
Housing a permanent collection, Reflecting Canberra, and a variety of local, national and international exhibitions, CMAG provides a refreshing insight to the integration of social history and the visual arts.

Rolls of admission tickets
Electric Printed Shadows
c.1990s
Gift of Ronin Films 2007
Four significant Canberra cinemas have closed since CMAG opened: the Center Cinema (1966-2003); the Boulevard Twin (later Electric Shadows 1973-2006), the Civic Theatre (later the Greater Union, Civic 1936-2007) and the Cosmopolitan Twin, Woden (1984-2000). CMAG was on hand to acquire artefacts and stories that preserve, reflect and document the important place that going to the pictures has occupied in the social life of our community for over eighty years. Material from Canberra’s first dedicated picture palace, The Capitol Theatre, Manuka (1927-1980), has also been donated to CMAG, including the souvenir program of its inaugural ‘Gala Performance’ in which the theatre’s name was misspelt: ‘Capital’ with a second ‘a’ instead of an ‘o’.
As part of CMAG’s tenth anniversary exhibition series, its
collection of cinema material was displayed in an exhibition
entitled In the Can (October 2008- January 2009). The
exhibition sought parallels between significant milestones
in the urban history of Canberra and the stories of five
cinemas as told by people both in front of the screen and
those behind the scenes. Sound and vision are fundamental
storytelling tools and stories are a rich source of cultural
knowledge. By coming under the stewardship of the
CMAG the artefacts, stories and photographs from our
cinemas have secured the Canberra chapter in the story
of storytelling.
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