The Broughton Hall Edwardian Postcard painting is 3 metres long and 1.75 metres deep. In the top left-hand corner, to the middle of the painting, a row of stained glass hearts record the names of those who have ‘laid down their heavy burden’.
In the centre panel, a white peace dove with an olive branch represents a heartfelt wish for love and world peace. The dove also represents our desire for emotional and spiritual contentment. The Holy Spirit, also in the form of the dove, flies above a portrait of Jesus Christ, whose love and light symbolically shines over and protects Broughton Hall, and Australia, her people and her flag.
The music of ‘The Irish Washerwoman’ runs from the centre to the top right-hand corner. An angel playing the violin heralds the musical notation. Don, one of the residents, contributes a vinyl disk which heralds a new generation of music and musicians.
Two panels run the depth of the work to visually anchor it at each end. At the foot of these panels are the images of ‘Red’ the dog and ‘Sylvester’ the cat. Using artistic License, these panels depicting Australian fauna and flora were based on elements of the plaster reproduction of the Florentine “Ghilberti Doors” frieze inside the front door of Tara. To produce something uniquely Australian, the European owl and oak have been replaced by the kookaburra and cockatoo, the waratah, the wattle and the flowering gums.
The nursing staff and caterers appear in Victorian period costume in a display of family photographs. The Broughton Hall ghost is depicted as the Butler carrying a tray of drinks. The hidden tiger represents the Richmond Football Club.
The living memories of the interesting and varied lives of Broughton Hall residents are displayed as vignettes on a Victorian wallpaper backdrop, which runs the full length of the bottom panel.
A childhood memento of a “guardian angel’ is testament to a lifelong friendship. The Buddha and red and gold “good luck” panel acknowledges the valuable contribution made by those staff members from Asia. The bronze horse represents the Chinese Year of the Horse (it’s 2002) and reminds us of the achievements of Broughton Hall’s former equestrians and horse breeders.
For some residents the long hot Australian summers were spent building sandcastles at the bathing boxes on Edithvale Beach, a memory captured in the work.
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