Hippies

Flower children
There are 23 related items to this topic
Image

Paynter, Bill, 1949- :No Nukes. What next? We all retire and live on a commune. 11 June...

Date: 1993

From: Paynter, Bill 1949- :The Independent cartoons. 14 May - 9 July 1993

Reference: H-077-005

Description: Shows Bill Birch and Rob Muldoon in the grounds of parliament looking at Jim Bolger, who is dressed in hippie-style floral shirt and flared trousers and is carrying a placard reading "No nukes". Refers to Bolger's adopting of an anti-nuclear stance. Quantity: 1 cartoon bromide(s).

Image

Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989:Rotorua, Feb.17 (PA). - If the amount of hydrogen sulph...

Date: 1975

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

By: Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.); Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989

Reference: B-134-720

Description: This cartoon relates to hydrogen sulphide pollution at Rotorua and features stereotypical environmental protestors marching against the pollution. In the final scene one has been attacked by a guardian of Lake Rotorua Label on verso dated Wed 19/2/75 Other Titles - Stop pollution stop Rotorua Other Titles - Close Rotorua Extended Title - We expect a quick reaction from some of the country's more extreme environmental cases Inscriptions: Pencil dated lower right hand corner 19/2/75 Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink, newspaper clipping and crayon, l280 x 406 mm

Image

Buis, Simon Paulus, 1926?-1980 :The Brutus Festival / photographs, Simon Buis. Cover de...

Date: 1969

From: Roth, Herbert Otto, 1917-1994: Collected papers, personal papers, photographs and ephemera

Reference: Eph-B-ROTH-Brutus-1969-01

Description: A booklet, mainly of photographs taken at gatherings of young peace protesters and friends at Auckland parks, mainly Albert Park. Those involved in these occasions included Tim Shadbolt, Roger Fowler and Susan Wilson. Quantity: 1 album(s) Album(s). Physical Description: Booklet of 32 pages, each 290 x 200 mm. Provenance: Part of the Roth acquisition, in about 1992.

Image

[Ephemera collected by Bert Roth, relating to marijuana. 1970s]

Date: 1970 - 1979

From: Roth, Herbert Otto, 1917-1994: Collected papers, personal papers, photographs and ephemera

Reference: Eph-B-ROTH-Marijuana

Description: Includes: New Zealand Marijuana Party. Manifesto. 1978? New Zealand Marijuana Party. Wellington Branch [Circular letters and flyers. ca 1978] Two flyers about the Nambassa Festival, referred to in one as the Nambassa Theftival Tapui Books - flyer suggesting an alternative lifestyle publication Dr J L Robson. "Drugs, youth and the law. Public meeting. J A Seymour. "Drugs, marijuana and the law". Typescript on 6 green sheets of paper, stapled in two groups of 3 pages each Rastafarians! Tokers! Come out of your closet. ... Far out freak rasta Grant Bedford preaches every Sunday. Botanical Gardens (duck pond area). Positive vibes and reggae. Resistance (Auckland). Smoke-in! Smoke-in! 25th March midday, Albert Park. Danger! Help stamp out the killer drug Marijuana! ... Join the Anti-Crime-Inducing-Drug (A.C.I.D.) Campaign [Auckland] Petition concerning New Zealand's drug legislation (2 blank copies) Citizens Against Repressive Legislation. "Marijuana can so destroy a mans character that he mixes freely with persons of another race" - from a South African textbook on criminology (Yellow sheet) Tolerance of Cannabis Society. Flyer Quantity: 1 folder(s). Physical Description: Offset prints, mimeographed typescripts, photocopies, sizes varying up to 330 mm. Provenance: Part of the Roth acquisition, in about 1992.

