Acting and Collecting: Imagining Asia through material culture and musical theatre

Authors

  • Peter Thorley Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Program National Museum of Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v13i3.335

Abstract

This paper explores the link between Asian-inspired material culture and musical theatre through the collections of Anglo-Australian performer Herbert Browne (1895-1975). Brown played lead roles in 1920s Australian musical theatre productions of The Mikado and Chu Chin Chow and re-lived his connection with oriental theatre by collecting and responding to objects performatively in the Chinoiserie room of his Melbourne home. Oriental musical theatre blended exotic cultures and locales in visually spectacular productions which bore little resemblance to reality. The taste for escapist fiction in the theatre took place against a backdrop of museum collecting which aimed to reproduce authentic Asian and Other cultures. In this paper, I draw on French philosopher Merleau-Ponty’s observations on the relationship between thought and the body’s interaction with space to interpret the influence of Browne’s theatricality on collecting choices. From this perspective, objects materialize particular understandings of the world which originate in the body and the body’s performative engagement with space.

Author Biography

Peter Thorley, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Program National Museum of Australia

Dr Peter Thorley is currently acting head of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Program, National Museum of Australia. He has worked extensively in Indgenous communities and in developing and interpreting Indigenous cultural material since the late 1980s. His research
interests revolve around the interpretive practices of museums and the role of material culture in the national imaginary.

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Published

01.07.2015

How to Cite

Thorley, P. (2015). Acting and Collecting: Imagining Asia through material culture and musical theatre. Museum & Society, 13(3), 356–368. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v13i3.335

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Section

Articles