OUR VISION... IS TO BE THE NATION’S MOST DYNAMIC CULTURAL RESOURCE, ENRICHING LIVES BY PROMOTING KNOWLEDGE AND ENJOYMENT OF AUSTRALIA’S RELATIONSHIP WITH ITS WATERWAYS AND THE SEA
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM ANNUAL REPORT 2003-2004
Q^O
A u s t r a l ia n M a r it im e Museum
n a t io n a l
Š Commonwealth of Australia 2004
ISSN 1034-5019 This work is copyright. Apart from use permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced by any process without prior permission from the Australian National Maritime Museum. Australian National Maritime Museum The Australian National Maritime Museum (ANMM) at Darling Harbour, Sydney, opens 9.30 am-5.00 pm every day (open 9.30 am-6.00 pm January). Closed 25 December Entry at 30 June 2004 Museum Ticket (including galleries and Wharf 7) - FREE Special Exhibitions Ticket adult $9, child/concession $5, family $20 Navy Ticket (including Vampire, Onslow, audio guide & Wharf 7) adult $10, child/concession $6, family $25 Tall Ship Ticket (including James Craig & Wharf 7) adult $5, child/concession $3, family $12 Big Ticket (including special exhibitions, Vampire, Onslow, James Craig, audio guide & Wharf 7) adult $22, child/concession $12, family $53 Executive, Commercial & Visitor Services, Building Services, HM Bark Endeavour Foundation: 2 Murray Street Darling Harbour NSW Vaughan Evans Library, Curators, Registration, Conservation, Design, Volunteers & ANMM Administration, Australian Heritage Fleet: Wharf 7 Maritime Heritage Centre Pyrmont NSW Mailing address GPO Box 5131 Sydney NSW 2001 Australia Telephone (02) 9298 3777 Facsimile (02) 9298 3780 Web Site (including this Annual Report) http://www.anmm.gov.au Contact Officer For enquiries about this report please contact the editor telephone (02) 9298 3647 facsimile (02) 9298 3670 email jmellefont@anmm.gov.au Editor Jeffrey Mellefont ANMM Assistant Editor Dr Wendy Wilkins ANMM Photographer Andrew Frolows ANMM Graphic Design H Riederer BrightNoisyWater P/L Layout & Production Vanda Graphics Printed in Australia by PIRION Pty Ltd Cover Lill Tschudi, Sailor's Holiday, 1932, relief on oriental laid paper. Lent by National Gallery of Australia for exhibition Sailor Style - A rt Fashion Film. Reproduced by permission Lill Tschudi and Donald R Matter
It gives me great pleasure to present the Australian National M aritim e M useum ’s An nu al Report for the period 1 Ju ly 2003 to 30 June 2004. This is the first year of reporting on the m useum ’s Strategic Plan for 2003 to 2006, and it is pleasing to note substantial progress tow ards achieving the goals and outcom es set when we fram ed this S trategic Plan. One of the year’s outstanding initiatives was opening the museum galleries to the public free of charge, to
chairman’s message
increase direct access to the nation's leading maritime heritage resource. This was not a risk-free strategy, and it is a tribute to museum m anagement that they had the vision to attem pt it, and the ability to make it work so well in the initial trial period. This report outlines significant infrastructure projects in progress or nearing com pletion. Again in 2 0 0 3 -2 0 0 4 the museum has mounted a variety of lively exhibitions, educational program s and public events th at cem ent its reputation fo r continually renewing, expanding and elaborating the concepts of maritime history and heritage. Again we have made substantial additions to our National Maritime Collection. My sincere thanks to all who have m ade these achievem ents possible: the Australian G overnm ent and the M inister fo r the A rts and S port S enator the Hon Rod Kemp; corporate and individual sponsors, donors and supporters; my fellow Council m em bers; and a dedicated m anagement, staff and volunteers.
M a rk B e th w a ite , Chairman Australian National M aritim e Museum
3
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
Vision statement
1
Contact officer
2
Chairman's message
3
Mission statement and values
6
SECTION 1
Y E A R IN R E V IE W
Highlights at a glance
10
Director’s overview
12
Travelling & temporary exhibitions, major events
20
Statutory Reporting Requirements
28
Effectiveness in managing human resources; Joint consultative council; Occupational health & safety; Workplace diversity; Commonwealth disability strategy; Access & equity; Environmental performance; Corporate governance; Insurance & indemnity; Developments in external scrutiny; Reports by the Auditor General; Fraud control; Advertising & market research; Freedom of information; Judicial decisions; Ministerial directions
SECTION 2
P E R F O R M A N C E R EP O R TIN G
KEY RESULT AREA 1 ENGAGING OUR AUDIENCES
32
Strategies and performance reporting A modern maritime museum at work; Education and children’s programs; Interactions; Visits and visitor profile; Market research; Venue hire and catering; The Store; Sydney by Sail KEY RESULT AREA 2 MARITIME HERITAGE
40
Strategies and performance reporting Innovative maritime heritage programs, Acquisitions, Conservation, Marine archaeology program, USA Gallery, Indigenous affairs, Fleet, Vaughan Evans library KEY RESULT AREA 3 INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT 48 Strategies and performance reporting Capital works, Building services, Communications and information management services, Customer service, Human resource management and OHS KEY RESULT AREA 4 REPUTATION AND RECOGNITION 54 Strategies and performance reporting Marketing, Media, Publications and web site, Design and preparation, The Welcome Wall, Members, Corporate support, Volunteers
SECTION 3
F IN A N C IA L S TATEM EN TS
Statement by Council members Independent audit report Statement of financial performance
contents
Statement of financial position Statement of cash flows Schedule of commitments and contingencies Notes
SECTION 4
A P P E N D IX E S
01. Visitors & Members programs
100
02. Selected acquisitions
105
03. Donors to the National Maritime Museum
110
04. MMAPSS grants
117
05. ANMM publications
119
06. Staff publications
121
07. Staff conference papers & lectures
123
08. Staff media appearances
125
09. Staff professional appointments
127
10. Staff overseas travel
128
11. Organisation chart at 30 June 2004
129
12. APS staff at 30 June 2004
130
13. Council Members
133
14. Council meetings & committees
136
15. Australian National Maritime Foundation
138
16. Sponsors, patrons & supporters
139
17. Corporate & supporting Members
140
18. Volunteers
110
19. Volunteer speakers panel
142
20. Consultants
145
21. Customer service charter
146
22. List of Acts administered
147
23. Functions & powers of the minister
148
24. Functions & powers of the museum
149
25. Director’s statement
150
26. Index
151
“Our 18th visit. Amazing’ SYDNEY FAMILY
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
To bring maritime heritage to life and preserve it for future generations, through...
our mission
• national leadership and international collaboration
programs and products that are creative, inclusive, enjoyable and memorable
•fostering traditional skills and practices
6
• research, acquisition, conservation, interpretation, outreach and education
•we promote a broad interpretation of maritime heritage and culture
•strive for the highest standards of service
•value partnership and collaboration
•focus on the lives of people as the core of our products and programs
*champion integrity and ethical practice
our values
• regard engagement, innovation and creativity as the keystones of our work
mr v
.
•encourage commitment, application and achievement
W H Waterfield Carte de Visite of John Thomas Newbery 1898 Silver gelatin print ANMM Collection
7
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
wm
i
m ■
M .......
8
Left Franz Xaver Winterhalter Albert Edward, Prince o f Wales 1846 Oil on canvas The Royal Collection Š 2004 Courtesy Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Below Collar from the RAN uniform worn by Bryan Gale as an able bodied seam an in the mid 1960s, ANMM Collection
THE YEAR IN REVIEW section one
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
ANMM Collection
♦ BECAME THE MOST-VISITED MUSEUM IN SYDNEY WITH A RECORD 431,000 VISITORS, WHILE ACHIEVING $5.3 MILLION GROSS REVENUE
♦ DEVELOPED AND DISPLAYED MAJOR NEW EXHIBITIONS SUNKEN TREASURES OF BRUNEI, SYDNEY WORKING HARBOUR, SAILOR STYLE - ART, FASHION, FILM AND SCRIMSHAW - THE ART OF THE WHALER
♦ BEGAN A TRIAL OF FREE VISITOR ENTRY TO OUR MAIN GALLERIES
♦ FIRST TRAVELLING EXHIBITION FROM NATIONAL GALLERY OF AUSTRALIA, DOUGLAS ANNAND - THE ART OF LIFE
♦ COMPLETED CONSTRUCTION OF MUSEUM QUAY AND FESTIVAL PONTOON, ENHANCING DISPLAY CONDITIONS
♦ MAJOR FESTIVALS INCLUDED THE OPERATION JAYWICK
AND ACCESS TO THE HISTORIC VESSELS AND CREATING
60TH ANNIVERSARY; THE MUSEUM’S SECOND FOOD
NEW WATERSIDE FACILITIES
FESTIVAL MEDITERRANEAN TUCKER; AND ITS SIXTH CLASSIC & WOODEN BOAT FESTIVAL
COMPLETED CONSERVATION AND RECTIFICATION OF THE 19TH-CENTURY CAPE BOWLING GREEN LIGHTHOUSE ON 10
THE NORTH WHARF, 130 YEARS OLD IN 2004.
+ REOPENED A COMPLETELY REDEVELOPED ‘CORE’ NAVY EXHIBITION IN THE ANZ TALL GALLERY
* r\
fj
-o
Top French Sailor band, Sam Hood, ANMM Collection
highlights 2003-2004
Left Bjorn Andresen in Death in Venice 1971 Courtesy of Austral Press Below Ceramic Donald Duck 1940 Lent by Martin Sharp
‘A feast for the landlubbers’ and mariners’ soul and mind!’ CANADIAN FEMALE
♦ AWARDED THE FIRST $2,000 FRANK BROEZE MEMORIAL MARITIME HISTORY BOOK PRIZE, IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATION FOR MARITIME HISTORY ♦ MAJOR ACQUISITIONS INCLUDED A RARE SCRIMSHAW OF THE MID-19™-CENTURY WHALER TERROR AND AN ILLUSTRATED JOURNAL FROM THE SAME SHIP ♦ COMPLETED RELOCATION OF FLEET MAINTENANCE FROM LEASED PREMISES TO THE MAIN MUSEUM SITE ♦ LAUNCHED OUR CONTRIBUTION TO THE NATIONAL, ON-LINE HISTORIC IMAGE PORTAL PICTUREAUSTRALIA, A SEARCHABLE DATABASE OF SHIP PORTRAITS IN THE ANMM COLLECTION
11
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
director’s overview
The outstanding achievem ent of the year under review has been the Australian National M aritim e M useum’s success in becom ing the m ost-visited museum in Sydney. In a m etropolitan market th a t is arguably A u stra lia ’s most com petitive in its supply of major urban and regional museums - all keenly seeking the patronage of both local visitors and the dom estic and international tou rist market - th is is an outstanding result. This is not, however, an achievement that we at the museum see simply as a marketing outcome - even though this result has put us ahead of some larger, better-resourced and much longer-established institutions. Speaking for staff and volunteers who are passionate about their museum and the way it enriches our understanding of the nation’s development and identity, we see it as an opportunity to reach an even wider audience and deepen their appreciation of this country and society. Top right Mademoiselle Chanel au
The year’s overall 35% increase in visitors was accelerated during the trial of a new model
Ritz Paris 1937 Photographer Roger
of access charges for entry to the museum. We have opened our main galleries to the
Schall Courtesy Jean-Frederic Schall
public for free, while maintaining charges for selected temporary exhibitions, tours of the
Above Director Mary-Louise W illiam s
ex-RAN destroyer Vampire and submarine Onslow, and special events such as the Classic
in a skirt by Brisbane designers
& Wooden Boat Festival.
Easton Pearson, whose fashions
12
featured in Sailor Style -
Entry fees are a substantial component of the museum’s commercial revenues which
A rt Fashion Film
augmentourgovem m entfunding.andareessentialtodeliveralltheservicesand programs
our public has come to expect. We calculated that we could offset lost ticketing revenue by increased patronage of our other facilities, and find other ways to absorb the costs. The results during the trial of free entry have been encouraging, with exceptional results in a number of our commercial operations bringing earned revenue of $5.3 million in 20032004 very close to budget. Obviously there was an element of risk in this strategy, and many other fee-charging museums are following our experimentwith intense interest. I would like to acknowledge the vision of the museum’s governing council both in endorsing an initial trial of this model, and extending it so that we can benefit from experience and tailor our systems to improve ourfinancial performance even more. Australian
“Great b e C B U S e it teaches a lot about history in general, not only maritime history” GERMAN MALE
maritime history will be one of the beneficiaries, as more people come through our doors and learn about Australia's fascinating past and present.
director’s overview
Fa cto rs a ffe c tin g p erform an ce - c h a n g in g a u dien ces There is no doubt that we are connecting with our audiences in different ways, compared to the previous, more passive modes of interaction between museums and their visitors. In recent years there had been consternation among museums at falling levels of attendance, which appeared to have decli ned to lessthan 20% of the population. Recent research by the professional body Museums Australia suggests that these attendance rates have turned around over the last five years to reach 25% of the population. At the same time audience participation and engagement is undergoing a qualitative shift. Commitment by friends, members and volunteer groups is now well over 160,000 nationwide, visits to museum web sites have increased, as has the use of museums as specifically educational destinations (museumsaustralia magazine 0 8 /2 0 0 4 :1 2 -1 3 ). At this museum we have worked hard to foster one particular shift in this pattern of
Top Stefano Manfredi, guest of honour
engagement - the way that migrant and other sectors of society have come to see
during Mediterranean Tucker festival
museums as places that can give them a voice. Programs such as our Welcome Wall
at the unveiling of the Welcome Wall,
- celebrating and recording migrant arrivals - and the exhibitions and events associated
the museum’s tribute to all those
with it recognise a constituency with origins in 120 different countries, who increasingly
who have travelled across the seas to
feel the museum belongs to them, too.
make their homes in Australia. Above Gina Sinozich We are sailing
We know that communities are increasingly willingto engage in political action to preserve
the Suez Canale on our way to
their heritage, and will often look to museums such as ours for advice and leadership.
Australia, 2003. The painting is one
Even those who don’t attend museums will participate in the current arguments about
of 13 depicting the Sinozich fam ily’s
museums, history and social identity. Altogether, then, we see our museum operating in
post-WWII voyage to Australia on the
a human environment that's just as dynamic as the changing technological environment
Neptunia, acquired by the museum
which has attracted most of the recent comment.
this year.
