
Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast The camera in the colony: Australia's oldest photographs
Nov 4, 2025
Elisa de Corsi, a historian and curator specializing in 19th-century colonial Australian photography, discusses the fascinating arrival of the first camera in Australia and the initial public reaction. She highlights the 1845 William Bland daguerreotype as the earliest surviving photograph and shares intriguing details about the lost portraits and their global journey. The conversation also touches on photography's role in documenting Indigenous people and the colonial landscape, and how it served both as a celebration of empire and a tool for surveillance.
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Dramatic Arrival Of The First Camera
- Captain Augustine Lucas's shipwrecked expedition accidentally brought the first daguerreotype camera to Sydney in March 1841.
- The camera arrived after a dramatic wreck at Valparaiso and was carried to Sydney on the ship Justine when Lucas sought passage home.
Early Demonstration Was A False Start
- The 1841 camera demonstration in Sydney was a false start because no image from it survives and the camera remained unsold.
- Photography needed technical skill, equipment and care to form a lasting practice in the colony.
Earliest Surviving Portrait Is From 1845
- The earliest surviving Australian daguerreotype is George Baron Goodman's 1845 portrait of William Bland.
- Goodman made thousands of photographs commercially, but fewer than a dozen survive in Australian collections today.