Audio

Interview with Anna Reed

Date: 20 Jun 2009

From: Selling sex - the New Zealand sex industry oral history project

By: Reed, Anna, 1943-

Reference: OHInt-0977-04

Description: Interview with Anna Reed, born in Dunedin in 1943. Outlines her family background including her father's Polish Jewish parents, her parents' open relationship and her mother's career. Comments on her schooling, and rebelling at Wellington Girls' College. Refers to working as a photographer's assistant after she left school, attending art school, and mixing with hippies. Talks about going to Europe in 1963 and being in London on and off for about six years. Comments on travelling alone in Europe, her parents being very worried about her, and spending time in hippy havens in Ibiza and Formentera. Talks about getting pregnant intentionally, settling in Wales where she was a social worker with old people for a time. Refers to living in a commune where she gave birth, and her mother bringing her back to New Zealand. Mentions living at the Wilderland commune near Whitianga for a year and then at Hokianga where she had another baby. Talks about moving to Marahau Farm (Nelson), then moving to Christchurch so her children could attend a Rudolf Steiner school. Discusses beginning to work for the an outcall service in Christchurch when she was 34. Mentions the managers and services she worked for and the dangers in outcall work. Talks about massage parlours and outcall services in Christchurch in the late 1970s, how they operated, and 'extras' [sex]. Comments on changes over the years in the way sex workers were paid by parlour owners and her feelings about the introduction of charging workers shift fees, bonds and fines. Talks about massage parlour workers having to register with the police and be photographed and how the police harrassed premises and workers. Comments on action taken in the early days of the New Zealand Prostitute Collective to get police procedures changed, and lobbying unsuccessfully for the registers to be destroyed when prostitution was legalised. Mentions retiring from sex work when she was 58. Discusses her spirituality, encountering Maharaji when she was 27, and how it improved her ability to be intimate with clients. Discusses doing educational work in the sex industry for the AIDs Foundation. Refers to becoming Canterbury regional co-ordinator for the Prostitutes Collective, and attending a conference in Europe. Talks about her work building up networks of sex workers, giving out condoms, and setting up a text alert system about abusive clients with police support. Refers to doing police training to change their attitudes, and the hostile attitude of some brothel owners towards Collective workers. Mentions murders of sex workers in Christchurch. Comments on the Collective working closely with the Christchurch School of Medicine on research projects. Interviewer(s) - Caren Wilton Arrangement: Tape numbers - OHDL-001432 (digital recording) Quantity: 1 digital sound recording(s) digital sound recording(s). 1 Electronic document(s) - abstract. 1 printed abstract(s). 1 interview(s). 4.18 Hours and minutes Duration. Physical Description: Sound files - wave files; Textual files - Microsoft word Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHDL-001433, OHA-7374. Black and white photographs of Anna aged 4 and 19; colour photographs of Anna aged 45 and 62. Search dates: 1943 - 2009

Audio

Interview with Jenny Gill

Date: 07 10 00 - 07 Oct 2000

From: YWCA of Wellington and Hutt Valley oral history project

By: Gill, Jennifer Mary, 1951-

Reference: OHInt-0590-5

Description: Jennifer Mary Gill was born in Lower Hutt in 1951. Talks about her parents, their marriage, and strong belief in education. Mentions relationship with brother, grandparents, and talks about school, Victoria University Wellington, and issues of the early seventies such as the Vietnam War, the Springboks rugby controversy and abortion. Mentions attending the founding meeting of Victoria's Women's Liberation Front. Talks about campus life, politics, flower power, hippiedom and the sense of freedom. Mentions her marriage in 1972, teaching, work for the Council of Organisations for Relief Services Overseas (CORSO), opening a Trade Aid shop, overseas travel and visiting CORSO projects in India, Sri Lanka and Nepal. Talks about working for Wellington's YWCA (Young Women's Christian Association) before and after it was influenced by feminism. Mentions the Willis St building, the shopper's creche, management style, and remaining a board member after the birth of her son. Talks about the contrasting views between older and younger board members, such as police use of YWCA building during the Springbok Tour 1981. Discusses YWCA board meetings and committees, concerns about the Nydia Bay camps, and minimal contact with the YMCA (Young Men's Christian Association). Compares YWCA with CORSO and the Roy McKenzie Foundation which she later worked for. Talks about Roy McKenzie's preparedness to address hard issues. Mentions Marion Wood's ability as national Director of YWCA. Talks about current position as Executive Director of Fulbright New Zealand, mentions the Wellington Regional Community Foundation. Talks about her life, children, feminism, and women's organisations that no longer exist. Interviewer(s) - Jill Abigail Accompanying material - Project release form, biographical information, CV. Arrangement: Tape numbers - OHC-9081, 9082 Quantity: 2 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 2 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-2872. 2 photocopies of photos, (one 1970's aged early twenties, one 1990's)