13
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
Above Sam Hood photograph from the ANMM Collection, of the Queen Mary, which featured in the Sydney W orking Harbour exhibition
E xhibition s and events The exhibitions, festivals and other public events that appear in the following section of this report, and in Appendix 1, show the lively diversity that our regular patrons and supporters have come to expect. They included the re-opening of one of our exhibitions, NAVY, after an extensive redevelopment which meant closing half the ANZ gallery for six months. Over a period of years, each major thematic exhibition undergoes a complete redevelopment of its intellectual and physical structures, reflecting new perspectives as well as more recently acquired display objects. We’ve always enjoyed great support from the RAN, so the exhibition’s re-opening had no shortage of brass and ribbons in attendance. Yet one of my favourite comments about NAVY came from a staff member who’s ex-Navy rank-and-file. ‘I love it!’ he said. ‘It’s not just battles and admirals. It tells everybody's story ... men, women, the lot!’ The year’s biggest temporary exhibitions couldn’t have been more dissimilar in subject and style. Lost for 500 years ... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam, from Art Exhibitions Australia, opened the door on the vibrant pre colonial trade of our South-East Asian neighbours, while dazzling us with the beauty of its ceramic treasures. We had worked for years on the concepts of Sydney Working Harbour, about the changing face of our harbour
Above chief of Navy, vice Adm iral
and the increasing impacts of development upon it. The
chris Ritchie a o
exhibition Was made highly topical by Vigorous public
Mary-Louise W illiam s at the opening
ran
with director
debate that coincided with its opening, about the uses
of the new
proposed for Sydney Harbour. A feature of the exhibition
The new impact entry to
n avy
exhibition, n avy
was a visitors book which invited people to record their views about this subject, which attracted well over two thousand comments. The opinions have been analysed and are being fed back into the public debate. But if I had to pick a favourite for the year it would have to be Sailor Style - A rt Fashion Film, about the perennial allure and influence of the sailor in his emblematic uniform. Oscar Wilde called fashion ‘athingso intolerably uglythatwe have
------------------
-----------------------
to change it every six months.’ Not in this case! As the exhibition demonstrates, the sailor suit is so universal and appealing that it endures and endlessly reinvents itself. To create this cheeky look at the sailor's image we mined our own collection and borrowed widely from others, from Buckingham Palace to the fashion houses of Paris. Festivals during the year included a pageant to mark the 60th anniversary of the most famous special forces raid in the history of Australian arms, Operation Jaywick, which was launched from the vessel Krait displayed at our wharves. Our second food festival Mediterranean Tucker was a spring-time hit, while the sixth Classic & Wooden Boat Festival held in early March was a resounding success despite non-stop drenching rain, proving that dedicated boaties don’t mind a soaking!
Sailor Style - A rt Fashion Film, displayed the universal appeal of the sailor suit. Top Matelot 1934 dress fabric Courtesy V& A Images/Victoria & Albert Museum, Shibuya ju n ior high schoolgirls, Japan 1987 © Ken Straiton/Austral Press Above Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in Follow the Fleet 1936 Courtesy Austral Press R ight John McRea Grand Harbour 2003 Reproduced courtesy of the artist
15
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
The National M aritim e Collection One of the year's temporary exhibitions, S crim sh aw -A rt o f the Whaler, was designed to show off an entire subset of the National Maritime Collection. The museum’s extensive holding of decorative craft objects made of whale teeth, bone and baleen has benefited from recent acquisitions to become a most significant collection of its type. Examples of this art, which originated during whaling voyages that lasted for years, are now highly sought after on the international market. We were fortunate to be the successful bidder, at very short notice, for two outstanding, provenanced relics of the Australian whaling industry at auctions in New York and London. A scrimshaw panbone depicting Ben Boyd’s barque Terror, signed and inscribed with the title and the Boyd family crest, is extremely rare since scrimshaw is usually anonymous and the subjects unidentifiable. It is perfectly complemented by a beautifully illustrated whaling journal from the same barque Terror, recording a
“Much better than National Maritime Museum Greenwich. Much more informative about life at sea, and its history.”
Pacific whaling voyage out of Sydney. Among the many acquisitions noted in Appendixes 2 and 3 is a German navy lifejacket owned by a survivor of HSK Kormoran, the World War II raider which infamously sank (and was sunk by) HMAS Sydney. This lifejacket was the property of a Kormoran crew member who was transferred to a POW camp after surviving the battle in the Indian
Ocean, which remains controversial to this day. The jacket was presented to Warrant Officer H Scanlon who was stationed at the camp. Partnerships and collaborations, home and abroad As time goes on we are increasing our efforts to assist and collaborate with organisations and institutions in a variety of fields, by no means limited to the many smaller maritime museums and societies around Australia which we have directly aided for many years. Above Beautifully illustrated
(Our foremost partnering program, the Maritime Museums of Australia Project Support
frontispiece from the log of Terror,
Scheme, entered its ninth year - see report in Appendix 4, and details of our internship
acquired by the museum this year
scheme).
During the year I was personally involved in helping to develop a new maritime heritage precinct for Newcastle. This included planningforthe relocation of the existing Newcastle Regional Maritime Museum from Fort Scratchley to the urban waterfront. In the same period we were able to support the museum and conservation community of Vietnam with advice about the preservation of heritage vessels in the famous, world-heritagelisted area of Halong Bay. Closer to home, we continued to give substantial support to Australian Heritage Fleet (formerly Sydney Maritime Museum), which specialises in heritage ship operations including the 1874 barque James Craig and century-old steamer Lady Hopetoun. We accommodate this mostly volunteer-based organisation's collections, workshop and offices alongside our own facilities in our Wharf 7 Maritime Heritage Centre, and give them berthing for James Craig. The museum’s Yirrkala bark painting collection was the inspiration for an ambitious new educational project aiming to incorporate components of Indigenous knowledge in nonIndigenous teaching and learning. The paintings represent a unique artistic expression of Indigenous land and sea rights, describing the natural, human and spiritual dimensions of geography and meteorology, botany and zoology. The curriculum development project is a collaboration between the museum, the NSW Department of Education and Training Aboriginal Studies Team, the Centre for Cross-Cultural Research at the ANU and the Yirrkala (Northern Territory) Education Centre. The primary showcase for the project is a multimedia web site Turtle Tracks. Since the museum was founded in the 1980s, we have been closely associated with the Australian Association for Maritime History (AAMH - publisher of Australia’s only academic maritime historyjournal, The Great Circle). This year we announced the winner of the first $2,000 Frank Broeze Memorial Maritime History Book Prize, jointly sponsored and judged by this museum and AAMH. Congratulations to Dr Leonie Huntsman, author of a social history of Australian beach-going, Sand in our souls. The AAMH's national executive rotates from state to state every five years and this museum has now assumed its top executive positions. Lindsey Shaw, our senior curator of maritime technology, exploration and navy, has become president and editor of its newsletter, and publications manager Jeffrey Mellefont is vice-president.
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
Exhibitions curator Susie Sedgwick became the first of our staff to go to the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, on a professional exchange program that we have developed with our noted British counterpart. She worked there on the management of touring exhibitions. Conservator Elizabeth Hadlow also visited the UK on a Churchill Fellowship to enhance her skills as a specialist in the conservation of photographic materials. Both visits created valuable professional and institutional links. Organisational developments In a bold engineering initiative to tame the wash from passing vessels which has affected our historic craft, w have enclosed the fleet basin using screw piles and ballasted B P ? / steel pontoons sitting deep enough
‘Absolutely great! You are so lucky to have a harbourside location” STAFF MEMBER, NMM GREENWICH
in the water to reflect most of the wave energy. One of the outer pontoons can be winched open for vessels to enter or leave the enclosed basin. This has created a still-water basin, which we named Museum Quay, where a
range of activities - from work on moored vessels to onwater activities such as model boat racing - can now be Top right The Festival Pontoon, an
undertaken free from excessive wash.
exciting new develpment in the ANMM site masterplan
This is the museum’s biggest development project since
Right Classic & Wooden Boat
building the Wharf 7 Maritime Heritage Centre, and is
Festival 2004, enthusiastically
part of a longer-term strategy addressing the need f o r ________
attended despite rain
greater self-sufficiency in the areas of fleet maintenance,
Below Sydney celebrates victory
improved docking for the floating collection and better public access to the vessels.
in the Pacific during W W II1945 Photographer F J Ha Ima rick Courtesy
An additional finger wharf known as the Festival Pontoon has been built out from the
Fairfaxphotos, from Sailor Style
shoreline south of Vampire. It accommodates the office and modem yacht fleet of Sydneyby-Sail, the commercial charter operation which formerly operated on our north wharf. The Festival Pontoon also provides extra mooring for visiting vessels, for example during our Classic & Wooden Boat Show, and international events such as the Sydney stopover of Global Challenge yacht race which ties up here again in 2005. This means reduced expenditure on hired pontoons for events such as these. By 30 June 2004 we had completed relocation of fleet maintenance from leased premises at Berrys Bay, on the opposite side of the harbour. Other capital works included the completion of conservation and rectification work on the 19th-century Cape Bowling Green lighthouse. Initiatives in the areas of human resource management included development of a Disability Action Plan and a
18
2003-2006 Workplace Diversity Program.
Outlook One project which we have been especially keen to see progress is a proposed Australian Register of Historic Vessels, which in the coming year will receive staff and resources to move beyond planning to preliminary implementation phase. The aim of the project is to capture important data about historic vessels in public and community collections around the country, as well as ones in private hands. This will become an invaluable national heritage resource, for the first time providing a picture of this category of movable heritage item and its distribution throughout the country. It will help museums, historical societies and individual owners make decisions about managing their own historic vessels. The Australian Register of Historic Vessels will also be a valuable means of expanding on the museum outreach activities and consolidating our relations with regional Australian organisations, which
Max Dupain Sailors and their girls
are among the priorities that I have nominated for the museum during the current 2003-
Manly 1940 Print Jill W hite
2006 Strategic Plan. Allied to this, we anticipate an increase in the volume of requests
Lent by Max Dupain Archive
for professional assistance that we willingly provide. Among the new exhibitions which we confidently predict will continue the museum’s popularity will be one on the great period of Viking expansion, drawing on major European collections. The story of this dynamic maritime culture is one that has universal appeal. An exhibition called About Tim e will look at time and timekeepers not just from the navigator’s perspective but as a wide-ranging and imaginative survey of the way time rules us all. And our visitors will be surprised and astounded by a spectacular display of masterpieces of French naval sculpture from 1660 to 1860 which we are bringing to Sydney from the Musee de la Marine in Paris.
M ary-Louise W illiam s, Director Australian National Maritime Museum
19
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
SIGLAS DE PESCADORES - SIGNS OF FISHERMEN
travelling exhibitions
This exhibition from Portugal tells the sto ry of a traditional fishing
SMUGGLERS - CUSTOMS & CONTRABAND
com m unity, Povoa de Varzim , on Portugal’s Atlantic coast. The display of hand-m ade im plem ents,
One of the longest borders in
utensils, furnishings, clothing,
the world was created when the
m odels and evocative photography
Commonwealth of Australia was
docum ents a little-know n and
formed in 1901. Record drug
vanishing way of life.
busts, wildlife seizures and people-
Produced in association with the
sm ugglers have hit the headlines
Museu Municipal de Etnografica e
recently, highlighting the challenge
Historia da Povoa de Varzim and
of controlling who and what crosses
The Municipal da Povoa de Varzim,
this vast coastal frontier.
Portugal.
Sponsored by Australian Customs Service and supported by the National
Coordinator Mariea Fisher
Council for the Centenary of Federation
Curator Designers
Susan Sedgwick
Designer
Exhibition Solutions
Irene Scortis, Shame Fielder &
Coordinator Mariea Fisher Curator
Kieran Hosty
Lisa Carrington NORTH GALLERY 6 June-28 January 2004
SCIENCEWORKS, MELBOURNE 7 M ay-5 October 2003
Visitors
Visitors
SOUTH AUSTRALIAN
171,910
135,713
MARITIME MUSEUM 27 M arch-5 September 2004 Visitors
20
12,086
(to June 30 2004)
SHARKS - PREDATOR AND PREY In a country surrounded by water, horror stories of shark attacks have created deep-seated fear. Because of this, som e shark species, essential in the marine ecosystem , have been reduced alm ost to extinction. Yet when swim m ers, surfers and scuba divers are attacked, the idea of protecting sharks often meets resistance. The roles of predator and prey seem to sw ing uneasily between sharks and people. C oordinator Helen Trepa Curators
exhibitions & major events
Helen Trepa, Patricia Miles & Will Mather
Designers
Carola Salazar & Maria Briganti
SOUTH GALLERY 19 December 2002-27 July 2003 Visitors
200,894
OCEANS OF STORIES - ILLUSTRATIONS FROM AUSTRALIAN CHILDREN’S BOOKS Enter a world of fantasy and im agination, where stories unfold and pictures com e to life. Original works by well-known Australian children's book illustrators explore many different maritime experiences. Take the plunge and im m erse yourself in im aginary w atery worlds and let their works shape and reflect your ideas, fears and fantasies of the sea. Sponsored by eR&D, the ebook company. Presented in association with the Children's Book Council of Australia Coordinators Helen Trepa & Susan Sedgwick Curators
Jeffrey Fletcher, Helen Trepa & Kimberley O'Sullivan Steward
Designers
Johanna Nettleton & Daniel Ormella
NORTEL NETWORKS GALLERY 19 June-2 November 2003 Visitors
110,645
21
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
PATRIOTISM PERSUASION PROPAGANDA - AM ERICAN WAR POSTERS When Am erica went to war in 1942 after Pearl Harbour, posters played a critical role in m obilising public support. The striking images and m essages they contain provide a glim pse of the war e ffo rt on a w ider front, and the money, labour and personal sacrifices th at were required. Coordinator Paul Hundley Curator
Paul Hundley
Designer
Johanna Nettleton & Daniel Ormella
USA GALLERY 25 July 2 0 02-8 February 2004 Visitors
499,230
i.asaooe
NAIDOC - OUR CHILDREN OUR FUTURE Each year the National Aboriginal and Islander Day of
WORKING HARBOUR - MARY ROSENGREN
Com m em oration chooses a them e to celebrate the survival
Paintings produced in 1986
o f Aboriginal and Torres Strait
during M ary R osengren’s artist-
Islander people. And the museum
in-residency at Cockatoo Island.
participates. This year’s them e,
Her project was funded by
Our Children Our Future, includes
the Australia Council and the
selections from the m useum ’s
Am algam ated M etalworkers and
collection of photographic images
Engineering W orkers Union.
of children from the Torres S trait to La Perouse in Sydney.
22
Coordinator Bliss Jensen Curator
Diana Fletcher
Coordinator John Waight
D esigner
Eszter Matheson
TASMAN LIGHT
TASMAN LIGHT
3 Ju ly-1 4 September 2003
15 September 2003-21 March 2004
Visitors
Visitors
50,926
227,191
exhibitions & major events ‘
Working Harbour made me cry to remember the past” NSW FEMALE
SYDNEY WORKING HARBOUR Sydney’s working harbour has a major role in Australian industry, trade, national profile and tourism. Developers and governm ents are making changes to industries
Photographs David Matheson
and the lives of people who live,
WORKING HARBOUR - THE WATERFRONT
work or travel on the harbour. The exhibition included photographs from the m useum 's outstanding
An installation of large
collection of Sam Hood’s work - a
photographs of Sydn ey’s industrial
record of ships plying the harbour,
w aterfront by local photographer
portraits of seam en, work on the
Anthony Browell captured the
wharves and leisure boating.
surreal grittin ess and sp irit of S ydney's rapidly disappearing
Sponsored by Sydney Ports Corporation
w aterfront heritage. Coordinator Mariea Fisher Coordinator Susan Sedgwick
Curator
Curator
Daina Fletcher
Designer
Designer
Eszter Matheson
TASMAN LIGHT
SharJones Eszter Matheson Adrienne Kabos
SOUTH GALLERY
25 March-27 June 2004
24 September 2003-18 July 2004
Visitors
Visitors
91,682
329, 588 (toJune 30 2004)
23
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
DOUGLAS ANNAND - THE ART OF LIFE The versatile work of one of Au stralia’s leading 20th-century com m ercial a rtists em bellished ocean liners and pubic buildings, travel posters and textiles. Douglas Annand (1903-1976) was a graphic designer, w atercolourist, textile designer, m uralist and sculptor of great originality and style. From the 1930s he introduced the world to a dram atically different view of Australia through his sophisticated travel posters. National Gallery of Australia travelling exhibition Coordinator Susan Sedgwick Curator
Ann McDonald NGA
Designer
Shame Fielder
NORTH GALLERY 3 M arch-9 May 2004 Visitors
98,738
SCRIM SHAW - ART OF THE WHALER Scrim shaw - engraved designs on whales’ teeth, bone, tusk or shell - was a sailor’s craft that could be bold, brash or beautiful, elegant or erotic. Born of boredom on whaling voyages th at could last for years, the motifs reflected the sailors' preoccupations and experiences. The exhibition displays beautifully carved and decorated objects, often made as gifts for loved ones. Coordinator Susan Sedgwick Bliss Jensen Curator
Paul Hundley
Designer
Carola Salazer, Five Spaces Design
USA GALLERY 19 March 2 0 04-9 February 2005 Visitors
105,459
(to June 30 2004)
exhibitions & major events
FOOD FOR THOUGHT - REFUGEE ART PROJECT
M E D IT E R R A N E A N T U C K E R
In partnership with AUSTCARE
The m useum 's second festival
the museum asked NSW school
of food w as conceived as a way
F E S T IV A L
students to design a poster or
of show ing how M editerranean
mural exploring global refugee
foods have migrated to Australia.
issues. The exhibition was on show
M editerranean Tucker activities
throughout Refugee W eek 2 0 -2 6
dem onstrated in entertaining
O ctober 2003.
ways how M editerranean cuisines
Coordinator Kimberly O'Sullivan-
and how Australian conditions
have changed the Australian diet, Steward TASMAN LIGHT
in turn have m ade an im pact on M editerranean food.
