The ‘Meat in The Sandwich’ between Boom and Bust: James Clarke Waite’s 'The Saltwater River', 1896, Sam Nichols

Vol 47 no 3, August 2025
Article from Vol 47 no 3, August 2025

The ‘Meat in The Sandwich’ between Boom and Bust: James Clarke Waite’s 'The Saltwater River', 1896, Sam Nichols

Abstract:

A chance online encounter with an arresting 19th-century oil painting depicting a scene of forlorn industry on the banks of the Saltwater River, executed by one of Australia’s foremost portrait painters of the Victorian period, and its offering in a Hobart auction may have misled some to assume it depicted a scene from Tasmania’s long abandoned, convict-driven experiment at Saltwater River on the Tasman Peninsula. For Sam Nichols, it prompted recollections of a six-year residence in inner-west Melbourne and walking the banks of the Maribyrnong River, surveying the relics of the city’s 19th-century livestock-based industries in the area of Kensington and Footscray.

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