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Friday, January 04, 2019

Gora and William collected craft and art from 104 countries they visited during 62 years of travelling the world 🧳

“Seek out a life of moderation, stop being lazy, exercise regularly by ploughing the field and avoid unhealthy foods!”

Chef Eli ably assisted by Kulwant and Malchkeon cooked yummy dinner for Gora and his guests last night. From spicy chicken to salty pork to lentils and served with freshly picked salad... cucumber on steroids capsicum  / mango with plums etc Red vino flowed from neighbours wineries. Rare Rajo Wines were however under lock and 🔑.... 😇 Parliamentary white and red were added to TheArtCollection as the come from Sturt Uni ...

Telomerase offsets cellular aging by lengthening the telomeres, adding back lost DNA repeats to add time onto the molecular ...

The bohemian miche bread turned to French bread is now talk of town in Mudgee 😉

Nota Bene via MO’N from Singapore 🕵🏻‍♂️ Why Australia must not rush in alone to tax the digital giants


EXHIBITIONS / Ornamental Celebrating 15 years of the Mann-Tatlow Collection of Asian Art
​The Mann-Tatlow Collection of Asian Art was gifted to Wollongong Art Gallery by William S. Tatlow and Gora Singh Mann in 2003.

Library exhibition showcases the results of a lifelong passion

Local art collector Gora Singh Mann poses with just some of the many pieces of Aboriginal art he has  collected over the years.
Local art collector Gora Singh Mann poses with just some of the many pieces of Aboriginal art he has collected over the years.


Gora Singh Mann can be called many things, but what is he is best known for is his need to share. 
This need to share has given the Mudgee community a chance to look upon the works of some very well known Australian artists thanks to a series of exhibitions at the Mudgee Library over the past two years.
The current exhibition features works from artists from The Hermannsburg School of Aboriginal Artists in Central Australia, including Albert Namatjira, while previous exhibitions have focused on David Hill and dot paintings from leading Aboriginal artists.
Mr Mann was born in Borneo and emigrated to Australia with his siblings in the mid-1950s. 
After completing an Arts Degree at Sydney University, Mr Mann studied at Teacher’s College and worked his way up through the ranks until he was appointed as a relieving State High School Principal. 
It was during this time, travelling around the state to teach at different schools, that Mr Mann first began studying Australian history, with a focus on Aboriginal art.
It was also when he began to focus on the notion of sharing what he had learnt – and what he had in his possession - with the rest of society.
“In teaching you become aware of the need to share.  “Because through teaching you become keen to impart your knowledge to others, and that’s the philosophy behind what I do with my art,” he said.

'I am very happy to donate parts of my collection to such a space in the future and would encourage the local community to help such an idea become a reality.'
Mr Mann, and his business partner William Tatlow, have donated a collection of Asian art to the Wollongong City Gallery and in 2001 the Gora Singh Mann Collection of Australian pottery was snapped up by buyers from across Australia after Mr Mann decided he couldn’t keep the collection to himself. 
“It’s of no real use for me to hide anything away, everyone deserves to see these works if they can,” Mr Mann said. 
Over the past 40 years, Mr Mann has added Asian art and pottery, sculpture, ceramics, Aboriginal art, furniture, and Chinese artifacts to his ever growing collection and currently has many of the pieces not residing in galleries hanging on his own walls at his home just outside of Mudgee. 
The biggest part of his collection consists of works by Aboriginal artists from Broken Hill, to Utopia in the Northern Territory including Eddy Harris, Michael Nelson Jagamara, Miniie Pwerle, Paddy carroll Tjungerai and Albert Namatjira. 
His knowledge on each of the artists has continued to grow, and Mr Mann is able to speak about each of the paintings in a way that tells a story not just about the artwork, but the person who created it.




Mr Mann said it wasn’t just enough for him to have a little bit of knowledge about a certain artist, artwork, or art style – he wanted to know as much as he could about the history of the work, to the cultural influences on a particular style, and everything in between. 
While he has generously lent parts of his immense collection to Mid-Western Regional Council for the library exhibitions, Mr Mann said he did not do so just to share his collection with others, but as a way of showcasing the kind of standards that could be easily managed in an exhibition space like an art gallery.
“I am very happy to donate parts of my collection to such a space  in the future and would encourage the local community to help such an idea become a reality,” he said.  
Mr Mann will donate one of the paintings from the Hermannsburg School of Aboriginal Art exhibition to the Mudgee Library at the end of the exhibition. 


The project is the baby of James O'Neill - not related to Mike - from The Butcher Shop Café and he said that he wanted to bring diversity to the ..

CODA: It was a dream job, visiting the globe’s most alluring destinations
on assignment. Here’s what our 2018 Traveler learned in a year of almost nonstop travel 1 Woman, 12 Months, 52 Places via BC