18-27 October 2003 Visitors
5,439
C oordinator Bill Richards Designer
Heidi Riederer
MUSEUM FORECOURT, YOTS CAFE 25 October-2 November 2003 Visitors
12,500
25
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
2 0 0 4 C L A S S IC & W O O D E N B O A T F E S T IV A L This national event showcases classic, traditional and contem porary vessels displayed
LOST FOR 500 Y E A R S ... SUNKEN TREASURES OF BRUNEI DARUSSALAM
by their ow ners. The aim is to encourage the appreciation, preservation and sustainability of wooden boats to ensure
An Asian trading vessel sank 500
th a t traditional skills, m aterials
years ago off the Brunei sultanate
and crafts have a vital role in
with a cargo of ceramics that were
contem porary boating. The
part of a vigorous regional trade
iconic Great Ferry and W orkboat
network. The wreck was discovered
Challenge, with over 40 entrants,
during a seabed oil survey, and
was held on 6 March 2004.
over 15,000 artefacts were Coordinator Diane Fenton
recovered. The exhibition focused on archaeology and artefacts - the
Designer
find’s recovery and significance.
THROUGHOUT MUSEUM
A n A r t E x h ib itio n s A u s tra lia tra v e llin g
JAM ES CRAIG
o f B ru n e i. S p o n so re d b y B H P B illito n
Sydney Heritage Fle et’s m agnificent 1874 barque Jam es
Coordinator Mariea Fisher
C raig was recom m issioned in
Curator
Kieran Hosty
2000 after her epic 30-year
Designer
Wendy Osmond
restoration and is sailing again
Art Exhibitions Australia
- one of only four such barques in
NORTEL NETWORKS GALLERY
the world.
3 December 2003-27 April 2004
WHARF 7 MARITIME
Visitors
32,028
6 -7 March 2004 Visitors
e x h ib itio n u n d e r th e p a tro n a g e o f th e S u ltan
HERITAGE CENTRE Visitors
32,277
Lisa Carrington
12,500
SAILOR STYLE - ART FASHION FILM From the m anliness of Jack Tar to the sauciness of ‘hello sailor!', the sailor suit has always seduced. This cheeky, flam boyant and theatrical exhibition traces the evolution in nautical wear from purely functional, to fashionable, to fetishised. Coordinator Mariea Fisher Note: Visitor figures on these pages
Curator
Rosie Nice
Designers
Johanna Nettleton
represent the museum’s total visitor numbers during the time the attraction
Daniel Ormella NORTEL NETWORKS GALLERY
was at the museum (or to 30 June 2004).
3 June 2004-20 February 2004
Visitors may not view all exhibitions.
Visitors
2,408
(toJu ne302004)
27
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
Assessm ent of effectiveness in m anaging human resources In addition to the next three items below, see under the heading ‘Human resource managementand OHS’ inSection 2, Key Result Area 3 Infrastructure Development. Joint consultative council The museum's Joint Consultative Council comprising the director, assistant director corporate services, the human resources manager and three elected staff representatives met four times this year. The council discusses a wide range of issues including financial and human resource planning, workplace diversity, occupational health and safety, and work and organisation structures. Occupational health and safety See under the heading ‘Human resource management and OHS’ in Section 2, Key Result Area 3 - Infrastructure Development.
statutory information requirements ‘The warship and submarine walks are awesome! I especially like how the Aussies and Yanks get along”
W orkplace diversity A workplace diversity policy was endorsed by the museum executive and distributed to all staff. For staff breakdown by gender see table under the heading‘Human resource managementand OHS’ inSection 2, Key Result Area 3 - Infrastructure Development. Com m onwealth d isa b ility strategy The museum provides facilities to help disabled people to access its programs, exhibitions and publications. The Workplace Diversity Committee developed a Disability Action Plan with an external consultant, together with performance measures, in accordance with the Commonwealth Disability Strategy. See under the heading ‘Disability action plan’ in Section 2, Key Result Area 3 Infrastructure Development. Access & equity In line with the Charter for Public Service in a Culturally Diverse Society the museum creates programs and products that reflect the diversity of Australian society. Environm ental performance Environmental benefits have resulted from the museum’s engineering approach to fleet basin modifications which were largely completed during the year under report. The adaptive reuse of surplus steel pontoons and winch systems, and recycled concrete ballast, represents savings not just in cost but in energy and materials and, consequently, in C02 emissions. Management of energy consumption, for which the museum has won awards in the past, was ongoing. Modifications have been made to improve the performance and reliability of the main building's air-conditioning system. This initiative alone is expected to realise significant energy savings over the next reporting period. This is undertaken by the building services section which also targeted waste management as an issue for
28
1
improved performance.
Corporate governance The chairman has initiated an annual performance assessment and review process which requires all councillors to complete a questionnaire rating their individual and collective knowledge and contributions across a broad range of issues. The responses are consolidated and discussed by council in a full and frank discussion over some hours. Areas needing improvement are identified and actions agreed. The chairman and director also have biannual meetings with the minister to review governance issues. Names of senior executives appear in Appendixes 12 & 13. Senior management committees, including the Finance and Audit Committee, appear in Appendix 14. Triennial strategic plans are prepared and are addressed by annual business
“Disappointing! Where is the display on the First Fleet? - instead we have pandered to the Americans [with the USA Gallery]!” QUEENSLAND FEMALE
plans. Section 2 of this report specifically reports performance to the current Australian National Maritime Museum Strategic Plan 2003-2006. Ethics and conduct of staff are in line with professional codes published by Museums Australia (1994), ICOM (International Council of Museums 1986) and the APS Code of Conduct (Public Service Act 1999), and are subject to normal scrutiny.
statutory information requirements Insurance & indem nity Comcover provides Professional Indemnity Cover in accordance with statutory requirements. Liability cover is provided for the director and staff. Developm ents in external scrutiny There were no developments, significant or otherwise, in external scrutiny. Reports by the Auditor General None undertaken during the period other than for financial statements. Fraud control The museum is developing a fraud control plan with appropriate fraud prevention, detection, investigation, reporting and data collection procedures and processes to meet the specific needs of the museum and the Commonwealth Fraud Control Guidelines 2002. A d ve rtisin g & m arket research This information is contained in the section Key Result Area 4. Freedom of inform ation There were no requests undertheFreedom o f Information A ct 1982. The museum’s FOI officer is Russell Smylie, tel 02 9298 3619 email rsmylie@anmm.gov.au Judicial decisions No judicial decisions affected the museum during the period under report. M inisterial directions The Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts wrote on 2 February regarding the Code of Practice for the Construction Industry and the Commonwealth Implementation Guidelines. Two directions from previous years continue to be noted: policies on Foreign Exchange Risk received on 17 July 2002, and on Cost Recovery received on 12 May 2003. 29
Sailor style inspired fashion Opposite clockw ise from top left Claude Montana floating a nautical idea for landlubbers Fashion October 1980 Courtesy Daily Mail/Solo Syndication; Bettina Jones wearing bathing socks by Schiaparelli 1928 photograph George Hoyningen-Heune/ Vogue ©Conde Nast Publications Inc Photograph courtesy Vogue Paris; Mademoiselle Chanel a t ‘La Pausa’ with her dog Gigot 1930 Photograph DR All rights reserved; Easton Pearson does contemporary sailor style; Below Detail of Easton Pearson fabric
PERFORMANCE REPORTING section two
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
CREATE A MIX OF ENTERTAINING, SCHOLARLY, EDUCATIONAL, TOPICAL AND RELEVANT PROGRAMS, AND PRODUCTS FOR GREATEST VALUE TO OUR AUDIENCES CONDUCT RESEARCH AND CREATE DIALOGUE WITH OUR AUDIENCES TO UNDERSTAND THEIR
KRAI ENGAGING OUR AUDIENCES... UNDERSTAND OUR AUDIENCES AND INTERPRET AUSTRALIA’S MARITIME HERITAGE IN EXCITING AND INFORMATIVE WAYS
Above Gina Sinozich Three Suitcases 2003. Handwriting in black reads ‘A ll our possesions/arrive in Melbourne/16.8.1957’
CHANGING NEEDS AND WANTS EXPLORE NEW AND DEVELOPING DIRECTIONS THROUGH SCHOLARSHIP, RESEARCH, INNOVATION AND EXPERIMENTATION IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PROGRAMS AND PRODUCTS
ENGAGING OUR AUDIENCES KEY RESULT AREA 1
• BUILD OUR CAPABILITIES THROUGH OUR STAFF AND VOLUNTEERS AND THE BEST USE OF OUR INFRASTRUCTURE • PURSUE EXCELLENCE IN THE QUALITY OF OUR PROGRAMS AND SERVICES THROUGH MONITORING, EVALUATION AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS THAT SUPPORT GOOD PRACTICE IN ALL THAT WE DO
‘Very edgucataionaF
YOUNG VISITOR
Left A new exhibit developed for
Details top Young visitors at the
Passengers about the Lebanese
entrance to the Australian National
com m unity in Australia. Pictured
Maritme Museum; Womens Royal
here is Farouk Afiouny, nicknamed
Naval Service poster
‘The King’, with his fa m ily 2004, who
Above As featured in Sailor Style - Art
actively provide com m unity services
Fashion Film, Gene Kelly and Frank
through the Lebanese Moslem
Sinatra in Anchors Aweigh 1945
Association in Sydney
©Getty Images
33
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
A MODERN M ARITIM E MUSEUM AT W O R K Redeveloping the core exhibition NAVYin the ANZTall Gallery was a milestone in the periodic renewal of all the exhibitions with which the museum opened in 1991. The evaluation cycle for this long-term commitment was completed in June 2004. The re-opening of NAVY, and four major new exhibitions staged this year, were highlighted in the Director's Overview in Section 1. The temporary exhibitions were: Lost for 500 Years ... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam, Sydney Working Harbour, Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film and Scrimshaw - Art of the Whaler. In addition, we hosted our first travelling exhibition from the National Gallery of Australia, Douglas Annand - the art of life, featuring the work of one of Australia’s most influential commercial artists whose commissions for the P&O-Orient Line revealed him as a master of maritime modernism. A visitor access brief for Blackmore's First Lady, a centrepiece of the l/Vatermarksexhibition in the ANZTall Gallery, has been researched and written. This will allow visitors to board the Cavalier 37 yacht on which Australian single-hander Kay Cottee became the first woman in the world to circumnavigate solo and non-stop. This is just one example of the continual refinements and developments that our longer-term exhibitions undergo. Major festivals included a special program of events commemorating the 60th anniversary of Australia's most daring and successful WWII special operation, Operation Jaywick; our second food festival Mediterranean Tucker, and the sixth Classic & Wooden Boat Festival. These popular celebrations appealed to different audiences who enjoyed specially coordinated programs of talks, displays, demonstrations, music and entertainment and food and wine. All such visitor events and programs are recorded in Appendix 1. Stories of migration across seas are part of the history of almost all Australians; the museum records and relates these stories from both our distant and recent pasts as well as our present. In September we hosted the Dunera Boys reunion (furthering a connection made with our 1993 exhibition of the same name), commemorating a key chapter in the history of modern Australia as an immigration-based society. For Refugee Week 2003 we sponsored an art project jointly with Austcare and held an evening of activities celebrating the survival of our nearest South-East Asian neighbour, East Timor. The first Frank Broeze Memorial Maritime History Book Prize was awarded this year. Offered jointly by this museum and the Australian Association for Maritime History, the $2,000 prize was awarded to Leone Huntsman, for Sand in Our Souls (Melbourne University Press, 2001). EDUCATION AN D CHILDREN ’S PROG RAM S One indicator of our education programs’ success was the 50% of school tours that were repeat visits this year, as were more than 80% of school groups on Careers Day. More than 50% of all HSC chemistry students elected the shipwrecks option in the HSC chemistry exam, and more than one third of these students had participated in the museum's shipwreck workshop program. There was a large increase in the number of participants in oursecondary school workshops related to archaeology, chemistry and Sydney - Working Harbour. Theatre remains the most immediate and one of the most successful ways of engaging young audiences, and museum staff are adept in dramatic arts. There were performances by Jigsaw Theatre (Flotsam and Jetsam) during school holidays; SOS Theatre (during the Classic & Wooden Boat Festival and Museums Light Up); Stormy Grey (on James Craig)-, and X-Ray Theatre, in Wetworld during school holidays. A successful conference was held jointly with the Australian Children’s Book Council in conjunction with the popular exhibition Oceans of Stories - Illustrations from Australian children's books. In association with WEA the section hosted a well received oneday conference on maritime illustrations in Australian children’s books, and a two-day
