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Location7 QUEENS STREET SOUTH BALLARAT EAST, BALLARAT CITY
File Number600341LevelRegistered |
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What is significant? Construction of the house later known as the Old Curiosity Shop
commenced about 1863, the year bricklayer, James Warwick obtained a
miner's right for a residential block on the edge of the exhausted
Eureka diggings in the newly proclaimed municipality of Ballarat East.
James built a modest 4-roomed timber and brick house for his expanding
family and continued in the bricklaying trade until retiring around
the early 1880s. By then he was pursuing his gardening interests in
the local Horticultural Society and was supervising the gardens of
many East Ballarat residents. It was during these years that his
gardening and building interests converged to find expression in the
marvellous permutations of decoration that extend over the house and
garden. Using cast-off crockery, glass, ceramic figurine and mirror
shards, shells, wallpaper samples, architectural ornament and slag, a
place was found for all manner of things, large and small. Children
would bring broken china dolls and bits of crockery, and the patient
mosaic work preoccupied James and his wife Caroline for the rest of
their lives. The work has its origins in the grottoes and shellhouses
that ornamented the gardens of large English estates from the 1730s.
In the few years before James' death in 1898, the house had become
known as the 'Old Curiosity Shop', inspiring associations with the
Charles Dickens novel of the same name. By then professional
photographs had also been taken and thousands of tourists were
visiting it yearly. Caroline obtained copyright for 2 of the photos
and began issuing her own postcards before she died in 1903. The Shop
passed to their son Charles and then to a succession of owners who
added their own mythology to the story of the Warwicks and their work.
After attracting tourists for more than 100 years, the Shop closed to
the public in 1999. How is it significant? The Old Curiosity Shop is of aesthetic, historical and architectural
significance to the State of Victoria. Why is it significant? The Old Curiosity Shop is important for its exceptional aesthetic
characteristics and rich, diverse and unusual integration of
decorative features. Created outside the aesthetic norms of the
period, the embellishments in their marvellous permutations conjure a
fantasy world, a special environment that was home and sanctum for its
elderly owner-makers and a source of wonder to its many visitors. It
is unique in Victoria, if not Australia as a late nineteenth century
example of the unusual medium of shell and shardwork. The imaginative
arrangements are similarly unique, with mosaic patterns of shell,
crockery, glass as well as small everyday objects and architectural
ornament embellishing the house, fence, paths, garden and grotto. The
ornament is historically important as an index to a myriad of everyday
domestic things used and discarded by a late nineteenth century
community. The wallpaper samples inside the house comprise an
important catalogue of late Victorian popular styles that extend our
knowledge on the detail of interiors of the period. The Old Curiosity Shop has further historical importance as an early
house museum, a privately-run tourist enterprise that operated from
the late nineteenth century, drawing visitors from all over the world. The house is architecturally significant as an early and intact
example of the modest class of dwellings erected in this vicinity of
Ballarat by holder's of miner's rights, and it contributes to an
understanding of the cultural landscape of the East Ballarat
goldfields and their haphazard settlement pattern.
Residential buildings (private)
Cottage