Summary

Sculpture 'Burke and Wills', created by Mr. Leon Wolowski in 1985. Leon arrived in Australia from Poland in 1949. When he retired in 1975 he took up sculpting. His works fall into two main categories, both of which depict ways of life which have long since disappeared. One of these is a collection of sculptures depicting the life of Jews in a Shtetl in Poland. The other group is 'The Australian Pioneers'. This topic was chosen because it too represents a way of life that no longer exists.

This sculpture forms part of Leon's Australian Pioneers collection, which illustrates the shared experiences of 'The Australian Pioneers' of the nineteenth century. The collection includes images of men working on the goldfields, men living and working in the bush, a convict and interaction between Aborigines and whites. Many of the sculptures depict life in the bush illustrating the theme of rural Victoria. Others show images of the working lives of men and women on the gold fields.

Physical Description

Clay sculpture of two men and a camel on a rectangular base. Both men are dressed in long pants, heavy boots, long sleeved shirts and have full beards and moustaches. One man holds a long heavy stick in one hand and his hat in the other. The other man who wears his hat on his head and a waist length coat holds a shorter stick in one hand and the reins of the camel in the other. The camel is seated before the two men.

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