ENGAGING OUR AUDIENCES KEY RESULT AREA 1
symposium with children’s literature specialist Dr Robyn McCallum and book illustrators. On Careers Day at the museum this year we cordinated over 30 presentations from defence forces, Sydney Ports, Waterways and professional training groups. Other collaborative outreach projects included: • Turtle Tracks - a science curriculum project, in partnership with the NSW Education Department Aboriginal Studies team and the ANU Centre for Cross-cultural Research • a joint school project with IMAX theatre for the exhibition Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam • a joint school project with Sydney Aquarium for the exhibition Sharks - Predator and Prey • Sydney Harbour Week activities • two teacher exhibition previews • school tours of Cockatoo Island with Sydney Harbour Federation Trust • cruise forums held in conjunction with WEA. Other programs targeted specific communities. Portuguese Sunday, developed with Portuguese community groups, attracted over 300 visitors to the museum. Others involved cooperation with community maritime groups, for example the Newcastle Maritime Festival run in conjunction with Newcastle Regional Museum and the Australian Maritime Museums Council. The section coordinated a number of successful events during the 2004 C/ass/c & Wooden Boat Festival and participated with 25 other Sydney public museums and galleries in the inaugural Museums Light Up event. Many of this year’s education publications also involved collaboration with other organisations. These include a CD-ROM about how to read museum exhibitions as texts, being produced in collaboration with NSW English Teachers Association, and the flyers produced for the Sydney Working Harbour cruise forums. The Operation Jaywick 60th Anniversary booklet was produced in conjunction with the Australian War Memorial and Department of Veterans Affairs. These were in addition to the large number of educational resources such as ‘hands-on learning’ annual program flyers (primary and secondary); Careers Day student information kit; worksheets and flyers (and the fax streams produced for each item) which included a Sydney Working Harbour resource kit and an archaeology activity worksheet for workshops in Sunken Treasures o f Brunei Darussalam. See also the education publications listed in Appendix 5. IN TER AC TIO N S , VIS ITS AN D VIS ITO R PR O FILE Interactions with the museum, which include people availing themselves of museum services and facilities in a variety of ways other than the traditional exhibition visit, rose significantly in the 2003-2004 financial year to 1,638,732. In the same period, looking at the measure of people visiting in person, the Australian National Maritime Museum became the most-visited museum in Sydney. The 431,536 visitors to our site were 31% over the target figure of 329,830. This was an outcome of the November 2003 introduction of a trial of free visitor entry to our main galleries as reported fully in the Director’s Overview. Since then, several changes to ticketing options have been made, producing valuable feedback about audience needs and preferences. An analysis of visitor origins reveals a similar pattern to last year: 37% came from the Sydney metropolitan area, 14% were from NSW country areas, and 14% from other states. Museum visitors of overseas origin comprised 35% of total visitation. The top five international sources of visitors were the UK, USA, New Zealand, Japan and Germany. Visitor programs drew 40,970 visitors this year compared to 49,006 last year. The decrease represents a return to the museum’s average school visitation numbers, after a previous
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
exhibition, Antarctic Heroes, attracted a record number of school groups in 2002-2003. Our museum venues were hired for 233functions, attended by 37,580 people representinga significant increase on the previous year and indicatingthe marketability of our harbourside location and excellent facilities. M A R K E T R ES EAR C H Market research continues to inform and influence the museum’s interaction with its audiences and the wider community. A contract market researcher conducted surveys and analysis to determine market needs and expections of services and attractions, and to measure the level of satifaction. In partnership with the University of Technology and the Powerhouse Museum, we completed the pilot stage of a major strategic study investigating museums and leisure choices. Exit surveys tested visitor responses to three temporary exhibitions, Oceans of Stories - Illustrations from Australian Children's Books, Lost for 500 Years... Sunken Treasures of Brunei and Sydney Working Harbour. A tracking study of visitors to Oceans of Stories examined visitor flow, to assist in improving the layout and placement of major labels in future exhibitions. A visitor comments book was introduced into the Sydney Working Harbour exhibition to solicit views on Sydney Harbour’s future. A report of the first six months of comments from this book (September 2003 to March 2004) was produced, providing a comprehensive overview of the public's priorities for the harbour. Two program evaluations were conducted on the Classic & Wooden Boat Festival and Marine Careers Day, providing valuable feed back to assist in the planningof future events. A market analysis of the Sydney Chinese community was undertaken to assess the potential of this market to the museum, and it is likely to provide a model for similar surveys. An evaluation study of the museum's quarterly magazine Signals involved a readership survey of ANMM Members and other readers, and two focus groups, yielding useful information on perceptions of the magazine’s content and design, as well as comments on the Members program. This will help us to further improve these products and services. VEN U E H IRE AN D CATERING Venue revenue exceeded budget by an astonishing $89,000 this financial year despite a long period during which bookings for two of the most popular spaces - the ANZ theatre and Tasman Light - were unavailable due to NAVYgallery renovations. And for the second consecutive year we won the Convention & Incentive Marketing Magazine award for best practice as a function venue. The award is highly regarded by professionals in the conference and meetings industry. Successful events were held for corporate, government and private clients, including museum sponsors Tenix, Raytheon and Lloyd’s Register (in conjunction with the Seapower 2004 conference). Renovations to Yots Cafe, completed in 2003, resulted in an increase in patronage during the day by museum visitors, tourists and the local business precinct, as well as for evening functions. The combination of location, food by award-winning caterers the MODE Group, and distinctive service has contributed to the museum's reputation (and income) as one of Sydney’s more popular function venues. In a telephone survey of 62 venue clients from 2003, 85% of external users expressed satisfaction with the museum’s facilities and amenities, and 88% expressed satisfaction with the support of ANMM staff. Marketing initiatives included a venue CD-ROM to re-launch the museum’s venues, strategically deployed at the Sydney On Sale exhibition at the Conference and Entertainment Centre, Darling Harbour. A wedding brochure was produced in print and electronic format
ENGAGING OUR AUDIENCES KEY RESULT AREA 1
and is being used to target this lucrative market, along with advertising in bridal magazines. A marketing package promoting harbourside wedding venues was developed in conjunction with the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority, and venue staff follow up enquiries with site inspections. TH E STORE The museum’s retail branch is run with skill and flair. Strategic product selection and display make shopping for maritime-themed and exhibition-related books and souvenirs an indispensable part of the museum visit. Store revenue this financial year was the highest recorded since the museum opened. Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film presented an unusual merchandising opportunity, and The Store has been packed for the duration of the exhibition with highly marketable goods and wittily nautical fashion items. SYD N EY B Y S A IL Sydney by Sail is a successful commercial enterprise operated from the museum waterfront by former Olympic sailor Matt Hayes. The yacht charter company is well-regarded in the tourism industry and offers short sails on the harbour and longer overnight cruises, as well as courses for beginning or veteran sailors. In addition to giving visitors an opportunity to extend their museum experience with hands-on maritime adventures, Sydney by Sail is a source of revenue to the museum. More information about their activities can be found at www.svdnevhvsail.com
VISITOR S A N D INTERACTIONS
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
Visitors to the museum
314,243
304,394
431,536
Travelling exhibitions
107,200
110,023
183,996
1,197,476
1,131,617
1,638,732
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
Primary schools
298
433
310
Secondary schools
236
275
349
Interactions EDUCATION GROUPS
Tertiary/adult groups GROUPS TOTAL
70
108
214
604
816
873
16,944
24,728
17,393
6,432
9,938
12,048
Visitor numbers Primary students Secondary students Adult students
1,248
1,738
994
Teachers
3,488
4,904
4,186
Vacation care
2,950
4,753
3,328
Mini Mariners
1,152
1,265
na
Other groups
2,745
3,175
3,048
GROUPS TOTAL Kids Deck ALL PROGRAMS TOTAL *Figures include approximations for participants in Play & Wet World **excluding Wetworld 3
34,959
49,873
40,970
*23,372
*21,230
**10,734
58,331
69,172
51,705
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
SCHOOLS BOOKED WITH TEACHER GUIDES FOR TOURS
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
Navigators gallery/early explorers/ history
52
67
70
Transport
39
43
42 11
The sea
8
10
Antarctic Heroes
na
114
na
Brunei - Treasures o f Darussalam
na
na
31 26
Oceans o f Stories
na
na
Sydney W orking Harbour
na
na
10
Other tours
43
26
21
Tour & performance * TOTAL SCHOOLS ON TOURS
79
30
10
221
300
211
Percentage of schools taking a guided tour 41% 65% 32% *2000-02 Gold, Prospectors: 2002-03 Navigators & Mapmakers Brother: 2003-04 Stormy Grey (Oceans of Stories)
SCHOOL WORKSHOPS
2002-03
2003-04
Archaeology - junior
6
6
21
Archaeology - senior
8
10
19
Submarine Adventure
2
10
2
19
16
21 22
Ship Shape & Life Aboard a Tall Ship (James Craig) Pirate school (James Craig, Bounty in 2002-03)
na
31
Splash workshop (Watermarks)
na
na
7
Oceans o f Stories workshops
na
na
106
Science & other workshops
11
4
8
Shipwreck, conservation & corrosion
52
70
85
Shipwreck sleuths Technology of gold workshop History workshops Pyrmont walk
1
2
5
31
30
24
2
17
9
na
15
37
TOTAL SCHOOLS IN WORKSHOPS
140
134
364
Percentage of schools participating in a workshop
26%
20%
56%
2002-03
2003-04
354
na
OTHER PROGRAMS Antarctic Heroes teacher preview Oceans o f Stories teacher preview
80
na
Oceans o f Stories teacher conference
na
70
Sydney W orking Harbour teacher preview
na
60
Brunei Treasures o f Darussalam teacher preview
na
300
Marine careers day, senior students
489
304
Legal studies lecture - Saltwater
35
na
Public program - Amundsen anniversary
60
na
Public program - Antarctic lecture
83
na
Public programs - Cruise forums
187
220
Public programs - W EA program
97
25
127
na
60
na 979
Public programs - Harbour Week cruises Public program - Night in the Navy TOTAL
38
2001-02
1,572
ENGAGING OUR AUDIENCES KEY RESULT AR EA 1
SCHOOLS BOOKED ON VESSELS
2001-02
2002-03
Schools on cruises
33
42
40
Schools on Onslow (including workshop)
na
na
245
James Craig (includes Ship Shape and Sleuths programs)
na
25
50
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
$1,700,980
$1,770,178
$1,466,876
$526,541
$503,881
$570,907
The Store net revenue
$40,440
$22,238
$87,768
Yots Cafe rental revenue
$81,706
$89,928
$92,317
MAJOR VISITOR REVENUE SOURCES Visitor entry revenue The Store gross revenue
Visitor Services revenue TOTAL
VENUE HIRE PERFORMANCE Number of functions Guests
2003-04
$92,265
$170,168
$233,747
$2,441,932
$2,556,393
$2,451,615
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
239
192
234
35,812
31,252
38,175
Turnover
$710,681
$615,814
$734,983
Net revenue
$374,698
$368,708
$481,912
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
• DEVELOP THE NATIONAL MARITIME COLLECTION • MANAGE AND PRESERVE THE MARITIME HISTORICAL MATERIAL IN OUR CARE
KRA2 MARITIME HERITAGE FOSTER THE CARE AND RESEARCH OF AUSTRALIA’S MARITIME HERITAGE AND MATERIAL CULTURE
* FAC|L|TATE re s e a rc h in to m aritim e h e rita g e
ANDMATERIALCULTURE * pRESERVEANDF0STERTRAD|T|0NALMAR|T|ME SKILLS AND PRACTICES
MARITIME HERITAGE KEY RESULT AREA 2
• MAXIMISE ACCESS TO THE NATIONAL MARITIME COLLECTION AND OTHER MARITIME HERITAGE MATERIAL IN OUR CARE • WORK WITH NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITIES TO FOSTER BEST PRACTICE IN THE PROMOTION OF MARITIME HISTORY
Left Visitors to Sydney Working Harbour were treated to Sam Hood’s incomparable photograph of Vampire's construction, juxtaposed with a view through a window to the Vampire moored at our wharf below. Top Aerial View of Vampire and Carpentaria at the Australian National Maritime Museum. Details Coral from a display of Australian shells and corals in an oak and mahogany veneer secretaire cabinet, collected by Mrs Violette Pratten from the 1940s and acquired by the museum this year.
“Great to see the Vampire still going. Last time was 1964 when she rescued me and the crew of my aircraft” UK MALE
Above Leading Seaman Douglas Short steps off HMAS Vampire to fam ily greeting 1973 Courtesy Fairfaxphotos. Left Halvorsen history book co-published this year by the museum. Opposite Visitors to W harf 7 can view skilled shipwrights restoring craft in this Australian Heritage Fleet workshop.
