The Royal Society of Tasmania is making a hidden cultural treasure accessible to the public after more than a century of preservation constraints. According to ABC News, the society has owned an album of Owen Stanley's maritime artworks since 1900, but the delicate nature of the original meant it could not be safely displayed. Rather than consign the works to a vault, the society is converting the album into a digital flip book.
Stanley's maritime art represents a significant document of Tasmanian and Australian naval history, capturing the perspective of a 19th-century seafarer during formative years of colonial exploration and trade. The works have been locked away not out of indifference, but because traditional conservation methods couldn't tolerate public handling or light exposure.
The digital approach solves a real problem in regional cultural stewardship: how to preserve fragile materials while making them meaningful to contemporary audiences. For Launceston and Tasmania, particularly given the state's deep maritime heritage, the project demonstrates that heritage institutions can adapt their practices to both conserve and share. The flip book will likely appeal to researchers, students, maritime enthusiasts, and anyone curious about how Tasmania's waters and vessels were recorded by those who lived them.