Image

Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :Rolling Stone - David Lange for president. 31 March 1988.

Date: 1988

From: Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :[One folder of original cartoons concerning New Zealand politics. Published in the Auckland Star 1986 - 1989.]

Reference: A-330-161

Description: The cartoon shows an aging American hippie with an issue of Rolling Stone magazine. The cover story is about David Lange. A man representing New Zealand is carrying a huge parcel, containing David Lange, with a label reading, therapy sanitised. He is about to give it to the American. Refers to David Lange's antinuclear stance. Negatives at PA Collection 5371 Bromhead Collection Extended Title - He's all yours! Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink on card, 265 x 180mm. Provenance: Donated by the artist in 1997.

Audio

Interview with Robin Payne

Date: 07-06-1996 - 09-06-1996

From: Te Kura Toi Whakaari o Aotearoa / New Zealand Drama School oral history project

By: Payne, Robin Joan, 1947-; Gaitanos, Sarah, 1950-

Reference: OHInt-0400-12

Description: Describes tradition of `Tarrant women' following in footsteps of maternal grandmother. Sister and cousin now connected through theatre work with Toi Whakaari. Father was tailor in Wanganui, mother a speech and drama teacher in Wanganui involved as examiner on New Zealand Speech Board. Recalls childhood in Wanganui. Describes liberal education, influences, national events, personal achievements and political climate. Recalls Nola Millar. On leaving school, toured with David Smile's CAT, then went to NIDA in Sydney where John Clark was a mentor. Describes explosion of creative talent and development of Australian theatre, the climate of political protest, jobs and life in Sydney in the late 60s and early 1970s. Travelled overland to England during the Vietnam War working and studying en route. In London did post-graduate training at Central School of Speech and Drama. Worked with David Herbert and Cicely Berry. Joined group of avant-garde writers and theatre people. Married Tolis Papazoglou, Greek theatre designer. Returned to Wellington and describes work including teaching voice at Drama School. Was head-hunted to Melbourne, then Perth. Gives details of work, theatre and further travel. Returned to New Zealand in 1991 to be Director of Toi Whakaari. Discusses whakapapa of the school, bi-culturalism, multi-culturalism, qualifications, length of course, staffing, teaching methodology, own work in Shakespeare and directing. Abstracted by - Sarah Gaitanos Awards/funding - Award in Oral History Interviewer(s) - Sarah Gaitanos Recorded by - Sarah Gaitanos Arrangement: Tape numbers - OHC-006577-006579, OHC-006580-006581 & OHLC-002354-002358 Quantity: 5 C60 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 5 Hours Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-1557.

Image

Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :Mum! What have you done!! Auckland Star, 15 February 1973.

Date: 1972 - 1973

From: Various cartoonists :Cartoons from the New Zealand News, 1970s

Reference: A-297-031

Description: A young woman with an afro haircut, sunglasses, T-shirt and frayed jeans in the hippie style, shrieks as she sees sheets marked Hotel Inter-Continental hanging on a rotary clothesline. This is the era of 'Steal this book', a subversive movement one would not expect one's mother to join. Extended Title - Hotel Inter-Continental. Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Black ink, Chinese white on watercolour paper, 175 x 345 mm

Image

Gill, Janice, 1947- :Alternative Kiwi, 1980 / Janice Gill - [Christchurch, N.Z.] ; Capp...

