
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.

Tea service (partial) c.1928-45
bone china with transfer print of the
Canberra Coat of Arms
manufactured
by Shelley Potteries,
Staffordshire, England
7.3 x 10.2 x 8.4 (cup), 13.5 x 13 x 1.8
(saucer) 9 x 19 x 10 (tea pot)
Purchased 2008
The Dawn Waterhouse Collection includes numerous items
of china that were originally offered for sale as mementoes
of Canberra and the surrounding region from around the
1920s until the end of the 20th century. Many of the items
acquired by Dawn Waterhouse between 1988 and 2008
were created and issued specifi cally in the context of the
tourist trade and to cater to a buoyant and nationalistic pride
in the ‘bush capital’ in the early years of its development,
and at a time when motoring
as a leisure activity was
becoming popular
with travellers.
Promotion of Canberra has served many purposes, from
affecting tourism and migration to the development of the
local community’s sense of place within the region. Such
purpose is evident in the production of souvenirs and
guidebooks of the city and its famous icons.
In August 1923, in near gale-force winter winds, the fi rst sod
was turned at the site of the provisional Parliament House of
the Australian Federal Government in Canberra. Percy G
Stewart, Minister for Works and Railways, performed the
ceremony in front of approximately 1900 people assembled
on Camp Hill:
The sacred soil was carried away, not only in bags by
many good people who had much better dirt at home,
but also on their clothes and their ears.
- J Gibney, Canberra 1913-1953, AGPS Press, Canberra, 1988
Some of this soil was fashioned into a pinecone by fourteenyear- old Doris Todd, who came to Canberra that year with her parents. Her father Robert Todd was a plumber’s assistant at the provisional (now Old) Parliament House. The pinecone souvenir is a homemade souvenir of a unique occasion, created by new residents in a new city. They give a personal perspective to a nationally signifi cant event.
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