Correspondence Files of Leonhard Adam
Place |
Melbourne |
Subject | |
Category | |
Author |
Adam, Leonhard |
Keywords |
Tatura camp German Australian |
Current holder | |
Item number |
UMA-ACE-20110013 |
Access rights |
Request at location |
Country of origin | |
Language | |
Period of reference |
1940-01 to 1960-12 |
Description from source |
Extent 1 Box Linear Meterage 0.17 Scope and Content Comprising of copies of articles and correspondence in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish and Russian a large proportion of the material consists of letters between Leonhard Adam and editors or printing houses in relation to the publishing of his works. Other correspondence is to universities, museums, professional friends, scholars and students in relation to ethnographical collections, and research with a particular regard towards Australian Indigenous art. A small section of the correspondence is in German with or relating to Fr Earnest Worms SAC and the Pallottine Mission. History Leonhard Adam was born on 16 December 1891 in Berlin, Germany. Adam studied at the Royal Frederick William Gymnasium, the Ethnological Museum, and the universities of Berlin and Greifswald. He was appointed judge in the provincial court, Berlin, and was also an academic lecturer and editor. Adam was part Jewish, and in 1933, Nazi laws ended his career in Germany. In 1938, he went to the UK where he resumed his academic career at the University of London and published Primitive Art (1940). On 16 May 1940, he was classified as an ‘enemy alien’ and shipped on the Dunera to an internment camp in Australia. The internment camp at Tatura, Victoria, held a number of eminent scholars. They organised their own ‘university’, the ‘Collegium Taturense’, and gave lectures to their fellow internees. Some Australians lobbied for Adam’s release, and on 29 May 1942 he was released to work at the National Museum of Victoria and the University of Melbourne, where he remained for the rest of his career. In 1943, he married Julia Mary Baillie. He made field trips to central and northern Australia to study the art of indigenous Australians, and he argued for the acceptance of Aboriginal art as artistic equals to European art. His anthropological collections became the Leonhard Adam Ethnological Collection of the Ian Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne. Adam died in Bonn from heart disease on 9 September 1960. |
Physical format |
Correspondence Photographs Diaries Journal Drawing |
Related resources | |
Record author |
Siobhan Campbell |
Post successfully! Your comment will appear after it has been approved by the admin.
Log In to add your own notes to this record.
Saved to collection