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Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :EEC life blood. 8 July 1978.
Date: 1978
From: Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :[One folder of original cartoons concerning world politics. Published in the Auckland Star, August 1977 - December 1979.]
Reference: A-331-064
Description: The cartoon shows a man, representing New Zealand, lying in a hospital bed. Attatched to his arm is a drip, representing EEC life blood, however the supply will soon run out. Surrounding his bed are get well cards from Britain, Holland, Germany, Denmark and France, all countries who are members of the EEC. Refers to the EEC and the resulting effect on New Zealand. Negatives at PA Collection 5371 Bromhead Collection Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink on card, 250 x 185mm. Provenance: Donated by the artist in 1997.
Gilmour, John Henry, 1892-1951 :Is this John Bull's style of imperial preference? New Z...
Date: 1930
From: Various artists :Collection of newspaper clippings, photocopies and bromides of cartoons by Fox (A-313-2), T Ellis - ie Thomas Ellis Glover (A-313-3), J. C. Blomfield (A-313-4) and John McNamara (A-313-11). Also folders of cartoons by various artists published in New Zealand Free Lance (A-313-6), in The Guardian (A-313-7), in Xrays (A-313-8), in the New Zealand Observer (A-313-9), in The Standard (A-313-12) and in various publications (A-313-1).
By: Gilmour, John Henry, 1892-1951; New Zealand free lance (Newspaper)
Reference: A-313-1-041
Description: John Bull (Great Britain) has his arm around a dairy maid (Denmark) and is handing her a 'butter cheque 140 shillings per c.w.t.' [hundredweight]. She says 'I like you, John, but I like your butter cheques better.' On his other side a younger, prettier, dairy maid is offering him the 'world's best butter' at 112 shillings per c.w.t. and protesting 'Say, Dad, don't be so fresh with her. You have your own daughters to consider.' Under the Imperial Preference scheme New Zealand's dairy produce should have had an advantage in the British marketplace, but the British consumers preferred to buy the Danish product. Extended Title - The comparative prices of Danish and New Zealand butter constitute an object lesson in Empire preference as it should not be. The advice to 'Buy British Goods' is not being practised in the land in which the slogan originated, for Danish butter is preferred at threepence a pound above New Zealand butter. Quantity: 1 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: A5 size bromide from newspaper.
Winter, Mark 1958- :[Grate Dane]. 9 April 2013
Date: 2013
From: Winter, Mark, 1958- : Digital cartoons published in the Southland Times and other papers
By: Southland times (Newspaper)
Reference: DCDL-0024502
Description: Cartoon commenting on Danish Member of Parliament Marie Krarup's comments on the powhiri she received at the Devonport Naval base, calling the powhiri 'uncivilised and grotesque'. She later blamed her comments on her translator. (New Zealand Herald, 7 Apr 2013) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:When Maori and Danish cultures meet. 8 April 2013
Date: 2013
From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald
By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)
Reference: DCDL-0024686
Description: Shows a Maori warrior standing holding a spear, as a blond woman builds a wall between them with children's Lego blocks. Text reads, 'When Maori and Danish cultures meet-'. Refers to an incident where Conservative Danish Member of Parliament Marie Krarup received a powhiri at the Devonport Naval Base and later described the traditional welcome as "uncivilised and grotesque" in a column for a Danish newspaper. Lego blocks are a popular children's toy which originated in Denmark. (New Zealand Herald, 7 Apr 2013) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Smith, Ashley W, 1948- :"Yikes, they're fortified!" "We must stop the spread!" 1 June 2011
Date: 2011
From: Smith, Ashley W, 1948- :[Digital cartoons published in the Shipping Gazette, MG Business, or Presto]
By: New Zealand shipping gazette (Periodical)
Reference: DCDL-0017988
Description: Text across the top of the cartoon reads 'NEWS - N.Z. food lobbyists say Danes are being ridiculous by treating vitamin-fortified spreads as dangerous foods'. The cartoon shows a Viking hoard appearing over a sand-dune with weapons to fight jars of marmite that have arrived in boats and are also armed. The Danes yell 'Yikes, they're fortified!' and 'We must stop the spread!' Context - The Danish government has banned importing New Zealand's beloved breakfast spread, Marmite. Danish legislation was passed in 2004 prohibiting products fortified with added vitamins, the Guardian reports. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).