4±
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
IN N OVATIVE M A R IT IM E HERITAG E P R O G R AM S Museum staff held consultative meetings with the Australian Heritage Fleet to develop priorities and strategies for the establishment of an Australian Register of Historic Vessels. This will be an ongoing project to document and create a database of heritage craft in public, community and private collections and ownership. The museum was involved in the selection of tenderers for a research project commissioned by the Australian Heritage Commission to address the theme Mapping the Coastline. The project calls for identification and assessment of places of heritage significance taking in maritime incidents, developments in navigation and survey techniques, political and economic associations and key locations related to all of these. Another collaborative project, The River - a joint enterprise with the NSW Museums and Galleries Foundation concerning inland river communities and trades - is being developed, with a scoping study underway. In a regional extension of the museum's national outreach program, material (text and graphics) from the sucessful exhibition Oceans Apart - the story of Ann and Matthew Flinders was sent to the Yamba museum on the NSW north coast. In addition, valuable experience was gained in our registration and photography sections by interns from Broome and Echuca. AC Q U IS ITIO N S The museum's collections were enriched this year by the acquisitions and over 55 donations that appear in Appendixes 2 and 3. They range from a fine series of seven engravings and five original sketches dating from 1783, depicting the adventures of the fictional character Robinson Crusoe, to two rowing oars from Sydney University Boat Club, commemorating victories at inter-university boat races held in the late 1890s. Two of the most outstanding acquisitions this year, relating to 19th-century Australian whaling, were a rare scrimshaw panbone depicting Ben Boyd's whaling barque Terror, and an illustrated whaling journal from the same ship (see Director's Overview). Among important Indigenous material acquired this year, a woven sedge yabbie trap from the Murray River in South Australia stands out. This one, made by Yvonne Koolmatrie, shows the distinctive weaving characteristic of the region. Yvonne Koolmatrie (language group Ngarrindjeri) is an exceptional artist and a highly regarded exponent of traditional fibre craft production as well as a community leader in maintaining such traditional craft. She was responsible for all aspects of making the trap including collecting and harvesting the materials. The item is a significant contribution to our policy of increasing representation of Indigenous communities of South Australia and inland river communities. The contract for a new collection management software system was signed in June 2004. An implementation plan and strategies for data migration, system configuration, customisation and training were prepared by the registration section, and a ‘go-live’ date for early 2005 is anticipated. CON SERVATION The second phase of the conservation program for the outstanding and extremely important Yirrkala Saltwater bark painting collection - condition assessment and treatment, adjustment of support, and photo documentation - is almost complete and the collection will be ready to travel to other venues by December. The testing of containers for the archival storage of two of the museum’s most significant photographic collections, the Samuel Hood and William Hall collections, is complete and the collections will be re-housed by December 2005. 42
MARITIME HERITAGE KEY RESULT AR EA 2
In April, in cooperation with the Australian War Memorial, the section hosted an Australian Institute for the Conservation of Cultural Material workshop on the conservation of photographic materials. Senior conservator Elizabeth Hadlow returned from her valuable studies at the Centre for Photographic Conservation in the UK on a Churchill Fellowship, and will be developing a set of procedures for staff for the examination, identification and care and handling of cultural materials. This will be supplemented by in-house training. A new head of conservation has been appointed. Canadian James Engelbert brings to the position skills and experience in conservation management, living history site conservation and industrial site preservation development. M A R IN E AR C H A E O LO G Y PR O G R AM Museum personnel continue to engage professionally with other organisations in preserving and promoting Australia’s maritime heritage. A regular program of archaeological diving with the New South Wales Heritage Office is maintained. Ten dives on shipwrecks in Sydney Harbour were undertaken in 2003-2004, on Centurion, Royal Shepherd and Annie Miller. The museum’s head maritime archaeologist, Kieran Hosty, has left temporarily on secondment to the Historic Houses Trust of NSW and his position is temporarily filled by curator Nigel Erskine. Curator Paul Hundley continues to assist in efforts to identify HMB Endeavour, examining evidence collected during fieldwork at Newport Harbour, Rhode Island, USA. U S A G ALLER Y The USA Gallery occupies a unique place in the international museum world, as a gallery in a national museum funded by another nation. It celebrates a shared history - more than two centuries of maritime contact, cooperation and competition between Australia and the United States - and is the enduring product of a generous endowment which was the USA’s bicentennial gift to Australia. The gallery continues to foster diplomatic, commercial and cultural relations between the two countries and their museums. A further valuable connection with the USA was established this year when the American Friends of the Australian National Maritime Museum was launched. As well as fostering links with this museum and its USA Gallery, it will enable donations and gifts from US supporters to be tax-deductible. This year extensive modifications were made to the USA Gallery in preparation for the new exhibition Scrimshaw - A rt of the Whaler which opened in March 2004. The striking display draws on the museum’s collection to highlight many fine examples of this traditional folk art, mostly associated with the whaling industry. A number of pieces on display were acquired by the museum from the collection of the late Des Liddy, who built up Australia's foremost private collection of scrimshaw. Currently a program of visiting scholars and curators is being evaluated for exhibitions in the the USA Gallery, and a five-year masterplan for the gallery is in development ready to be implemented in the next financial year. IN D IGEN OUS A F F A IR S The museum continues to offer visitors opportunities to encounter apects of Indigenous cultural heritage, strengthen partnerships with Indigenous communities, and ensure that Indigenous people have access to cultural assets and experiences. The Indigenous curator and liaison officer John Waight has worked with various Indigenous communities to source material for exhibition changeovers in the museum’s Merana Eora Nora gallery, and for the Indigenous storyline in the exhibition Sydney Working Harbour. He organised a number of objects including paintingand sculpture to be lentto the Powerhouse Museum for exhibition at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games. The officer's varied role has
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
included work on developing an Indigenous protocol for the museum, and providing advice for the museum's volunteers training program. The assistant director of Collections and Exhibitions, Michael Crayford, and the Indigenous curatortravelledto Launceston and returned a bull-kelp water carrierto the deceased artist’s next of kin Muriel Maynard and Gloria Templar, in the presence of the Aboriginal Elders Council of Tasmania. For safe-keeping and to preserve the object’s cultural integrity it was placed in the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery in Launceston. These arrangements were formalised with the Tasmanian Indigenous community and QVMAG. A replacement bull-kelp water carrier was given to the museum by Tasmanian Elder Lola Greeno. The family and the Tasmanian Indigenous community provided formal acknowledgement. Collaboration continues between the Indigenous curator, the Centre for Cross Cultural Research at ANU, the NSW Department of Education and Training Aboriginal Studies team, and the Yirrkala (NT) and Yuin (NSW south coast) communities on the Turtle Tracks Indigenous Science Curriculum project mentioned elsewhere. Other outreach activities included involvement with a scoping study for the project The River (see under Heritage programs, above), and bringing school bands from Yirrkala (NT) and Mornington Island (QLD) to perform at the museum. FLEET The transfer of fleet operations from Berrys Bay to Darling Harbour, completed this year, is expected to facilitate vessel maintenance. Fleet staff provided their expertise for the installation and commissioning of the Museum Quay and Festival Pontoons which form the first stages in the museum site masterplan; and they have been involved in planning for its future stages. Two apprenctices are currently acquiring valuable skills in the fleet section - a continuation of the museum's commitment to providing shipwright and marine trade training for young people. A vessel management policy was developed during the year, and guidelines for conserving and maintaining historic vessels were published. The conservation plan for the Vietnamese refugee boat Tu Do was completed, and progress made in the conservation of both the WWI commander raider Krait and the Colin Archer ketch Kathleen Gillett. The Attack class patrol boat HMAS Advance was slipped for triennial maintenance. The fleet section has given advice on the proposal to provide a home for the Endeavour replica when it returns to Australia, including updated costings for the the vessel’s management by the museum. The section was involved in planning and managing the 2004 Classic & Wooden Boat Festival. This national event encourages the appreciation, preservation and sustainabilty of classic, traditional and contemporary vesels and craft skills, as well as promoting the museum and maritime history. Fleet manager Steven Adams actively supported a number of outreach projects. He gave collection management advice to the Schoolhouse Museum at Ryde in Sydney; provided naval architectural advice to Nick Coffill, a consultant to the government of Malaysia, for a new vessel; and briefed Hette Mollema, planning coordinator for the John Ox/ey project (Australian Heritage Fleet) on the conservation approach taken by our museum. Fleet personnel are kept busy responding to public requests for information about vessels and engines. A record number - 85 - of such enquiries were handled in the reporting period. In addition, the fleet section provided its services to enable safe access to the museum’s historic vessels for visiting media and television crews on 24 occasions, responding to a steady and growing demand by a wide range of media to utilise this unique heritage asset. 44
MARITIME HERITAGE KEY RESULT AR EA 2
VAU G HAN EVANS L IB R A R Y In reponse to constant public demand for pictures of ships and access to the museum's pictorial collections, head of the Vaughan Evans Library, Frances Prentice, undertook a project to develop temporary access to the pictorial material from the National Maritime Collection prior to the new Collection Management Information System going 'live' to the public (proposed for 2005-2006). Assisted by consultants TL Collective and the publications, curatorial, registration and photography departments of the museum, the librarians designed and produced a web-based database of images from the museum's painting collection. Most of these are ship portraits, which are the images most in demand. This material is also harvested by the National Library of Australia for its national pictorial portal Picture Australia, htto://www.Dictureaustralia.org. The library began work on a major preservation, microfilming and digitisation project for fragile material held in its collection. In the first stage of the project issues of the Australian Motor Boat and Yachting Monthly from 1922 to 1930 were copied. The library also commenced an ongoing project to cull and rehouse the serials collection with a view to long-term preservation. In addition, librarians began adding holdings for rare book material held in our collection onto the national bibliographic database, to facilitate access to this material.
ACQUISITIONS TO NATIONAL MARITIM E COLLECTION SECTION
2001-02
2002-03
Technology
51
98
16
Communities
51
96
15
USA Gallery
18
25
2
Indigenous
na
4
6
120
233
38
2003-04
TOTAL
2003-04
DONATIONS TO NATIONAL MARITIM E COLLECTION 2001-02
2002-03
Technology
SECTION
27
368
21
Communities
32
54
34
USA Gallery
0
0
0
Indigenous
0
0
1
59
422
56
2003-04
TOTAL
ACQUISITION FUNDING - BY APPROPRIATION SECTION
2001-02
2002-03
Technology
$54, 380
$110,346
$40,141
Communities*
$134,170
$34,943
$152,675
USA Gallery
0
0
0
Indigenous**
0
$127,123
$29,524
$188,550
$272,412
$222,340
TOTAL *2003-04 includes $59,159 purchased through director's fund **2003-04 includes $14,332 purchased through director’s fund
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
OBJECTS REGISTERED Documents Clothing and accessories Photographs Tools and equipment
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04 470
24
258
103
188
41
95
944
206 344
743
86
Models and model parts
17
7
0
Vessels, vessel parts and accessories
40
0
21
416
350
380
Other
CURATORIAL SECTION Totals of enquiries assisted organisations
public/private SECTION
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
2001-02
2002-03
Technology
489
507
478
118
115
107
Communities
674
510
620
245
150
175
USA Gallery
126
143
138
109
114
127
Indigenous
20
40
50
60
70
40
1,309
1,200
1,286
532
449
449
TOTAL
2003-04
PROJECT PROFILE - TEM PORARY EXHIBITIONS (% STAFF TIME) SECTION
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
Technology
60
45
40
Communities
24
55
50
USA Gallery
50
70
70
Indigenous
50
50
70
2003-04
PROJECT PROFILE - CORE EXHIBITIONS (% STAFF TIME) 2001-02
2002-03
Technology
SECTION
21
45
50
Communities
56
40
50
USA Gallery
20
10
5
Indigenous
10
10
10
PROJECT PROFILE - PUBLIC PROGRAMS, MEDIA RELATIONS, OUTREACH (% STAFF TIME) SECTION
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
10
5
5
5
5
7
USA Gallery
20
10
15
Indigenous
40
40
20
Technology Communities
PROJECT PROFILE - M ARITIM E ARCHAEOLOGY (% STAFF TIME) SECTION
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
Technology
9
5
5
Communities
0
0
0
10
10
10
0
0
0
USA Gallery Indigenous 46
MARITIME HERITAGE KEY RESULT AREA 2
CONSERVATION Conservation hours (preparation, examination, treatments)
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04 6,116
5,817
4,918
Preventative conservation hours
950
658.5
502
Collection objects examined, treated
820
1,062
1,437
Loan objects examined, treated
842
1,355
1,149
Maritime archaeology project hours
65
na
20
Public enquiries serviced
45
77
15
Special projects (Hood Collection, Tu Do, Saltwater Barks)
na
378
750
High school student workshop hours (Maritime Archaeology, Shipwrecks & Salvage)
na
776
32
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
1,469
1,925
1,462
78
114
52
124
119
90
1,924
1,750
2,314
REGISTRATION Objects registered (NMC) Collections registered Collections remaining unregistered Objects on display in core exhibitions (NMC, loans) Objects on temporary display
442
701
1,260
Objects borrowed
397
484
521
Objects loaned (includes ANMM travelling exhibitions)
137
43
67
7
3
3
99
11
689
Institutions borrowing from NMC Core exhibition objects changed over (NMC, loans) Collections donated Registration photographs Other photographic services
FLEET PROJECTS PROFILE (% STAFF TIME)
59
54
55
1,469
1,925
108
450
451
462
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
Maintenance/Conservation
62
61
58
General tasks/Shipkeeping
24
28
28
Routine vessel operations
9
7
5
Special events (vessels)
5
1
4
Other Public enquiries serviced
VAUGHAN EVANS LIBRARY Monographs/AV titles accessioned Internal loans processed
0
3
5
na
na
85
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
716
1,272
733
1,998
1,618
1,645
Inter-library loans processed
326
506
291
Visitors research requests
963
882
1,014
External research requests
2,983
3,298
3,339
Total research requests
3,946
4,180
4,353
861
782
704
$4,065
$4,467
$7,683
Items catalogued Revenue
47
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
KRA3 INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT... DEVELOP OUR FACILITIES AND ASSETS TO PROVIDE THE MOST EFFECTIVE AND EFFICIENT INFRASTRUCTURE FOR OUR PROGRAMS, SERVICES, COLLECTIONS MANAGEMENT AND PROFESSIONAL WORK
Above Conservation and rectification works on our 19th-century Cape Bowling Green lighthouse were completed this year. Its welcom ing presence on the north wharf makes it one of the museum ’s most popular attractions.
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT KEY RESULT AR EA 3
• DEVELOP THE MASTERPLAN FOR OUR DARLING HARBOUR SITE, INCLUDING SUSTAINABILITY AND PRECINCT PARTNERSHIP CONSIDERATIONS • UNDERTAKE MAJOR CAPITAL WORKS SET OUT IN THE MASTERPLAN • COORDINATE INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT TO PROVIDE MAXIMUM VALUE FOR OUR PROGRAMS, COLLECTIONS, AND ADMINISTRATIVE NEEDS, INCLUDING VESSEL UPKEEP AND SKILLS DISPLAY WITHIN A 'WORKING HARBOUR' MODEL • MAINTAIN THE VALUE OF THE NATIONAL INVESTMENT IN CAPITAL ASSETS
‘I ’m afraid of a submarine that too small and narrow. Thankyou.” Top Our subm arine Onslow, one of
JAPANESE MALE
six British-designed and built Oberon class subm arines of the Australian Submarine Squadron, served from 1969 to 1999. Above Museum conservators' work is skilled, painstaking and detailed. Treated objects are displayed in the viewing window of the W harf 7 conservation laboratory.
49
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
C A P IT A L W O RK S The relocation of our fleet maintenance operation from Berrys Bay and the re-opening of NAVY are mentioned elsewhere. Other major capital works projects completed this year included conservation and rectification work on the 19th-century Cape Bowling Green lighthouse. The lighthouse will be 130 years old in 2004. Also completed in the past financial year were Museum Quay and Festival Pontoon, the first stages in an ambitious reconfiguration of our existing wharves. New wharves were constructed through an ingenious recycling of large pontoons from Western Australia. The project has improved display conditions and access to our historic vessels and will proceed over a period of years. We have initial development approval for Heritage Cove, a further extension of waterside facilities. Restructuring and repair of the wharf and piers supporting the museum’s Wharf 7 Maritime Heritage Centre are also included in the masterplan for our Darling Harbour site. A number of architectural and engineering options are being explored, with documents and estimations in preparation. A contract for sea coating has already been awarded. Modifications have also been made to improve the performance and reliability of the main building’s air-conditioning system. This initiative alone is expected to realise significant energy savings over the next reporting period.
