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Lloyd Triestino Ticket

Artist (1930 - 2020)
Date2003
Object number00037905
NamePainting
MediumAcrylic paint on board MDF board
DimensionsOverall: 605 x 452 mm, 2 mm, 0.78 kg
Copyright© Gina Sinozich
ClassificationsArt
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Gina Sinozich
DescriptionIn 1957 the Sinozich family migrated from Croatia to Melbourne, Australia on board the Lloyd Triestino steamship NEPTUNIA. This painting is a reproduction of the family's passenger ticket and lists their names: husband and wife Eugen and Giorgina (Gina) Sinozich and their children, seven-year-old Vladimiro (known as Michael) and six-year-old Eugenia (known as Jenny). This is one of 14 paintings by the 73 year old artist Gina Sinozich documenting her personal experience as a Croatian migrant travelling to Australia.HistoryGina Sinozich began painting in 2000, when she was 70 years old. In 2009 she continued to paint full-time at her home in south-western Sydney. In these paintings Gina gives a first hand account of daily life on board the passenger ship SS NEPTUNIA which left Genoa, Italy for Melbourne, Australia on 19 June 1957. Her works are largely chronological and concentrate on the ship's journey, offering an insight into the anticipation and apprehension she felt towards their destination Australia, of which little was known. In 1956 Gina Sinozich fled her hometown in Istria, Croatia with her husband and two children Michael and Jenny to start a new life. Their decision to leave was made because of the difficult conditions experienced by families living in post-war Croatia, then part of the Communist Republic of Yugoslavia and under the control of Marshall Josip Tito. Many Croatians feared for their safety and experienced hunger and poverty. After travelling overland to Italy the Sinozich family lived in a refugee camp for 18 months until they were accepted for assisted migration to Australia. The family of four arrived to Australia with only three small suitcases, having fled in secret without packing family keepsakes or mementoes. Their journey mirrored the passage taken by hundreds of thousands of post-World War II European migrants, one which changed not only their lives but also had a profound effect on Australian society. Gina returned to Croatia in 2004, reuniting with family members and mending rifts caused by her secret departure almost fifty years earlier.SignificanceGina Sinozich's painting highlights her family's migration journey from Croatia to Australia in 1957. It represents the experience of many displaced people compelled to move from Europe in the aftermath of World War II.