Summary

This didactic exhibition label from the Industrial and Technological Museum presents one of Victoria's major impacts on fruit growing; San Jose Scale disease.
Dating from the 1940s era of the Applied Science arm of what later became Museums Victoria, this label employs a standard approach for Applied Science. It illustrates the etiology, how the disease presents and the accompanying exhibit would have utilized wax fruit models from the collection capturing various stages of infection. And finally, it offers the best known control to be applied in Victoria.

Physical Description

Single-sided, grey typewritten print on white (aged) card, mounted on thick cardboard. Extensive text. Pin holes and slight damage in corners.

Significance

The Historic Exhibition Labels Collection illustrates the changing styles in didactic interpretation, aesthetics and approaches to audiences engagment throughout the history of Museums Victoria. From the earliest days of the National Museum of Victoria in the mid 1800s, through the various incarnations of the Applied Sciences collection, to the amalgamation of all the branches into Museums Victoria, the labels chart a course through the changes in audience needs and desires. There are beautiful examples of hand-written Ninteenth Century labels, some examples of extremely long didactic panels from the early twentieth century, and rare and unusal fonts in the mid twentieth century. The collection also illustrates the transition from hand-written and painted labels to the use of typewriters, then Letraset, and ultimately printed labels, culminating in the large format digital print room being introduced at Melbourne Museum in 2000.

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