BUILDING SERVICES Capital works
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04 $7,604,000
$4,642,000
$5,358,000
Maintenance & minor works
$773,361
$749,545
$734,988
Energy costs
$272,845
$354,735
$369,962
Energy (kilowatt hours)
5,271,802
5,126,729
5,370,043
C O M M U N IC ATIO N S AND IN FO R M ATIO N M AN AG E M E N T S ER VIC E S Information technology staff assisted the publications manager in the first stages of the redevelopment of the museum’s website. They also provided technical support in tenders to select a new Collection Information Management System (CIMS), in addition to adding file servers to facilitate installation of the new system and the cross-grade of several of the museum’s databases, including the library catalogue. Eighty-five PCs and laptops throughout the museum were refreshed to support a number of new technologies including the new CIMS. This museum section providesoften-unseen, essential services to ensure visitors experience museum displays of technological sophistication. For the successful redevelopment of the core exhibition NAVY, we extended the media and venue management system to its gallery. A comparable role was performed in the installation of the major new exhibitions Lost for 500 Years ... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam, Sydney Working Harbour, Scrimshaw - Art o f the Whaler and Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film. In particular, a PIVoD digital reticulation system was installed in the Nortel Networks Gallery for Sailor Style. A rear projection system was installed in the USA Gallery to replace an obsolete video wall, and audiovisuals were produced for Sydney Working Harbour, AMVYand Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film. Exciting and effective lightening was designed, rigged and commissioned for those exhibitions as well as for Scrimshaw - A rt of the Whaler. IT staff implemented a new service-desk software system to improve handling of service requests in the areas of information technology, telephony and AVs. The system has been configured using Information Technology Infrastructure Library principles, recognised as
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT KEY RESULT AREA 3
one of the world standards for IT service management. Users can submit incidents and change requests and track their progress via a web browser. The system also contains a knowledge base of common solutions relevant to our museum. These initiatives are increasing productivity and efficiency. The section contributes to and benefits from membership of the Corporate Management Forum Information Technology Working Group, which comprises information technology managers from national collecting insitutions. CU S TO M E R S ER VIC E Customer service personnel are in the frontline promoting the museum and increasing public awareness of our attractions and services. Front-of-house and security officers are well-informed by induction and ongoing briefings both before exhibition openings and on a daily basis. The section continues to work alongside local organisations on local issues, including: • the successful negotiation of a city-centre bus stop at the museum’s doors, making arrival and departure at the museum easier for visitors and staff • acting as a training venue for government organisations • participating in community discussions on social and security issues • involvement in NSW juvenile justice (specifically with young people defacing the museum with grafitti). A major security review of the museum during the year resulted in the following implementations: • audible alarms on all fire exit doors • ongoing involvement in precinct security with local stakeholders and law enforcement authorities • working with all branches in the continuing challenge of securing museum exhibition, staff and visitor security. In addition, the security and front-of-house contracts went to tender last year. A consultant was employed to see the process through to recommending and awarding the contract. H U M AN R ES O U R C E M AN AG E M E N T AN D O C C U P ATIO N AL HEALTH AN D S A F E T Y C e rtifie d a gre em ent and A W A s At 30 June 2004 there were 101 Australian public service employees covered by a certified agreement and Australian workplace agreements. All 101 are non-Senior Executive Service staff. Salary ranges appear in the table below. Non-salary benefits provided to employees include: • access to a confidential professional counselling service through Employee Assistance Program • reimbursement of cost for vaccinations • eyesight testing service for APS staff and reimbursement for spectacles • studies assistance to ongoing APS staff • access to purchased leave scheme for ongoing APS staff. All Australian workplace agreements offered in the museum link pay to performance. At 30 June 2004 performance payments totalled $15,397.50. Other information on performance pay - the number of APS employees at each classification level who received performance pay; aggregated amount of payments at each classification level; and average and range of bonus payment at each classification level - is available on request, since publishing this
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
information would allow amounts paid to individuals to be identified. Productivity gains as negotiated in the 2002-2004 certified agreement for the 2003-04 financial year are: • the implementation of enhanced strategic planning processes • training in the new project management system • improvements in the use of information technology. Negotiations for the 2004-2006 Certified Agreement were completed and at 30 June 2004 were awaiting a hearing at the Australian Industrial Relations Commisssion. The major features of the new agreement are: • Pay increase of 4% from date of certification of the Agreement (or 1 July 2004, whichever is the earlier) and a 4% increase effective from 1 July 2005. • Agreement to link all progression through the pay scale to the Museum Performance Scheme. • The museum will develop a health awareness program in conjunction with staff with the aim of increasing the health and fitness of staff. • The museum has agreed to ‘family friendly’ initiatives such as not arranging meetings before 9.30 am where possible and providing the employees with extra dependent care costs where they are required to travel away for work, or work additional hours, and/or where they are required to pay for additional child care arrangements. The museum has also agreed to two additional weeks maternity leave. • A community language allowance will be paid to staff where there is an identified need for particular language skills, and the staff member has the appropriate qualifications. A sse ssm en t of effectiven ess in m an agin g human resources The second round of the museum performance scheme was also completed, to June 2004. Human resource management statistics are provided regularly to management to enable them to assess workforce needs and apply workforce planning strategies. Staff turnover was 10.7% in 2003-2004, compared to 15.7% in the previous year. The first secondment to the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, UK, was undertaken by a museum staff member as part of an exchange program negotiated between the two museums. Relevant staff attended an in-house project management workshop. Assessment of both enterprises has been favourable. In addition to statutory requirements and humans resources initiatives, museum staff benefit from a staff seminar program which hosts lectures by visiting scholars or curators. In the past year talks have been given by curators from the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich, the Imperial War Museum, and the National Museum of Denmark. Jo in t co n su lta tive council The museum’s joint consultative council, which consists of three management and three employee-elected representatives, met on four occasions during the year, to discuss a wide range of issues including financial and human resource planning, workplace diversity, occupational health and safety, and work organisation and structures. O ccu pation al health and safety It is an ANMM policy to provide and maintain a working environment that is safe for employees, is without risk to their health and provides adequate facilities for their welfare at work. The museum has a range of procedures in place to manage OH&S, including a staff Induction booklet, accident investigation guidelines, confined space entry guidelines, hot work permit system and a system of workplace inspections. The OH&S committee of
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT KEY RESULT AREA 3
management representatives and elected staff representatives meets on a two-monthy basis. Incident statistics are reported to the museum council, and we aim to capture information on 100% of accidents or incidents occurring on the museum site. There were six compensation claims by staff and volunteers in 2003-04, and 73 reported accidents or incidents - a reduction from 77 in the previous reporting year. The museum has a number of health surveillance programs in place, including hearingtesting and flu and hepatitis vaccinations. Environment monitoring takes place as required. D isa b ility a ctio n plan Work has commenced on the implementation of a Disability Action Plan developed by John Moxon in accordance with the Commonwealth Disability Strategy and endorsed by the museum, with a number of initiatives due for completion by December 2004. S ta ffin g overview At 30 June 2004, staff employed under the Pub//cServ/ce Act 1999totalled 101(77 ongoing full-time, 12 ongoing part-time, 1 1 non-ongoing full-time and one non ongoing part-time).
STAFFING Staff years (actual)
2001-02
STAFF BY GENDER male Senior management (EL 2) 4 Middle management
6
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
99.6
96.9
99.55
2003-04
2002-03
female
female
male
female
male
0 11
4
0
4
nil
7
12
8
11
Others
43
49
38
47
39
39
TOTALS
53
60
49
59
51
50
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
BRANCH STAFF Executive/secretariat
19
20
18
Collections & exhibitions
46
45
44
Commercial & visitor services
23
20
18
Corporate services
25
23
113
108
21 10 1
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
TOTAL
SALARIES Executive/secretariat
$1,320,530
$1,128,578
$1,338,538
Collections & exhibitions
$2,561,936
$2,387,352
$2,685,451
Commercial & visitor services
$1,168,458
$1,090,035
$1,206,115
Corporate services
$1,330,863
$1,323,417
$1,420,990
TOTAL
$6,381,787
$5,929,382
$6,651,094
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
KRA4 REPUTATION AND RECOGNITION... BE ACKNOWLEDGED AS A PRE-EMINENT AND INNOVATIVE CULTURAL INSTITUTION
Yvonne Koolmatrie, woven sedge yabby trap, ANMM Collection Left Epic Lass Vessel from the ANMM Fleet
REPUTATION AND RECOGNITION KEY RESULT AREA 4
INCREASE AWARENESS OF WHAT THE MUSEUM IS AND DOES THROUGH INNOVATIVE MARKETING AND PROMOTION ENCOURAGE INVOLVEMENT IN PROFESSIONAL AND COMMUNITY FORUMS EXTEND AND ENHANCE THE MUSEUM’S CORPORATE AND GOVERNMENT RELATIONSHIPS DEVELOP PROGRAMS TO ENCOURAGE WIDER INVOLVEMENT BY MEMBERS, VOLUNTEERS, INTEREST GROUPS AND OTHER INDIVIDUALS
Detail top Shell from a display of
Above Tsar Nicholas II and his
Australian shells and corals in a
children onboard im perial yacht
“ G r e a t ,
veneer secretaire cabinet, collected
Standart, 1908. The Royal Collection
by Mrs Violette Pratten, acquired by
©2004 Courtesy Her Majesty
volunteers. Surprises - swimmers x in a museum! Very Oz!”
the museum this year
Queen Elizabeth II
UK COUPLE
■»
t lia ilk s . ,
c^t
V C f y '
in f o r m
a t iv e ‘
55
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
M AR K ETIN G The year’s most recent exhibition Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film received sensational advertising media support. In addition to general mainstream advertising the museum took advantage of a number of free promotional opportunities including a store display window in the mid-city store Gowings, banners at monorail stations and a hoarding in Harbourside (the Darling Harbour precinct shopping centre). This is one example of the way marketing strategies varied to meet the challenge of a busy, eclectic program. For Oceans o f Stories - Illustrations from Australian Children's Books the focus was on the youth market, children’s reading magazines and metropolitan press, supplemented by extensive direct mailings to book shops, graphic design schools, art galleries and art supplies stores. The Mediterranean Tucker Festival was successfully promoted through advertisements in ethnic newspapers and food-related publications. Our major Christmas exhibition Lost for 500 Years ... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam was promoted to art audiences, antique collectors, maritime enthusiasts and scholars as well as in mainstream press. Excellent awareness of the children’s Wetworld activity was secured by advertising in school holiday features, children's magazines and metrolite posters at bus and telephone shelters in Sydney’s CBD and inner west. This campaign was supported by a precinct free-to-air TV campaign which highlighted the variety of activities available at our unique indoor/outdoor venue. Free entry to the museum was promoted in a select but successful campaign of advertising in major metropolitan press, selected ethnic press, precinct metrolites, buildingbannersand a widely distributed brochure. The initiative was a valuable contribution to the museum’s high and positive profile. Tourists to Sydney comprise one of our most important markets which we continued to target this year in various ways including a mixture of independent and cooperative advertising in major tourist publications. A major function of the marketing section is to take our products and services beyond the museum. Developing strategies to reach those with a keen interest in history, we formed an alliance in December 2003 with the History Channel. Available to subscribers to the Foxtel and Austar networks, the History Channel is Australia's only television channel dedicated to history. Three mini-programs (or interstitials) have so far been produced - on Oskar Speck, the man who paddled a kayak from Germany to Australia in the 1930s; the exhibition Lost for 500 Years ... Sunken Treasures o f Brunei Darussalam; and Ken Warby’s world speed record-breaking boat Spirit of Australia. The museum enjoyed a high profile in the inaugural Museums Light Up event, particularly as hostforthe press launch. The evening involved 25 museums and galleries openingfrom
6 pm until midnight and was widely covered by the media. This museum and the Australian Heritage Fleet vessel James Craig were two of the most-visited attractions, with visitors enjoying live entertainment, films and demonstrations. Many took the opportunity to enjoy a candlelight dinner in Yots, our waterfront cafe. M E D IA Early in the year under review the museum adopted a new media strategy with the intention to raise the museum's profile - particularly in regional Australia - to draw attention to its national role. As part of the strategy, a journalist has been engaged on a regular part-time basis to increase the flow of information to press and electronic media. A media training program has been introduced. On available evidence, it appears editorial coverage of the museum's activities in the Australian media increased by a factor of more than 10% in the year 2003-04. 56
REPUTATION AND RECOGNITION KEY RESULT AREA 4
In order to monitor these movements more accurately the museum has now, as part of the media strategy, engaged an outside consultant to record and analyse coverage on a regular basis. In its first analysis report, covering the 12 months to 30 June 2004, Media Measures Pty Ltd said the museum had a ‘highly successful’ year in the Australian media. In all, 815 reports or stories appeared. Significantly, 80% of coverage focused on the museum's key operations - its exhibitions and visitor programs. The report also drew attention to the fact that 99% of coverage was ‘favourable’. The consultant commented that, for a large museum, this high proportion was an unusual achievement. In more detailed parts of the report, the consultant found that the museum gained an almost equal value of coverage in print and electronic media. Within the print media, by far the most coverage (53%) was gained in Sydney’s metropolitan daily newspapers, and here almost equal coverage was gained in the Sydney Morning Herald and the Daily Telegraph. Almost 60% of coverage, in all media, was concerned with the museum’s exhibitions. The exhibitions which drew the most attention were, in order: NAVY, Lost for 500 Years... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam and Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film. P U B LIC ATIO N S AND W E B S ITE Print and electronic publications such as the web site http://www.anmm.gov.au support the museum’s reputation and recognition, and take it to international audiences (see Appendix 5). The stylish exhibition Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film was accompanied by a stylish exhibition catalogue with essays by curator Rosie Nice and Dr Fiona Allon of the Centre for Cultural Research, University of Western Sydney. The catalogue extended the exhibition themes, guiding readers from bare chests and tattoos to Japanese schoolgirls in sailor suits, via Jean Genet's Querelle de Brest. In March the museum was co-publisher with Halstead Press of the long-awaited Wooden Boats, Iron Men - The Halvorsen Story by Randi Svensen. The handsomely illustrated hardcover was the culmination of a longstanding commitment by the museum to document this important Norwegian-Australian maritime family and its achievements as gifted designers and boatbuilders, astute marketers and champion sailors. The publication capped the museum's long association with the Halvorsens, who carried out an acclaimed restoration of museum vessel Kathleen Gillett (a Norwegian Government Bicentennial Gift). Generous donations of plans, photographs, documents and tools by family members have made the museum the major repository of this boatbuilding dynasty’s history. The new book is a valued addition to the records of Australia's maritime heritage. The web site continues a steady growth in usage, logging 475,000 separate visits from 191,600 unique visitors (2002-2003: 401,566 visits). In this financial year we embarked on a complete, top-to-bottom redevelopment of the website. The managers of publications and communications & information management services assessed 14 tenders. The Adelaide company United Focus Pty Ltd was selected to guide and implement the planning phase of the redevelopment, which will emphasise improved architecture and useability, design, content management, interactivity and e-commerce. The analysis, scoping, specifications and implementation will proceed over the 2004-05 financial year. The publications section administers a growing demand by publishers and individuals for reproductions of images from the collection. The section dealt with 142 such requests during the year. DESIGN A N D PR EPAR ATIO N Good design is vital to the contemporary representation of Australia's maritime past and present. This year our designers worked hard and imaginatively to create two vastly different temporary exhibitions - Sydney Working Harbour and Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film, as well as reinvigorating Watermarks and Wetworld.
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
Designers spent about 62% of their time on exhibition projects; preparators spent 71% of theirs on exhibitions and public programs; and our graphic designers worked for 25% of their time on the many public programs produced by the museum to complement exhibitions. In addition, the design section provided professional expertise to a number of community organisations, including assistance to the Cruising Yacht Club for an exhibition commemorating the Sydney-Hobart yacht race (planned for the 2004 race), and advice to the Newcastle Maritime Museum on relocation to new premises. TH E W E LC O M E W ALL Three panels of the Welcome Wall were unveiled this year. Well-known chef and restaurateur Stefano Manfredi unveiled 806 new names on panels 33 and 34 at an event held during the Mediterranean Tucker Festival in November. A record 1,500 guests participated in the ceremony and stayed to enjoy the food festival. Panel 35, with another 398 names, was unveiled on Mothers Day 2004 in a ceremony themed around motherhood and migration. In the past year, 1,493 new names were registered, compared to 1,181 in the same period in the previous year. Excellent print media coverage, especially in ethnic community newspapers, and successful advertising campaigns, especially on SBS radio and television, have increased registrations and awareness of the Welcome Wall, the museum's lasting tribute to the six million people who have migrated from across the seas to make their homes in Australia. M EM BER S The introduction of the new pricing system in November 2003 presented a challenge to the Members manager and staff. Memberships dropped off in the last two quarters of the year. This was anticipated from the experience of other museums where similar changes have occurred, and the Membership office is focused on reversing the trend. There were 1,622 new Members in the period, bringing total membership at 30 June 2004 to 7,751. In addition, we welcomed four new corporate Members, bringing the number of corporate supporters to 31. This year 17,073 Members and their guests visited the museum, with our wide-ranging program of events attracting over 3,000 Members and guests. Membership offers visitors the opportunity to become more closely involved with the museum. Exhibition previews, curators' talks, family activities and ‘on the water’ events are among the most diverse and imaginative of any comparable organisation, with events in the latter category always fully subscribed. Revenue from these functions went some way towards maintaining our budgeted revenue figures following the reduction in membership revenue. Increasingly, events are conducted jointly with other museum and community organisations. For example, in the past year our Members joined friends of the Art Gallery of NSW, Powerhouse Museum, Sydney Observatory, Earthwatch, Australian Heritage Fleet and the International Fund for Animal Welfare. Members enjoyed the broader interest-base these initiatives afforded. C O R P O R A TE S U P P O R T The museum continues to benefit from corporate support. Sponsors increasingly express a preference for long rather than short-term partnerships with the museum. As a result we have developed a new strategy and already achieved positive results by offering partnership agreements that continue beyond exhibition viewing dates. This arrangement often gives sponsors more flexibility to partner according to their budgets. In addition, the extended financial period gives sponsors more time to experience the special benefits of museum partnership.
