A new City of Melbourne exhibition will take Melburnians on a trip down memory lane, with the iconic celebrity handprints from a former Bourke Street store making their triumphant return to the CBD at the City Gallery at Melbourne Town Hall.
McEwans hardware store, which became a big part of the modern Bunnings, was a household name in the 1970s and 80s. It was a must visit, with celebrity handprints marking the entrance to the Bourke Street store.
As Melburnians crossed the threshold of the do-it-yourself superstore, they’d find the mark of actors, musicians, sportspeople, writers, dancers, politicians, an astronaut, a racehorse, and even a talented opera-singing dog.
Melburnians and visitors can see 40 of these prints at the GOTCHA! exhibition, alongside the stories of the celebrities who made them.
Celebrity handprints featured include:
- Evonne Goolagong , tennis legend
- Jamie Redfern, singer
- Kamahl, singer
- Merv Hughes, cricketer
- Colleen Hewett, singer
- Heather McKay, squash champion
- John Bertrand, America’s Cup winner
- Paul Cronin, actor
- Johnny Letts, Melbourne Cup-winning jockey
Lord Mayor Sally Capp said: “We’re excited to host GOTCHA! – which is set to draw more people into the city, with a display of quirky yet iconic city history at Town Hall’s own City Gallery.”
“Attendees can literally feel our city’s history by holding their hands against the prints of beloved celebrities, who were immortalised at the heights of their careers.”
“Compare your hand with the likes of Evonne Goolagong, who cemented her mark just after her momentous Wimbledon win in 1971, and John Bertrand, who won the America’s Cup in 1983,” she said.
The exhibition has been curated by author and historian Robyn Annear, who has written extensively about Melbourne and Victoria’s history. This is the fourth exhibition she has curated for City Gallery.
Robyn Annear said: “McEwans was a Melbourne institution in the 1970s and 80s and people flocked to the city store for their weekend projects. This exhibition shines a light on what our city was like and it is so appropriate that these prints should find a home at Melbourne Town Hall.”
“The idea of celebrity is ephemeral, yet here we have these prints set in concrete which is glorious. I hope people will try their hands for size against the celebrity prints, as Bourke Street shoppers used to do with the Lionel Rose fist prints,” she said.
The free exhibition will be on display at City Gallery until Friday 16 August 2024.