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Bromhead, Peter 1933- :[20 cartoons published in the Auckland Star in September 1987.]
Date: 1987
By: Bromhead, Peter, 1933-; Auckland star (Newspaper)
Reference: A-362-249/268
Description: Cartoons on New Zealand and international political and social issues. Quantity: 20 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Black ink on card, sizes vary. Provenance: Donated by the artist in 1997.
Tremain, Garrick 1941-:61 cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times between 10 Octobe...
Date: 2001
By: Tremain, Garrick, 1941-; Otago daily times (Newspaper)
Reference: H-661-001/061
Description: Cartoons on New Zealand and international political and social issues. Quantity: 61 photocopy/ies. Physical Description: Photocopies A4 size
Scott, Thomas, 1947- :27 copies of cartoons (includes 14A) published in the Evening Pos...
Date: 2001 - 2002
By: Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)
Reference: H-674-001/026
Description: Cartoons on political and social issues. Shows a destroyed bus (peace process) destroyed first by the Palestinian suicide bombers and them by Israeli war planes. Health spending priorities promote huge salaries for the CEO and a pittence for everyone else. Cartoon obituary to Sir Peter Blake. A dolphin weeps. Shows a flag at hslf-mast over the sea and a poem for Sir peter Blake. Peter Jackson, Director of Lord of the Rings dresses up for the New Zealand premiere. Debate in the Parliamentary Chamber on proposed changes referred to as the 'wipe the slate clean' Bill. Helen Clark hides from the anger of the grounded NZ Air Force capability. Children's perception of the difference in pay rises between MP's and teachers. Shows a tour guide explaining the virtues and down-side of New Zealand to a group of travel writers. Shows Bin Laden jumping the cue at the plastic surgery clinic. Shows MP's defending themselves at a press conference against charges of triple-dipping from public funds. Shows the men calling the tune on America's anti-terrorism campaign. Shows the leader of the National Party, Bill English asking Santa Claus for a Christmas present. Santa and his reindeer narrowly avoid being hit by airborne missiles. Shows an All Black selector recruiting new talent from a war zone. Shows Helen Clark and Jim Anderton clucking over their new baby (Air New Zealand), while Michael Cullen advises them not to get too attached as it'll be up for adoption as soon as it can stand on it's own feet. Winston Peters climbs up to his attic to dust off his 'super scare monger' suit. Slobadon Milosevich stands in the War Crimes Tribunal dock with his hands dripping in blood, he defys the authority of the court. A tribute to New zealand Criketerl, Chris Cairns as 'King of the Oval.' Shows Tranzrail passengers being shown a pick-axe they are to use in case of a derailment. Shows detainees at Guantanamo Bay being asked by their detainers if they have any complaints. They wear something like a gas mask so their answer is impossible to understand. Refers to anti-terrorism war and those captured by American-led forces. Shows politicicians as children engaged in petty squabbles as the election draws near. Comment on asylum seekers in Australia seeking help from the rest of the world. Shows Israeli troops in a armoured tank trying to force Yasser Arafat to end Palestinian violence. Shows an Australian teacher explaining to his students that only those arriving in Australia between 1840 and 2000 are 'fair dinkum Aussies'. National Party leader, Bill English dons a judges cloak, a hangman's noose and an executioners hood as he campaigns on a law and order platform. ACT leader, Richard Prebble outlines his stand on immigration policy. Quantity: 27 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: B5 size bromides.
Lloyd, Trevor, 1863-1937 :Uncle Sam off with the Davis Cup. Auckland Weekly News, 6 Jan...
Date: 1921
By: Lloyd, Trevor, 1863-1937; Auckland weekly news (Newspaper)
Reference: H-664-001
Description: A kangaroo and a kiwi are in tears as Uncle Sam makes off with the Davis Cup for tennis. Quantity: 1 newsclipping. Physical Description: One A4 size newsclipping.
Salmon album 3
Date: [August to October 1947, June 1958 and June 1959
From: Salmon, J T :Albums, album pages and loose prints
By: Salmon, John Tenison, 1910-1999
Reference: PA1-q-199
Description: Album in two sequences. The first 12 pages are contacts from 35mm film relating to a John Tenison Salmon's Carnegie Travelling Fellowship in 1958-1959; the second sequence (pages 13-41) contains prints relating to his trip to Australia to attend the Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science Congress held in 1947. Quantity: 1 album(s) Album(s). Physical Description: Album with cream cover, Cobra ring binder; 30 x 24 cm
Pieces 63a, 71, 90 - Sir Everard Home papers; miscellaneous manuscripts
Date: 1813, 1885, n d
From: Australian Joint Copying Project : Miscellaneous Series microfilm
Reference: Micro-MS-Coll-20-2288
Description: Quantity: 1 microfilm reel(s).
Murdoch, Sharon fl 1990s :Somewhere high above the Tasman... You're a clever little bir...
