search Results

Advanced Search

Note: Layers are contributed from many sources by many people or derived by computer and are the responsibility of the contributor. Layers may be incomplete and locations and dates may be imprecise. Check the layer for details about the source. Absence in TLCMap does not indicate absence in reality. Use of TLCMap may inform heritage research but is not a substitute for established formal and legal processes and consultation.

Log in to save searches and contribute layers.
Displaying 1 result from a total of 1:

Details

Latitude
-25.2303005
Longitude
121.0187246
Start Date
1934-01-01
End Date
1934-01-01

Description

Sources

ID
tb9f86

Extended Data

DAAO URL
https://www.daao.org.au/bio/vera-wallam
Birth Place
Western Australia, Australia
Biography
embroiderer, was a Nyungar from south-west WA. In the late 1940s she attended the school at what was then known as Carrolup Native Settlement (today’s Marribank), near Katanning, when Noel and Lily White were the teachers and artmaking was encouraged. The boys’ pastel landscape drawings are better known but the girls were also prolific artists, creating a wide variety of abstract designs. The Education Department of the day encouraged the boys’ art in the expectation that at least a few of them might later find employment as commercial artists; the girls, however, were being trained as domestic servants and were guided away from art along a different path. They had always done embroidery. Mary Durack Miller and Florence Rutter state that during World War II 'they gave some lovely pieces of work to the Red Cross’. The designs they worked as tapestries for cushion and chair covers 'in startling colours’ after the boys’ drawings were unique and beautiful art works. However, all except Vera Wallam’s splendid cushion cover (c.1948) after a design by Revel Cooper (Berndt Museum, UWA) have now disappeared. Writers: Stanton, John E. Date written: 1995 Last updated: 2011
Born
b. c.1934
Summary
embroiderer. Along with fellow students, designed and worked tapestries for cushion and chair covers 'in startling colours'. Many given to the Red Cross during WWII.
Gender
Female
Died
None listed
Age at death
None listed