Provisional Programme

ANZAAB/State Library of NSW Conference

Gallery Room, State Library of NSW

April 21 – 22, 2016

Rare Books: Still So Much to Learn and Discover

Day 1

Thursday 21st April

9.00 – 9.10am : Welcome. ANZAAB President, Dr Jonathan BurdonAM

Session 1 : Creative Collecting – Enduring Collections

Chair: Jonathan Burdon

Jonathan Burdon comes from a family of booksellers and over the last 10years has been closely involved with his wife's business, Kay Craddock Antiquarian Bookseller, in Collins Street, Melbourne. He hasa particular interest in militaria and is the present ANZAAB President.

9.10 – 10.15 am :Collecting ephemera: the Monash experience - Richard Overell

Richard Overell was Rare Books Librarian at Monash University for 26 years until 2014. During his career at Monash he added over 150,000 items to the collection, of which a large proportion was ephemera. His appreciation of all of these items from the small or quirky to major works means that Monash now has a unique and important collection of ephemera. Richard will talk about his experience of actively seeking and incorporating ephemera into the Rare Books Collection at Monash University.

10.15 – 10.45 am - Morning Tea

10.45 – 11. 40 am :Book Collecting and DSM-5* – The Hon David Levine AO RFD QC

David Levine is a book collector in the finest tradition;knowledgeable, scholarly and with the greatest appreciation of all things related to the book. Well known in legal circles, David Levine was a judge in the Supreme Court of New South Wales for 13 years, and continues to hold significant appointments within the justice system in NSW. He has built an important book collection over many years and will share stories of the joys and “madness” of building a private library. *Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5th edition

11.40 – 12.30 am:Keepers of the Flame - Some Antarctic collections – Stephen Martin

Stephen Martin is a writer, Antarctic historian and collection builder.Since 1998, Stephen has travelled to the Antarctic and its islands as a history lecturer, tourist and sailor. He has published several books on the south. He worked for many years with the Antarctic collections of the State Library of New South Wales. During his career he has visited and worked inmany other Antarctic collections, including the collections of Australian Capital Equity in Perth and Sydney and smallmuseums and collections on the continent and sub-Antarctic islands.

12.30 – 1.30 pm : Lunch

Session 2: Outsider Research

Chair: Michael Treloar

‘The broad theme of this afternoon session is research, and I was interested in exploring this activity outside the traditional model of salaried academic or grant-awarded student/scholar. In essence, I would like to impress upon the intended audience - rare book dealers and working librarians - the real contributions we can make from our respective vocations, in spite of the obvious constraints (but with arguably more positive things going for us)’ (M. Treloar).

13:30-13:35 pm :Introduction - Michael Treloar, Session Co-ordinator

Michael Treloar is an experienced antiquarian bookseller, based in Adelaide since 1976.

13:35-14:15pm : Only Amateurs, Hobbyists and Dilettantes? A Brief History of Private Scholarship- Jörn Harbeck
Jörn Harbeck is an antiquarian bookseller in Brisbane with a recently developed interest in modernist Australian book designfrom the 1930s and 1940s. He is also a keen free-diver.

14:15-15:00 pm : For Pleasure, not Profit: Researching and Writing Introductions to the Friends of the State Library of South Australia's Publications- ValmaiHankel AM PSM

Valmai Hankel has worked for nearly 60 years for the State Library of South Australia, most recently as a volunteer, but for much of the time as the Rare Books Librarian. Her interest in Australia's inland explorers goes back to her school days. She has driven many times, usually alone, through much of the country crossed by the four lesser known explorers (Allan A Davidson, Charles Chewings, John McKinlay, and Ted Colson) discussed in her talk, and has discovered how easy it is to find conflicting and inaccurate information about historical figures, and how a piece of serendipity can save hours of research work.

15:00-15:30 pm : Afternoon Tea

15:30-16:15 pm : The Making of an Explorer - Ralph Grandison

Ralph Grandison has done extraordinary work on relocating original sites of paintings by the likes of George French Angas and S.T. Gill. He has done this using a unique combination of knowledge from a broad and diverse range of disciplines - history, geography, anthropology, botany, meteorology, geology - harnessed by what can only be called an obsessive attention to detail.

16:15-17:00 pm :Taking it personally - Earl Grey's Irish Female Orphan Emigration Scheme, 1848-50- Dr Neisha Wratten
Dr Neisha Wratten is an Adelaide obstetrician and gynaecologist, with an engaging passion for genealogy.
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Day 2

Friday 22nd April

Session 3: On Paper

9.00 – 10.00 am: -On Paper - Nicholas Basbanes(via Skype)

NicholasA. Basbanes is the author of nine critically acclaimed works of cultural history, with a particular emphasis on various aspects of books and book culture. His first, A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for nonfiction, and was named a New York Times Notable Book. His most recent, On Paper: The Everything of Its Two Thousand Year History (Alfred A. Knopf, 2013, Vintage, 2014) – which he will discuss in this lecture –was the recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities research fellowship, and was one of three finalists selected by the American Library Association for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction. In July 2015, Basbanes was awarded a Public Scholar research grant by the National Endowment for the Humanities in support of his work-in-progress for Knopf, Cross of Snow: The Love Story and Lasting Legacy of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. He also writes the “Gently Mad” column for Fine Books & Collections magazine, lectures widely on book related subjects, and is a frequent contributor to Humanities magazine. This past November, the Cushing Memorial Library at Texas A&M University acquired his literary archive and significant components of his library. He and his wife Constance live in North Grafton, Massachusetts.

Session 4: Protecting the Collections

Chair: Jonathan Burdon

10.00 – 10.05 am : Introduction – Jonathan Burdon

10.05 -10.25 am : Rare Book Theft - An International Perspective - Norbert Donhofer.(Video)

Norbert Donhofer is the Principal of Antiquariat Norbert Donhofer, Vienna, Austria and is the current President of the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers.

10.20 – 10.50 am : Morning Tea

10.50am -12.30 pm : Theft of Rare Books and Associated Materials in Australia - Panel Discussion

Chair: Jonathan Burdon

Theft of books in Australia has been an ever-present problem but with few exceptions it has not reached the significant levels experienced in Europe and the USA. In this session, this topic will be discussed as a significant emerging risk by an antiquarian bookseller, a librarian, a book collector, other interested stake holders, and the audience, with the aim of creating interest in developing a network capable of promptly responding to reports of significant losses.

Panel members to be announced

12.30 – 1.30pm : Lunch

Session 5: State Library of NSW Programme

1.30 - 2.10pm :Artist Colony: Drawing Sydney's Nature - Louise Anemaat, Manager, Collection Care

2.10 - 2.30pm : Maggie Patton, Manager, Research & Discovery - Digitising the David Scott Mitchell collection

2.30 - 3.00pm Richard Neville : Mitchell Librarian - Fellows and scholar program at the State Library of New South Wales

3.00pmAfternoon tea

3.30 - 5.00pm Tour of the Collection and Care and Imaging Services Laboratories: State Library of New South Wales.

Register Now!

Full Registration: 2 days includes morning tea, lunch and afternoon teas $365

Single Day Registration: 1 day includes morning tea, lunch and afternoon tea $200

Conference Dinner: Castlereagh Boutique Hotel Dining Room: 7pm Thursday April 21st $110 per head (includes drinks)