Life under a shadow

Volume 8 Number 2 February 13 - March 11 2012

Grainger Museum Co-curator Brian Allison previews a new exhibition about the life and work of John Harry Grainger, architect and civil engineer – and father of Percy Grainger.

The Grainger Museum at the University of Melbourne is presenting an exhibition that investigates the many achievements of John Harry Grainger, the gifted architect and engineer whose life was largely overshadowed by that of his son – the composer and performer, Percy Aldridge Grainger.

Trained in London, JH Grainger travelled to Australia in 1877 to take up the humble position of a draftsman with the South Australian Public Works Department. An ambitious young man, Grainger entered competitions for private commissions with great success. At the age of 25 he won commissions for two bridges: the intricately engineered swing bridge at Sale in Gippsland; and most significantly, Princes Bridge over the Yarra River in Melbourne. The Princes Bridge design was an enormous achievement – a task that would have challenged a practitioner twice his age. It became a major landmark then, as it is now.

JH Grainger’s career took him to every state in Australia as well as Colombo in Sri Lanka and Auckland in New Zealand. He was also employed as senior architect in the Western Australian Public Works Department, during which time he signed off on the designs of numerous public buildings, conceived a very elegant ballroom at Government House in Perth, and designed the displays for the Western Australian Pavilion at the 1900 Paris Exposition Universelle – to much acclaim.

Notable structures that were the result of Grainger’s creative vision were the well-loved ‘Georges’ building in Collins Street, Melbourne and the State Savings Bank and Masonic Hall also in Melbourne (the latter two no longer exist). The impressive French Renaissance Revival style public library and municipal offices in Auckland, as well as the Fremantle Town Hall in Perth, are fine examples of Grainger’s public building commissions.

JH Grainger’s cultural interests extended beyond building design and engineering. He was a good water colour painter and executed some fine seascapes. He also had a lifelong love for music and established the first string quartet in South Australia and the Perth Orchestral Society.

This exhibition includes a selection of artefacts from the Grainger Museum Collection which show aspects of Grainger’s life, as well as photographs, architectural and engineering drawings, and artworks. The displays include correspondence and ephemera relating to his relationship with his son Percy. Museum visitors will gain a more detailed understanding of Percy Grainger’s early family life and the often forgotten influences of his father.

‘Life Under a Shadow: John Harry Grainger architect and civil engineer’ is on show at the Grainger Museum at the University of Melbourne (Royal Parade near Gate 13). Open from 1pm to 4:30pm Tuesday to Friday and Sunday. Closed Monday and Saturday.

http://www.grainger.unimelb.edu.au/