Skip to main content
The Crowd on the Hill
The Crowd on the Hill

The Crowd on the Hill

Date11 January 1968
Object numberANMS1078[041]
NamePhotograph
MediumPhotograph on paper
DimensionsOverall: 305 × 405 mm
Mount / Matt size (C fini mount): 522 × 717 mm
Display dimensions (C fini frame): 550 × 745 × 45 mm
Copyright© Jack Eden
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Dawn and Jack Eden
DescriptionA black and white photograph by Jack Eden titled 'Crowd on the Hill'. It depicts a crowd of spectators seated on a grass hill watching the Bobby Brown Memorial Surfboard Riding Championships held along Cronulla Beach on the weekend 10-11 January, 1968. Bobby Brown was a talented surfer from Cronulla, Sydney, who challenged Midget Farrelly's surfing supremacy in 1964. He beat Farrelly in the 1964 New South Wales Championship to take the title and in the same year was placed sixth in the inaugural World Surfing Championships held at Manly Beach, a contest that Farrelly won. At age 18 Brown was the youngest finalist in the competition. He died at the age of 22 in a pub fight at Taren Point, Sydney. The following year the first Bobby Brown Memorial Surfboard Riding Championships was held at Cronulla Beach. HistoryThese photographs by photographer and publisher Jack Eden shows the many facets of surfing culture in Australia in the 1960s. It was a time of change with internationalisation of the sport on the one hand and the beginnings of what would become the relaxed ideal of the surfing surfari on the other - when surfers followed waves around the coastline, firstly for competition and then as a 'soul surfing' lifestyle. Eden's photographs show the surfers, largely male but also some of the female surfers, that he ascribed the title femlins in the idiom of the day. They also show spectators, media, judges, surfboard makers, entertainers - Little Pattie and the Statesmen, beachfronts, waves, land and sea scapes, along the coastline from Coolangatta in Queensland to Point Lonsdale in Victoria. The early 1960s saw the rise of Australian stars like Bernard Midget Farrelly, his early protégé Nat Young, and Phyllis O’Donnell, all of whom won their respective classes in the first world surfing titles held in Manly in 1964 that he documents from the beach, the water and the air. Many of his competition shots were published in his magazine surfabout and are energetic and exuberant but today it is those images of life around the surf 50 years ago that are compelling - surf and beachwear, the crowds, the personalities, the boards and the changes in the coastal sites themselves.SignificanceThis photograph is part of a collection of Jack Eden photographs documenting the explosion of surf culture in the decade from the late 1950s. He depicts surfers and their world in competition and at rest - capturing their sporting and social customs from the position of an insider, a chronicler of surfing culture. The photographs include male and female surfers in the waves and on the beach, and the crowds, cars, customs, dating, bathing and baking rituals at events and chasing adventure along the coast.