REPUTATION AND RECOGNITION KEY RESULT AREA 4
New sponsor partnerships have been formed this year with market industry leaders Tenix, Raytheon Australia and Lloyd’s Register of Shipping. VOLU N TEER S At 30 June, the 335 registered volunteers at the museum had contributed 46,180 hours. The total is 3,140 hours more than for the same period last year, and 15.4% above the museum's target of 40,000 hours. Altogether, since the volunteer program began, volunteers have contributed 368,907 hours - an astonishing achievement. Volunteer guides escorted 29,216 visitors on 3,678 Vampire tours this year; over 436,355 visitors have been on volunteer guides’ tours of Vampire since the museum opened in November 1991. General museum guides have conducted 2,944 tours, escorting 11,927 visitors. The Cape Bowling Green Lighthouse was re-opened in December last year. Since then volunteer guides have led a total of 242 tours, escorting 5,247 appreciative visitors. Wharf 7 tour guides have conducted 606 tours, escorting 999 visitors. Volunteers continue to act as enthusiastic ambassadors for the musem, and bring Australian maritime history vividly to life for the large and appreciative audiences with whom they engage.
ADVERTISIN G & M ARK ET RESEARCH
2001-02
2 0 02-03
2 0 0 3 -0 4
Advertising agency
$108,043
$91,259
$82,028
$33,513
$13,636
$0
$2,711
$763
$505
2001-02
20 02-03
2 0 0 3-04
Market research organisations Direct mail
SPONSORSHIP PERFORM ANCE Number of new sponsorships
6
6
8
% value of new sponsorships
+48%
-4 8 %
+57%
Cash committed
*$280,000
In-kind committed
*$32,700
Received in financial year (cash & kind)
$574,247
$299,832
$158,104
TOTAL
$574,427
$299,832
$470,804
2001-02
2002-03
2 0 03-04
* new reporting items against Strategic Plan for 2003-2006
M EM BERS PROGRAM Memberships at 30 June 2003
3,717
3,764
2,970
10,220
10,043
7,751
Percentage renewing
74
71%
63%
Corporate Memberships
32
29
31
Gross revenue
$294,702
$293,875
$311,518
Net revenue
Members at 30 June 2003
$170,533
$127,316
$176,416
Donations
na
$15,566
$16,571
Exclusive Members functions held
53
66
62
2,748
2,965
3,164
19,640
21,615
17,073
Members attending functions Members & guests visiting museum
PERFORMANCE REPORTING
VOLUNTEERS SER VICE PROFILE (% OF SER VICE TIM E)
2001-02
2002-03
2 0 0 3 -0 4
Guides
59.2
60.4
63.7
Fleet
13.9
13.2
11.6
Members
8.7
7.6
7.2
Others*
6.8
6.4
5.1
Public programs
4.4
2.8
3.5
Volunteer office
1.0
1.3
1.3
Conservation
2.0
2.4
Registration
1.8
2.3
1.8 2.6
Marketing/External relations
2.2
3.4
3.2
Curatorial
0.0
0.2
0.0
2 0 0 1-02
2 0 03-03
2 0 0 3 -0 4
1,305
1,517
1,023
85%
88%
86 %
3%
1%
0%
12%
11%
14%
2001-02
2 0 02-03
2 0 0 3 -0 4
Complaint
20
18
26
Complimentary
57
76
89
^Includes library, records, design and secretariat and miscellaneous task hours
CUSTOM ER FEEDBACK V isito r com m ents book Number of entries Complimentary or positive Neutral or indecipherable Criticism/suggested improvements
LETTERS AND EM AILS
60
PER FO R M AN CE O VE R VIE W This overview, based on the museum’s achievements over the 2003-2004 financial year, addresses the Key Performance Indicators of the Australian National Maritime Museum Strategic Plan 2003-2006. KEY RESULT A R E A 1 Engaging our audiences Understand our audiences and interpret Australia's maritime heritage in exciting and informative ways Key Performance Indicator 1.1 Visitor satisfaction Percentage of ANMM visitors who express overall satisfaction: 95 % Key Performance Indicator 1.2 Number o f interactions Total number of interactions 1,668,503 Key Performance Indicator 1.3 Accuracy o f visitor predictions Percentage above or below predicted total museum visitors annually: 31 % above Key Performance Indicator 1. 4 Annual income net o f government sources $5.3 million income from all non-government sources K E Y R ES U LT A R E A 2 M a ritim e H e rita g e Foster the care and research of Australia's maritime heritage and material culture Key Performance Indicator 2.1 State o f the collection Implementation of revised Collection Development Policy: policy revised and presented to Council Key Performance Indicator 2.2 Research profile Number of published articles/papers by museum staff: 43 articles, 34 papers Key Performance Indicator 2.3 Reach into m aritim e heritage com m unity Number of collaborative projects related to maritime heritage: 30 Key Performance Indicator 2.4 Profile o f Australian m aritim e history Increase in numbers of organisations assisted nationally by ANMM: 0.4% KEY RESULT A R E A 3 Infrastructure Development Develop our facilities and assets to provide the most effective and efficient infrastructure for our programs, services, collections management and professional work Key Performance Indicator 3.1 Stakeholder satisfaction with infrastructure Percentage of external users and stakeholder who express overall satisfaction with the ANMM infrastructure: 85% Key Perform ance Indicator 3.2 Relative cost of infrastructure Percentage of major infrastructure projects completed within budget: 100% Key Performance Indicator 3.3 Business excellence Management systems meet Standards Australia criteria for business excellence: working towards 2006 deadline KEY RESULT A R E A 4 Reputation and Recognition Be acknowledged as a pre-eminent and innovative cultural institution Key Performance Indicator 4.1 Reputation Focus group panels consensus rating of ANMM reputation: high to very high Key Perform ance Indicator 4.2 ANMM involvement in community, national & international p olicy/p ra ctice s Rise in formal advice requests received / provided on museum issues: -15% Key Performance Indicator 4.3 Sponsorship $ value of sponsorships: $470,804 together in cash & kind
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
Above Russell Crowe as Captain
Opposite Details from an Adm iral’s
Jack Aubrey in Peter W eir’s film
uniform, of serge, silk, felt and
Master and Commander: The Far
cotton, about 1900. The museum
Side o f the World. © Twentieth
acquired the dress coat, cocked
Century Fox Hom e Entertainment
hat and japanned tin epaulette box
Inc All rights reserved
belonging to Surgeon Lieutenant
The costume department, headed
Comm ander KB Donovan of the
by W endy Stites, made 3,000
British Royal Navy Reserve.
costumes from 15,000 yards of fabric woven in China, Pakistan, Italy and India. A fabric samples book is on display in Sailor Style - A rt Fashion Film.
62
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL M ARITIM E MUSEUM STATEMENT BY COUNCIL MEMBERS In our opinion, the attached financial statem ents for the year ended 30 June 2004 are based on properly maintained financial records and give a true and fair view of the matterst required by the Finance M inister’s Orders made underthe Commonwealth and Com panies Act 1997. In our opinion, at the date of this statem ent, there are reasonable grounds to believe that the Australian National Maritime Museum will be able to pay its debts as and when they become due and payable. This statem ent is made in accordance with a resolution of councillors. Signed
Signed
Qs Mark Bethwalte, Chairman
Mary-Louise W illiam s, Director
2 September 2004
2 September 2004
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS section three
A A u s tra lia n N a tio n a l
Audit Office INDEPENDENT AUDIT REPORT To the Minister for the Arts and Sports
Scope The financial statements comprise: •
Statement by Council Members;
•
Statements o f Financial Performance, Financial Position and Cash Flows;
•
Schedules o f Commitments and Contingencies; and
•
Notes to and form ing part o f the Financial Statements
o f the Australian National Maritime Museum, for the year ended 30 June 2004. The Council Members are responsible for the preparation and true and fair presentation o f the financial statements in accordance with the Finance M inister’s Orders made under the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies A ct 1997. This includes responsibility for the maintenance o f adequate accounting records and internal controls that are designed to prevent and detect fraud and error, and for the accounting policies and accounting estimates inherent in the financial statements.
Audit approach I have conducted an independent audit o f the financial statements in order to express an opinion on them to you. M y audit has been conducted in accordance w ith the Australian National Audit Office Auditing Standards, which incorporate the Australian Auditing and Assurance Standards, in order to provide reasonable assurance as to whether the financial statements are free o f material misstatement. The nature o f an audit is influenced by factors such as the use o f professional judgement, selective testing, the inherent limitations of internal control, and the availability o f persuasive, rather than conclusive, evidence. Therefore, an audit cannot guarantee that all material misstatements have been detected. While the effectiveness o f management’s internal controls over financial reporting was considered when determining the nature and extent o f audit procedures, the audit was not designed to provide assurance on internal controls.
Procedures were performed to assess whether, in all material respects, the financial statements present fairly, in accordance with the Finance M inister’s Orders made under the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies Act 1997, Accounting Standards and other mandatory financial reporting requirements in Australia, a view which is consistent with my understanding o f the M useum’s financial position, and of its performance as represented by the Statements o f Financial Performance and Cash Flows. The audit opinion is formed on the basis of these procedures, which included: • •
examining, on a test basis, information to provide evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements; and assessing the appropriateness o f the accounting policies and disclosures used, and the reasonableness o f significant accounting estimates made by the Council Members.
Independence In conducting the audit, I have followed the independence requirements of the Australian National Audit Office, which incorporate Australian professional ethical pronouncements.
Audit Opinion In my opinion, the financial statements: (i) have been prepared in accordance with the Finance M inister’s Orders made under the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies Act 1997 and applicable Accounting Standards; and (ii) give a true and fair view, o f the matters required by applicable Accounting Standards and other mandatory professional reporting requirements in Australia, and the Finance Minister’s Orders, o f the financial position of the Australian National Maritime Museum as at 30 June 2004, and its performance and cash flows for the year then ended.
Australian National Audit Office
P Hinchey Senior Director Delegate o f the Auditor-General Sydney 2 September 2004
AUS TR ALIAN NATIONAL M AR ITIM E MUSEUM STATEM ENT OF FIN AN CIAL PERFORM ANCE for the year ended 30 June 2004 Notes
2004
2003
$000
$ ’000
REVENUE Revenue from ordinary a ctivitie s Revenue from Government
4A
19,930
29,513
Goods and services
4B
4,760
4,824
Interest
4C
336
395
Revenue from sale of assets
4D
6
23
Other Revenues
4E
1,361
1,383
26,393
36,138
Total revenues from ordinary a ctivitie s EXPENSES Expenses from ordinary activitie s (excluding borrowing costs expense) Employees
5A
8,604
7,804
Suppliers
5B
9,693
9,702
Grants
5C
36
30
Depreciation and amortisation
5D
8,442
7,123
Write-down of assets
5E
122
301
Value of assets sold
4D
3
19
26,900
24,979
973
1,074
Operating surplus (deficit) from ordinary activities
(1.480)
10.085
Net profit (loss)
(1.480)
10.085
92,971
14.971
92,971
14.971
91,491
25,056
Total expenses from ordinary activitie s (excluding borrowing costs expense) B orrow ing costs expense
Net credit to asset revaluation reserve
6
12
Total revenues, expenses and valuation adjustm ents recognised d ire ctly in equity Total changes in equ ity other than those resulting from transactions with the Australian Government as owner
The above statement should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
66
AUS TR ALIAN NATIONAL M AR ITIM E MUSEUM STATEM ENT OF FIN AN CIAL POSITION as at 30 June 2004 Notes
2004
2003
$’000
$ ’000
9,167
ASSETS Financial assets Cash
13 B
6,047
Receivables
7A
557
687
Investments
13 B
886
844
7,490
10,698
Total financial assets Non-financiai assets
8A, 8 D 162,027 8 B, 8 D 24,633 8C, 8 D 24,104 8E 74 8F 218
23,882
Total non-financiai assets
211,056
119,073
Total assets
218,546
129,771
15,007
16.510
15,007
16.510
_ 1,871
1.787
1,871
1.787
2,125
Land and buildings Infrastructure, plant and equipment National Maritime Collection Inventories Other
73,126 21,670 92 303
LIABILITIES Interest bearing lia bilities Loans
9A
Total in terest bearing liabilitie s Provisions Employees
10A
Total provisions Payables Suppliers
11A
878
Other
11B
72
122
Total payables
950
2,247
Total liabilitie s
17,828
20544
200,718
109,227
NET ASSETS EQUITY Contributed equity
12
1,000
1,000
Reserves
12
133,140
40,169
Accumulated surplus
12
Total equity Current assets N on-current assets Current liabilitie s N on-current lia bilitie s
66,578
68,058
200,718
109,227
7,635
10,946
210,911
118,825
4,488
4,080
13,340
16,464
The above statement should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
AUS TR ALIAN NATIONAL M AR ITIM E MUSEUM STATEM ENT OF CASH FLOWS for the year ended 30 June 2004 Notes
2004
2003
$000
$ '0 0 0
20,064
29,379
4,951
4,955
346
388
OPERATING A C TIVITIES Cash received Appropriations Goods and Services Interest GST received from ATO Other Total cash received
1,581
766
332
315
27,274
35,803
(7,454)
(7,008)
Cash used Employees Suppliers Borrowing costs Grants Total cash used Net cash from operating activitie s
(12,764)
(9,551)
(997)
(1,094)
(36)
____ (31) (17,684)
(21,251) 13A
6,023
18,119
__ 6
__ 22
6
22
INVESTING ACTIVITIES Cash received Proceeds from sales of property, plant & equipment Total cash received Cash used (7,604)
(5.358)
Total cash used
(7,598)
(5.358)
Net cash (used by) investing a ctivitie s
(7,598)
(5,336)
Purchase of property, plant and equipment
FINANCING A C TIVITIES Cash used (1,503)
(1,306)
______ — (1,503)
(11.124)
Net cash (used by) financing a ctivitie s
(1,503)
(11.124)
Net increase (decrease) in cash held
(3,078)
1,659
Cash at the beginning of the reporting period
10,011
8,352
6,933
10,011
Repayment of debt Capital use charge paid Total cash used
Cash at the end o f the reporting period
13B
(9,818)
The above statement should be read In conjunction with the accompanying notes.
AUS TR ALIAN NATIONAL M AR ITIM E MUSEUM SCHEDULE OF COM M ITM ENTS and CONTINGENCIES as at 30 June 2004 Notes
2004
2003
$000
$'000
S CHEDULE OF COM M ITM ENTS BY TYPE Com m itm ents 290
278
982
816
1,272
1,094
(4,995)
(6,113)
(3,723)
(5,019)
208
144
82
134
290
278
One year or less
823
319
From one to five years
159
497
982
816
Com m itm ents (receivable)
(4,995)
(6,113)
Net com m itm ents (receivable)
(3,723)
(5,019)
Operating leases Other commitments
(1)
_
Total com m itm ents Com m itm ents (receivable)
(2)
Net com m itm ents (receivable) BY M ATUR ITY Operating lease com m itm ents
(3)
One year or less From one to five years Total operating lease com mitments Other com mitments
Total other com m itm ents
N.B: Commitments are GST inclusive where relevant. (1) Other commitments include service contracts in respect of the Museum’s buildings. (2) Commitments receivable under the sublease of Level 3, Wharf 7. (3) Operating lease commitments payable include leases for storage facilities and for a motor vehicle, on which there are no contingent rentals. SCHEDULE OF CONTINGENCIES There were no contingent losses or gains as at 30 June 2004. The above schedules should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
69
AU STR ALIAN NATIONAL M AR ITIM E M USEUM NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 Note
D escription
1
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
2
Adoption of AASB Equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards from 2005-2006
70
3
Economic Dependency
4
Operating Revenues
5
Operating Expenses
6
Borrowing Cost Expense
7
Financial Assets
8
Non-Financial Assets
9
Interest Bearing Liabilities
10
Provisions
11
Payables
12
Equity
13
Cash Flow Reconciliation
14
Remuneration of Council Members
15
Related Party Disclosures
16
Remuneration of Officers
17
Remuneration of Auditors
18
Average Staffing Levels
19
Financial Instruments
20
Appropriations
21
Assets Held in Trust
22
Reporting of Outcomes
23
Australian National Maritime Foundation
NOTES TO AND FORMING PAR T OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 1.
