Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408:front:0:p274
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408
Segment Type: other
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Character Range: 847280–850569

4 August 2022).
Vietnam Forces National Memorial                                                 Dedicated on 3 October 1992, the Vietnam Forces National Memorial was designed by Ken Unsworth AM in collaboration with the architects, Tonkin Zulaikha Harford.  Ken Unsworth (born 1931) is a sculptor, installation artist and performance artist.  He has received numerous awards for his work including the Bi-Centenary Sculpture Competition Award 1970, and he was made a Member of the Order of Australia for services to sculpture in 1989 (Boutwell Draper Gallery, 'Ken Unsworth', www.boutwelldrapergallery.com.au/artist-profile-detail.php?idArtistInfo=203, accessed October 2011, site active 4 August 2022).
Desert Mounted Corps Memorial                                                    The Desert Mounted Corps Memorial was originally erected in Port Said, Egypt, in 1932.  It was partly destroyed during the Suez conflict of 1956.  In 1964 a replica was made by Ray Ewers OAM and erected in Albany, WA, the port from which troopships left for Europe in WWI.  A second copy was made and unveiled in Anzac Parade on 19 April 1968.

                                                                                 Three sculptors had a hand in casting the original statue.  C Web Gilbert won the design competition in 1923.  He died before he was able to finish the monument.  Some sources say the immensity of the task and Gilbert's inexperience broke his heart and his spirit.  Paul Montford, a leading British sculptor, then worked on the sculpture for some time before it was passed on to another Australian, Sir Bertram Mackennal.  Mackennal had a team of British assistants to help him but died before it was unveiled (Info Barrel, 'The Desert Mounted Corps Memorial – WA', www.infobarrel.com/The_Desert_Mounted_Corps_Memorial_-Western_Australia#axzz1b1IaxCju, accessed October 2011, site active 4 August 2022).  Ray Ewers (1917-1998) was an Australian war artist during WWII.  He produced 32 dioramas of war scenes and 22 statues at the AWM until the 1960s (Wikipedia, 'Raymond Boultwood Ewers, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Boultwood_Ewers, accessed October 2011).
Boer War Memorial                                                                Dedicated on 31 May 2017, the Boer War Memorial was designed jointly by Pod Landscape Architecture and Jane Cavanough, and the sculptor was Louis Laumen.  Cavanough has qualifications in both landscape architecture and the visual arts, and designs site specific public art.  She has achieved some success in competitions.  Laumen is a Melbourne-based sculptor born in the Netherlands.  He has qualifications in fine arts and has been responsible for numerous commissions, and has otherwise been a finalist in several competitions, sometimes as part of design teams.
New Zealand Memorial                                                             Dedicated on 24 April 2001, the New Zealand Memorial, a gift to Australia from the people of New Zealand, was designed by Kingsley Baird and Studio of Pacific Architecture, together with paving designs by Toi Te Rito Maihi and Allen Wihongi (east side), and Daisy Nadjungdanga in association with Urban Art Projects (west side).  Baird (born 1957) is a Wellington (NZ)-based designer, whose