Date: 1994
From: Murdoch, Sharon Gay, 1960-:Cartoon entries for Qantas Media Awards, 1994. October to November 1994
Reference: H-232-002
Description: Shows a kangaroo pushing a kiwi out the door of an aeroplane with is feet. Far below the plane is the outline of Australia and New Zealand. Refers to the `Open Skies' negotiations between New Zealand and Australia. Quantity: 1 cartoon bromide(s). Finding Aids: Photocopies available at Pictorial Reference Service..
Notebooks - Volume 9 (continued) to 14
Date: 1833-1838
From: Australian Joint Copying Project : Miscellaneous Series microfilm
Reference: Micro-MS-Coll-20-2283
Description: Quantity: 1 microfilm reel(s).
Correspondence - Volumes 26 (continued) to 27 WAT - ZUC; Supplementary correspondence; ...
Date: 1830-1887
From: Australian Joint Copying Project : Miscellaneous Series microfilm
Reference: Micro-MS-Coll-20-2282
Description: Quantity: 1 microfilm reel(s).
Ruffling some feathers... "Call yourself a bird?.. You can't even fly mate!" [and] The ...
Date: 2001
From: Winter, Mark, 1958- : Digital cartoons published in the Southland Times and other papers
Reference: DCDL-0002456
Description: There are two cartoons. In the first cartoon a kangaroo taunts a kiwi for being unable to fly. Refers to competition between New Zealand and Australian airlines. In the second cartoon a man representing Air New Zealand leaps off a cliff with another man representing Ansett clinging cheerfully to his back. The caption puts the question, 'Right brothers?' Reference to New Zealand and Australian competition again and a play on the idea of the Wright brothers, the first to fly. There are two separate cartoons on this digital image, DX-009-003 and DX-009-004 Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Brockie, Robert Ellison 1932- :...Who does What? and with Which? & to Whom? National Bu...
Date: 1982
From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons
Reference: DX-003-086
Description: A kangaroo and a kiwi are sitting up in bed together under a blanket labelled CER, both puzzling over what to do. New Zealand prime minister Robert Muldoon peers through a keyhole at them and tells Australian prime minister Malcolm Fraser that 'I think they're getting the message'. Exhibition caption reads - Perhaps a marriage of convenience at the beginning, CER was to blossom into a long-standing, stable and mutually beneficial relationship. At the end of 1982, for New Zealand prime minister Muldoon particularly, CER was an economic lifeline at a time when the economy was performing badly and job-creating major new industries, promised during the 1981 election campaign, looked more and more unlikely. Exhibited in 'The Other Side of the Ditch' exhibition of cartoons on the New Zealand-Australian relationship curated by Ian F. Grant of the New Zealand Cartoon Archive and exhibited in the National Library Gallery from 28 November 2001 to 24 February 2002 to mark the centenary of Australian Federation. Also exhibited at X Space Gallery, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland in mid-March 2002 and at Old Parliament House, Canberra, Australia from 26 March 2003 to 29 June 2003. Added to exhibition when sent to Australia in March 2003. Extended Title - CER. Newly married. I think they're getting the message. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).
Nisbet, Alistair, 1958- :[Qantas fever] Christchurch Press. 26 June, 2002.
Date: 2002
From: Nisbet, Alastair, 1958- :Digital cartoons
By: Press (Christchurch, N.Z.)
Reference: DX-006-036
Description: The new symbol on Qantas Airline's tail is a disco, jiving Kangaroo. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).
Evans, Malcolm, 1945- :'Duck.' New Zealand Herald, 27 November, 2002.
Date: 2002
From: Evans, Malcolm Paul, 1945- :Digital cartoons
Reference: DX-002-145
Description: Shows three Air New Zealand execuatives as rats stradling an arrow with the Qantas logo as its arrowhead aimed at the back of an unsuspecting New Zealand traveller. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).
Evans, Malcolm, 1945- :Changes at Air New Zealand. Ewe 'n' me. New Zealand Herald, 25 N...
Date: 2002
From: Evans, Malcolm Paul, 1945- :Digital cartoons
Reference: DX-002-143
Description: Shows the wool from a sheep (representing New Zealanders) being sown into the shape of a kangaroo. Signifies the bid from Qantas to buy into Air New Zealand, and New Zealander's fears over what that will mean to the identity of our national carrier. Extended Title - 'Click go the shares boys.' Quantity: 1 digital image(s).
Minhinnick, Gordon Edward George (Sir) 1902-1992 :Tie me kangaroo down, Sport... New Ze...
Date: 1967
From: [Various cartoonists including Sir Gordon Minhinnick 1902-1992] :[Newspaper clippings of cartoons from New Zealand newspapers. 15 December 1948 to 5 September 1972.]