Date: 1980 - 1981

By: Gill, Janice Gaynor, 1947-; Capper Press (Christchurch, N.Z.)

Reference: C-085-120-a

Description: A city street scene with a hippy-style 'alternative' family group in the foreground Original acrylic in private collection measures 760 x 920 mm Quantity: 1 colour photo-mechanical print(s). Physical Description: Photolithograph, coloured 430 x 510 mm

Image

Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989:'It looks as though our holiday's over with a vengeance...

Date: 1972

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

By: Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)

Reference: B-134-260

Description: This cartoon shows a man and a woman entering their house after returning from holiday. The man has gone in first and put down his suitcases and binoculars. His wife is just outside the door. Three 'hippies', one female (probably their daughter) and two bearded males can be seen in the living room by the fire. The man is calling to his wife that their house has been taken over as a squat. Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink, letratone and crayon, 318 x 397 mm Finding Aids: Photocopies available in Pictorial Reference Service.

Image

Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989:The drought continues and the time has come for all goo...

Date: 1973

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

By: Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)

Reference: B-134-432

Description: This cartoon features four water saving scenarios. In the first a man is drinking his whisky neat, in the second two hippies are congratulating themselves on their lack of water use, in the third a drunk budgie has been given gin instead of water and in the final scene a woman is preparing to bath in milk and has a row of bottles lined up. Note on verso has date Tues 27/2 Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink, letratone and crayon, 312 x 397 mm

Image

Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989:Sir Roy Jack doubts that the public would go along with...

Date: 1972

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

By: Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)

Reference: B-134-254

Description: This cartoon has three scenes relating to the issue of identity cards in pubs and hotels. The same three people feature in all. One is the bar manager in a suit and the other two are long-haired hippie-types, one male and the other possible female. In the first scene the bar manager in a suit is asking the hippies for their identity cards before they are allowed into the bars. In the lower left scene the manager is asking the man if he is wearing a tie (under his beard) which is required before going into the 'Stayers' bar which has a dress code. The final scene is outside the 'Players' bar which has a sign outside, ' No ladies before 6 pm'. The manager is asking the other character, Robin Leslie Crudd, to undergo a sex test before being allowed in. Extended Title - In our view, identity cards would only add to what is already a complicated business. Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink, letratone and crayon, 317 x 390 mm Finding Aids: Photocopies available in Pictorial Reference Service.

Image

Gill, Janice, 1947- :Alternative Kiwi, 1980 / Janice Gill - [Christchurch, N.Z.] ; Capp...

Date: 1980 - 1981

By: Gill, Janice Gaynor, 1947-; Capper Press (Christchurch, N.Z.)

Reference: C-085-120

Description: A city street scene with a hippy-style 'alternative' family group in the foreground Original acrylic in private collection measures 760 x 920 mm Quantity: 1 colour photo-mechanical print(s). Physical Description: Photolithograph, coloured 430 x 510 mm

Image

Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989 :"Here we go again! The usual confusion over what we're...

Date: 1970

From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]

Reference: B-137-097

Description: Shows two groups of hippie-style protestors with different messages on their placards. One group holds signs saying:"No Omega base for N.Z."; "Liberalise pot"; "Agnew go home"; while the other group's signs read: "Stop the tour"; No All Blacks to S.A.". Other Titles - No Omega base for N.Z.; Liberalise pot; Agnew go home; Stop the tour; No All Blacks to S.A. Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink drawing and letratone, 225 x 322 mm, on sheet 288 x 402 mm.

