Idol worship at the new temples of pleasure : an examination of sporting artworks at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and its place in the nation's heart

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Bibliographic Details
Title translated into German:Heldenverehrung in den neuen Vergnügungstempeln : eine Untersuchung der Sportkunstwerke am Melbourne Cricket Ground und sein Platz im Herzen der Nation
Author:Studham, David
Published in:Sporting traditions
Published:33 (2016), 1 (Australian sport statuary), S. 9-35, Lit.
Format: Publications (Database SPOLIT)
Publication Type: Journal article
Media type: Print resource
Language:English
ISSN:0813-2577, 0813-2577
Keywords:
Online Access:
Identification number:PU201611007916
Source:BISp

Author's abstract

The Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) has served as Melbourne's meeting place since the 1850s, in many ways replicating the role of a cathedral in medieval society. Over the years it has evolved into Australian sport's backyard. The Melbourne Cricket Club (MCC) has celebrated its history through a variety of commemorative media since the latter half of the nineteenth century. The variety and number of these ornamental trappings has greatly increased over the past 50 years. This article details the public art displayed at the MCG ground with an emphasis on the external abstract sculpture and series of sporting statuary. It also contextualises these sporting artworks within Melbourne's contemporary art discourses, noting that the movement for commemorative statues in Australian sporting stadia runs counter to the current Australian preference for abstract, non-representative art.