By: Auckland Herald (Newspaper); Minhinnick, Gordon Edward George (Sir), 1902-1992
Reference: E-549-q-13-215
Description: New Zealand Prime Minister Keith Holyoake is trying to lassoo a bounding kangaroo labelled 'Tasman Trade Bias', watched by a gleeful group of Australian Trade Minister McEwen and 'Australian Trade Lobby'. Exhibition caption reads - The NAFTA agreement, signed in 1966, made a start to freeing up trade between New Zealand and Australia, but over the next 17 years the ratio was generally strongly in Australia's favour. Exhibited in 'The Other Side of the Ditch' exhibition of cartoons on the New Zealand-Australian relationship curated by Ian F. Grant of the New Zealand Cartoon Archive and exhibited in the National Library Gallery from 28 November 2001 to 24 February 2002 to mark the centenary of Australian Federation. Also exhibited at X Space Gallery, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland in mid-March 2002 and at Old Parliament House, Canberra, Australia from 26 March 2003 to 29 June 2003. Published in 'The Other Side of the Ditch' by Ian F. Grant, published by the New Zealand Cartoon Archive in association with Tandem Press, 2001. Quantity: 1 newspaper clipping. Physical Description: newspaper clippings, various sizes.
"SCRAM!!" 17 May, 2006.
Date: 2006
From: Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times]
Reference: DCDL-0000773
Description: Finance Minister, Michael Cullen, opens his budget box, glances sideways at a large smug-looking kangaroo with its pocket bulging with tax cuts and snarls, 'Scram!!'. Refers to the criticism that was levelled at him by many people about the fact that Australians were getting tax cuts in their new budget but Kiwis were not. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Walker, Malcolm :Great cultures meet... Erratic Scratchings, Malcolm Walker, 1984.
Date: 1984
By: Walker, Malcolm, 1950-
Reference: H-652-007
Description: Published in 'The Other Side of the Ditch' by Ian F. Grant, published by the New Zealand Cartoon Archive in association with Tandem Press, 2001. Colourised version used for cover of Ian F. Grant's book 'The Other Side of the Ditch', New Zealand Cartoon Archive, 2001. Exhibited in 'The Other Side of the Ditch' exhibition of cartoons on the New Zealand-Australian relationship curated by Ian F. Grant of the New Zealand Cartoon Archive and exhibited in the National Library Gallery from 28 November 2001 to 24 February 2002 to mark the centenary of Australian Federation. Also exhibited at X Space Gallery, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland in mid-March 2002 and at Old Parliament House, Canberra, Australia from 26 March 2003 to 29 June 2003. Quantity: 1 photocopy/ies A4 size photocopy.. Physical Description: A4 size photocopy.
Walker, Malcolm :Closer Economic Relations... [Sunday News, 1986?]
Date: 1986
From: Walker, Malcolm, 1950- :73 Photocopies of cartoons by Malcolm Walker. Two undated. Most dated 1984-1986, with one dated January 1987 and one 19 July 1992.
Reference: H-348-030
Description: Four panels showing a distant country (Australia) and the space between Australia and New Zealand. In the first panel, a kangaroo can be seen hopping across towards a kiwi; in the second, the kangaroo is stuffing the kiwi into its pouch; in the third, the kangaroo is zipping up the pouch; in the fourth, the kangaroo is hopping back towards Australia. Refers to New Zealand fears that the Government's Closer Economic Relations policy will mean a take-over of New Zealand interests by Australian Quantity: 1 photocopy/ies. Physical Description: Photocopy, A4 size
Crimp, Daryl, 1958- :Air NZ sell off - Aussie in secret talks. Air NZ Marketing. 'It lo...
Date: 2002
From: Crimp, Daryl, 1958-:[Digital cartoons published in the Dominion Post and other newspapers]
By: Crimp, Daryl, 1958-
Reference: DX-012-031
Description: Shows two marketing men working on a Qantas and Air NZ merged logo. The logo is of a kangaroo with the Air NZ logo looking like an erct penis attached to the kangaroo. It puts across the message that Air NZ will be 'done over'. Quantity: 1 digital image(s) ..
Hunter, Ashley John Barsby, 1854-1932:Federation in the air. One possible view of the p...
Date: 1899
By: Hunter, Ashley John Barsby, 1854-1932; New Zealand Graphic and Ladies' Journal
Reference: J-040-001
Description: New Zealand is shown as a small boy in sailor costume riding on the tail of a kangaroo bounding across the Tasman sea from New Zealand to Australia. Exhibition and book captions read - New Zealand supporters of federation [with Australia] stressed the shared British stock, language, Queen, God and trade possibilities. New Zealand would progress by 'leaps and bounds' with an assured market for cereals, fruit and some manufactured goods. South Seas isolation was another reason for embracing federation. There was uneasiness about growing German power and French intentions in the Pacific. There was also fear, however, irrational, of the 'yellow peril'. Exhibited in 'The Other Side of the Ditch' exhibition of cartoons on the New Zealand-Australian relationship curated by Ian F. Grant of the New Zealand Cartoon Archive and exhibited in the National Library Gallery from 28 November 2001 to 24 February 2002 to mark the centenary of Australian Federation. Also exhibited at X Space Gallery, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland in mid-March 2002 and at Old Parliament House, Canberra, Australia from 26 March 2003 to 29 June 2003. Published in 'The Other Side of the Ditch' by Ian F. Grant, published by the New Zealand Cartoon Archive in association with Tandem Press, 2001. Extended Title - A contemporary prophesies that should New Zealand join the [Australian] Federation the colony would progress by "leaps and bounds". Quantity: 1 photocopy/ies A3 size. Physical Description: A3 size photocopy.