Online Image

"Where's the MASTHEAD?" "'No logo'" 13 June, 2001

Date: 2001

From: Buist, Grant, 1973- : [Jitterati digital cartoons published in The Capital Times newspaper]

Reference: DCDL-0008030

Description: "Jitterati" cartoon strip with the "Jitt" part of missing from the masthead. Shows Jaimee and Caryn discussing propaganda and counter-culture. Their male flatmate says that a counter-counter-counter culture would be called culture. Refers to counter-culture ideologies. Extended Title - "CARYN! I've told you before about leaving this hippie propaganda around the apartment! Do you want people to think we're STUDENTS?" "It's not propaganda - it's counter-culture" "Well...It SUCKS" "HA! If you think THAT sucks, you should see the COUNTER-counter-culture!" "I think it's time for a COUNTER-counter-counter culture." "Reacting to the counter-counter culture and counter culture? What would you CALL it?" "Culture" "Oh, YEAH" Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Photographs of Fundays

Date: 2000-2003

From: Farrell, Damer, 1943-: Photographs of the West Coast

Reference: PADL-000292

Description: Photographs of Fun days in West Coast Region. Includes photographs of fairs, markets, and picnic days. Arrangement: These files were originally delivered to the library within a folder called "Events (Fundays)" Quantity: 153 digital photograph(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"Man, I've got some good joints." "Man, I've got some bad joints." 16 November, 2004.

Date: 2004

From: Smith, Ashley W, 1948- :[Digital cartoons published in the Shipping Gazette, MG Business, or Presto]

Reference: DCDL-0004620

Description: Shows two hippies at a party in the 1970s. One of them reaches into his bag saying that he has some 'good joints'. The second half of the cartoon shows an older version of the same people, again at a party. One tells the other that he has some 'bad joints' as he rubs his sore hip. The cartoon plays on the word 'joint' meaning a marijuana cigarette in the 70s but an arthritic hip forty years on. Arrangement: This cartoon file was originally delivered to the library within a sub-folder called 'MG Business', which was inside a folder called 'AWS Cartoon highlights, Nov'04-May'07' Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Scenes taken in a flat on Jervois Road, Auckland

Date: 07 Dec 2013-27 Jan 2014

From: Oettli, Max Christian, 1947-: Photographs of New Zealand scenes

Reference: PADL-001326

Description: Electronic scans of black and white photographs showing scenes taken in in a flat on Jervois Road, Auckland, in 1971 and 1974 by Max Oettli. Includes images showing: Francis Pound writing at a desk outside; John Leckie with Tom the cat; John Leckie and Rua sitting with passengers on deck of the ferry boat 'Iris Moana'; people having cups of tea and socialising at a table (identified as Judie [SIC] [Judy] Dunkley, Francis Pound (obscured), Karen, and Maggie). Source of description - information from file names Arrangement: Files were delivered to the Library within a folder titled 'NZ 1967-75 2013 series' and subfolder 'Jervois road 76' Quantity: 6 electronic scan(s) of original black and white photographic print(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Scenes at parties and social gatherings

Date: 30 Dec 2013-09 Jan 2014

From: Oettli, Max Christian, 1947-: Photographs of New Zealand scenes

Reference: PADL-001332

Description: Electronic scans of black and white photographs showing scenes at parties and social gatherings. Taken between 1971 and 1973 by Max Oettli. Images taken during parties at the flat of Kevin Hume and Rene Wilson show: a point of view shot looking at a fireplace; and a group of people including Liz Hume and Helen Fordyce socialising in the dining room. Two images show two different young men under the influence of drugs. One image shows two Maori men playing guitar and singing at a New Years party in Onehunga Images taken outside during daytime social gatherings show: Rene Wilson sitting outside a house as a small boy scales a house fire escape behind him; and adults and children at a suburban party in a backyard. Also includes an image of two Satan's Slaves gang members at a Massey University student festival at night time. Arrangement: Files were delivered to the Library within a folder titled 'NZ 1967-75 2013 series' and subfolder 'parties and other intercourse' Quantity: 11 electronic scan(s) of original black and white photographic print(s).

Add to cart