Puneet Varma (Editor)

Grainger Museum

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Phone
  
+61 3 8344 5270

Grainger Museum

Address
  
13 Royal Parade, Parkville VIC 3052, Australia

Hours
  
Closed today SaturdayClosedSunday12–4PMMonday12–4PMTuesday12–4PMWednesday12–4PMThursday12–4PMFriday12–4PM

Similar
  
Ian Potter Museum of Art, Baillieu Library, Australian Centre for the Movin, Old Melbourne Gaol, Chinese Museum - Melbourne

Profiles

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The Grainger Museum is a repository of items documenting the life, career and music of the composer, folklorist, educator and pianist Percy Grainger (b. Melbourne, 1882; d. White Plains, New York, 1961), located in the grounds of the University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Contents

In the early 1920s, Grainger began to develop an idea for an autobiographical museum so that "all very intimate letters or notes should be deposited in an Australian Grainger Museum, preferably in birth-town Melbourne". Grainger was a linguistic purist, advocating for the use of a 'Blue-Eyed English' derived from Anglo-Saxon and Germanic glossary. As a result, he generally used the word 'past-hoard-house' for museums, but agreed to the word 'museum' in this case.

The Museum was designed by the University's staff architect John Gawler of the local firm Gawler and Drummond, with input and funding from Grainger himself. It was built between 1935 and 1939 on land provided for the purpose by the University of Melbourne, and officially opened in December 1938. Designed specifically to fulfill the role envisioned by Grainger, it is the only purpose-built autobiographical museum in Australia.

The Grainger Museum was closed in 2003 for seven years, for restoration and conservation work, after waterproofing issues were detected. It reopened on 15 October 2010.

Among displays of original manuscripts and published scores, musical instruments, field recordings, artworks, photographs, books and personal items, are Grainger’s whips and other items relating to his sado-masochism (which Grainger called the "Lust Branch"), the contents of his bedside cabinet, and a gallery devoted to his mother’s suicide. There are also sound-making devices Grainger used to make his innovative and experimental "Free music".

The substantial archival collection includes some 50,000 items of correspondence (Grainger corresponded with people such as Edvard Grieg, Frederick Delius, Cyril Scott, Roger Quilter and Julius Röntgen, and collected letters of Wagner and Tchaikovsky among others). The collection generally comprises over 100,000 items in total, only a small proportion of which are on display. The remainder of the collection is accessible for research by prior arrangement.

Grainger Museum opening hours

Monday to Friday: 12:00pm – 4:00pm. Saturday: Closed. Sunday: 12:00pm – 4:00pm. The Grainger Museum is closed on public holidays and from Christmas throughout the month of January each year.

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References

Grainger Museum Wikipedia


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