S U M M AR Y OF SIG N IFICAN T ACCOUNTING POLICIES
1.1
Basis of Accou n tin g
The financial statements are required by clause 1(b) of Schedule 1 of the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies Act 1997 and are a general purpose financial report. The statements have been prepared in accordance with: • Finance Minister’s Orders (being the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies Orders (Financial Statements for reporting period ending on or after 30 June 2004)); • Australian Accounting Standards and Accounting Interpretations issued by the Australian Accounting Standards Board; and • Consensus Views of the Urgent Issues Group. The Statements of Financial Performance and Financial Position have been prepared on an accrual basis and are in accordance with historical cost convention, except for certain assets which, as noted, are at valuation. Except where stated, no allowance is made for the effect of changing prices on the results or the financial position. Assets and liabilities are recognised in the Statement of Financial Position when and only when it is probable that future economic benefits will flow and the amounts of the assets or liabilities can be reliably measured. Assets and liabilities arising under agreements equally proportionately unperformed are however not recognised unless required by an accounting standard. Liabilities and assets that are unrecognised are reported in the Schedule of Commitments and the Schedule of Contingencies. Revenues and expenses are recognised in the Statement of Financial Performance when and only when the flow or consumption or loss of economic benefit has occurred and can be reliably measured. Consolidation and associated company. The financial statements show information for the economic entity only; this reflects the consolidated results for the parent entity, the Australian National Maritime Museum, and its wholly owned controlled entity, The Australian National Maritime Foundation. The results of the parent entity do not differ materially from the economic entity and have therefore not been separately disclosed. The Australian National Maritime Foundation is a company limited by guarantee, with an initial contribution of $385,620. See note 23. The accounting policies of The Australian National Maritime Foundation are consistent with those of the Museum and its assets, liabilities and results have been consolidated with the parent entity accounts in accordance with AAS24 - Consolidated Financial Reports. All internal transactions and balances have been eliminated on consolidation. 1.2
Changes in A cco u n tin g Policies
The accounting policies used in the preparation of these financial statements are consistent with those used in 2002-2003, except in respect of: • the initial revaluation of property, plant and equipment on a fair value basis (see note 1 . 1 1 ); and • the imposition of an impairment test for non-current assets carried at cost (see note 1.18).
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 1.3
Revenue
The revenues described in this Note are revenues relating to the core operating activities of the Museum. Revenue from the sale of goods is recognised upon the delivery of goods to customers. Interest revenue is recognised on a time proportionate basis that takes into account the effective yield on the relevant asset. Revenue from disposal of non-current assets is recognised when control of the asset has passed to the buyer. Revenue from the rendering of a service is recognised by reference to the stage of completion of the contract to provide the service. The stage of completion is determined according to the proportion that costs incurred to date bear to the estimated total costs of the transaction. Receivables for goods and services are recognised at the nominal amounts due less any provision for bad and doubtful debts. Collectability of debts is reviewed at balance date. Provisions are made when collectability of the debt is judged to be less rather than more likely. Revenues from Government - Output Appropriations The full amount of the appropriation for departmental outputs for the year is recognised as revenue. Resources Received Free o f Charge Services received free of charge are recognised as revenue when and only when a fair value can be reliably determined and the services would have been purchased if they had not been donated. Use of the resources is recognised as an expense. Contributions of assets at no cost of acquisition or for nominal consideration are recognised as revenue at their fair value when the asset qualifies for recognition. 1.4
Employee Benefits
Benefits Liabilities for services rendered by employees are recognised at the reporting date to the extent that they have not been settled. Liabilities for wages and salaries (including non-monetary benefits), and annual leave are measured at their nominal amounts. Other employee benefits expected to be settled within 12 months of their reporting date are also measured at their nominal amounts. The nominal amount is calculated with regard to the rates expected to be paid on settlement of the liability. All other employee benefit liabilities are measured as the present value of the estimated future cash outflows to be made in respect of services provided by employees up to the reporting date.
72
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 Leave The liability for employee benefits includes provision for annual leave and long service leave. No provision has been made for sick leave as all sick leave is non-vesting and the average sick leave taken in future years by employees is estimated to be less than the annual entitlement for sick leave. The leave liabilities are calculated on the basis of employees’ remuneration, including employer superannuation contribution rates to the extent that the leave is likely to be taken during service rather than paid out on termination. The non-current portion of the liability for long service leave is recognised and measured at the present value of the estimated future cash flows to be made in respect of all employees at 30 June 2004. In determining the present value of the liability, the Museum has taken into account attrition rates and pay increases through promotion and inflation. Superannuation Employees contribute to the Commonwealth Superannuation Scheme and Public Sector Superannuation Scheme. The liability for their superannuation benefits is recognised in the financial statements of the Australian Government and is settled by the Australian Government in due course. The Museum makes employer contributions to the Australian Government at rates determined by an actuary to be sufficient to meet the cost to the Government of the superannuation entitlements of the Museum’s employees. 1.5
Leases
A distinction is made between finance leases, which effectively transfer from the lessor to the lessee substantially all the risks and benefits incidental to ownership of leased non-current assets, and operating leases, under which the lessor effectively retains substantially all such risks and benefits. The Museum has no finance leases. Operating lease payments are expensed on a basis that is representative of the pattern of benefits derived from the leased assets. 1.6
Borrow ing Costs
All borrowing costs are expensed as incurred. 1.7
Grants
The Museum recognises grant liabilities as follows. Most grant agreements require the grantee to perform services or provide facilities, or to meet eligibility criteria. In these cases, liabilities are recognised only to the extent that the services required have been performed or the eligibility criteria have been satisfied by the grantee. In cases where grant agreements are made without conditions to be monitored, liabilities are recognised on signing of the agreement.
73
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 1.8
Cash
Cash means notes and coins held and any deposits held at call with a bank or financial institution. Cash is recognised at its nominal amount. Interest is credited to revenue as it accrues. 1.9
Other Financial Liabilities
Bills of exchange are carried at the amount of their initial proceeds plus accrued interest. Trade creditors and accruals are recognised at their nominal amounts, being the amounts at which the liabilities will be settled. Liabilities are recognised to the extent that the goods and services have been received (and irrespective of having been invoiced). Interest payable is accrued overtim e. 1.10
Acqu isition of Assets
Assets are recorded at cost on acquisition except as stated below. The cost of acquisition includes the fair value of assets transferred in exchange and liabilities undertaken. Assets acquired at no cost, or for nominal consideration, are initially recognised as assets and revenues, at their fair value at the date of acquisition. 1.11
Property (Land and B uildings), and Infrastructure, Plant and Equipment
Asset Recognition Threshold Purchases of property, infrastructure, plant and equipment are recognised initially at cost in the Statement of Financial Position, except for purchases costing less than $2 ,000 , which are expensed in the year of acquisition (other than where they form part of a group of similar items which are significant in total). Revaluations Land, buildings, infrastructure, plant and equipment and the National Maritime Collection are carried at valuation. Revaluations undertaken up to 30 June 2002 were done on a deprival basis; revaluations since that date are at fair value. This change in accounting policy is required by Australian Accounting Standard AASB 1041. Revaluation of Non-Current Assets. Fair and deprival values for each class of assets are determined as shown below. Asset Class
Fair Value Measured at:
Land
Market selling price
Deprival Value Measured at: Market selling price
Buildings
Market selling price
Depreciated replacement cost
Leasehold Improvements
Depreciated replacement cost
Depreciated replacement cost
Exhibition Fitouts
Market selling price
Depreciated replacement cost
Plant & Equipment
Market selling price
Depreciated replacement cost
National Maritime Collection
Market selling price
Market selling price
Linder both deprival and fair value, assets which are surplus to requirements are measured at their net realisable value. At 30 June 2004, there were no assets in this situation.
NOTES TO AND FORM ING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 Frequency Land, buildings, infrastructure, plant and equipment and the National Maritime Collection are revalued progressively in successive three-year cycles, so that no asset has a value greater than three years old. The Museum completed its asset revaluation on 30 June 2004, with asset groups updated as follows: • leasehold land and buildings were revalued in 2003-04; • leasehold improvements have been revalued in 2001 - 02 ; • exhibition fitouts have been revalued by type of asset in 2001 - 02 ; • plant and equipment, including information technology equipment, have been revalued by type of asset in 2001 - 02 ; • the National Maritime Collection has been revalued in 2002-03. There was no change in the valuation of Land and buildings or the National Maritime Collection as a result of adoption of the change of valuation basis required by the above standard. Assets in each class acquired after the commencement of a progressive revaluation cycle are not captured by the progressive revaluation then in progress. The Finance Minister’s Orders require that all property, plant and equipment assets be measured at up-to-date fair values from 30 June 2005 onwards. The current year is therefore the last year in which the Museum will undertake progressive revaluations. Conduct All valuations are conducted by an independent qualified valuer. Depreciation and Amortisation Depreciable property, plant and equipment assets are written off to their estimated residual values over their estimated useful lives to the Museum using, in all cases, the straight line method of depreciation. Leasehold improvements are amortised on a straight line basis over the lesser of the estimated useful life of the improvements or the unexpired period of the lease. Depreciation/amortisation rates (useful lives) and methods are reviewed at each reporting date and necessary adjustments are recognised in the current, or current and future reporting periods, as appropriate. Residual values are re-estimated for a change in prices only when assets are revalued. Depreciation and amortisation rates applying to each class of depreciable asset are based on the following useful lives:
75
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 2003-04
2002-03
Leasehold land
Lease term (105 years)
Lease term (105 years)
Buildings
22 years
Capitalised loan interest
22 years
22 years 22 years
Leasehold improvements
Lease term or 10 years
Lease term or 10 years
Exhibition fitouts
7 - 20 years
7 - 2 0 years
Plant & equipment
3 - 20 years
3 - 2 0 years
The Collection is not depreciated because of its long term nature and the expected appreciation of its historical value. The aggregate amount of depreciation allowed for each class of asset during the reporting period is disclosed in Note 5D. 1.12
Inventories
Inventories held for resale by the Museum store are valued at the lower of costand net realisable value. 1.13
Taxation
The Museum is exempt from all forms of taxation except fringe benefits tax and the goods and services tax (GST). Revenues, expenses and assets are recognised net of GST: • except where the amount of GST incurred is not recoverable from the Australian Taxation Office; and • except for receivables and payables. 1.14
Foreign Currency
Transactions denominated in a foreign currency are converted at the exchange rate at the date of the transaction. Foreign currency receivables and payables (if any) are translated at the exchange rates current as at balance date. Associated currency gains and losses are not material. 1.15
Insurance
The Museum has insured for risks through the Government’s insurable risk managed fund, called 'Comcover'. Workers compensation is insured through Comcare Australia. 1.16
Com parative Figures
Comparative figures have been adjusted to conform to changes in presentation in these financial statements where required. 1.17
Rounding
Amounts are rounded to the nearest $1,000 except in relation to: • remuneration of council members (note 14); • remuneration of officers (note 16); • remuneration of auditors (note 17); • assets held in trust (note 2 1 ); and • Australian National Maritime Foundation (note 23).
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 1.18
Im pairm ent of Non-Current Assets
Non-current assets carried at up-to-date fair value at the reporting date are not subject to impairment testing. Non-current assets carried at cost or deprival value and held to generate net cash inflows have been tested for their recoverable amounts at the reporting date. The test compared the carrying amounts against the net present value of future net cash inflows. No write-down to recoverable amount was required (2003: nil). The non-current assets carried at cost or deprival value, which are not held to generate net cash inflows, have been assessed for indications of impairment. Where indications of impairment exist, the carrying amount of the asset is compared to its net selling price and depreciated replacement cost and is written down to its higher of the two amounts, if necessary. The Museum has no internally developed software. 2.
ADOPTION OF AUS TR ALIAN EQUIVALENTS TO INTERNATIONAL FIN AN CIAL REPORTING STANDARDS FROM 2005-2006
The Australian Accounting Standards Board has issued replacement Australian Accounting Standards to apply from 2005-06. The new standards are the Australian Equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) which are issued by the International Accounting Standards Board. The new standards cannot be adopted early. The standards being replaced are to be withdrawn with effect from 2005-06, but continue to apply in the meantime. The Australian Equivalents contain certain additional provisions which will apply to notfor-profit entities, including the Australian National Maritime Museum. Some of these provisions are in conflict with the IFRSs and therefore the Musuem will only be able to assert compliance with the Australian Equivalents to the IFRSs. Existing Australian Standards that have no IFRS equivalent will continue to apply. Accounting Standard AASB 1047 Disclosing the Impact of Adopting Australian Equivalents to IFRSs requires that the financial statements for 2003-04 disclose: • An explanation of how the transition to the Australian Equivalents is being managed, and • A narrative explanation of the key differences in accounting policies arising from the transition. Management of the transition to AASB Equivalents to IFRSs The Museum has taken the following steps in preparation towards the implementation of Australian Equivalents: • The Museum’s Audit Committee is tasked with oversight of the transition to and implementation of the Australian Equivalents to IFRSs. The Chief Finance Officer is formally responsible for the project and reports regularly to the Audit Committee on progress against the formal plan approved by the Committee. • The plan requires the following key steps to be undertaken and sets deadlines for their achievement: • Identification of all major accounting policy differences between current Australian Standards and the Australian Equivalents to IFRSs progressively to 30 June 2004.
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 • Identification of systems changes necessary to be able to report under the Australian Equivalents, including those necessary to enable capture of data under both sets of rules for 2004-05, and the testing and implementation of those changes. • Preparation of a transitional balance sheet as at 1 July 2004, under Australian Equivalents, • Preparation of an Australian Equivalent balance sheet at the same time as the 30 June 2005 statements are prepared. • Meeting reporting deadlines set by Finance for 2005-06 balance sheet under Australian Equivalent Standards. • The plan also addresses the risks to successful achievement of the above objectives and includes strategies to keep implementation on track to meet deadlines. • To date, all major accounting and disclosure differences and system changes have been identified and the system changes have been tested successfully. Major changes in accounting policy Changes in accounting policies under AASB Equivalents are applied retrospectively i.e. as if the new policy had always applied. This rule means that a balance sheet prepared under the AASB Equivalents must be made as at 1 July 2004 to allow the opening (IFRS’s) balances to be prepared for the 2 0 04-05 comparatives, except as permitted in particular circumstances by AASB 1 First-time Adoption of Australian Equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards. This will enable the 2005-06 financial statements to report 2 0 04-05 comparatives under the AASB Equivalents also. Changes to major accounting policies are discussed in the following paragraphs. Property plant and equipment It is expected that the Finance Minister's Orders will require property plant and equipment assets carried at valuation in 2003-04 to be measured at up-to-date fair value from 2005-06. This differs from the accounting policies currently in place for these assets which, up to and including 2003-04, have been revalued progressively over a 3-year cycle and which currently include assets at cost (for purchases since the commencement of a cycle) and at deprival value (which will differ from their fair value to the extent that they have been measured at depreciated replacement cost when a relevant market selling price is not available). However, it is important to note that the Finance Minister requires these assets to be measured at up-to-date fair values as at 30 June 2005. Further, the transitional provisions in AASB 1 will mean that the values at which assets are carried as at 30 June 2004 under existing standards will stand in the transitional balance sheet as at 1 July 2004. Borrowing costs related to qualifying assets are currently capitalised. It is understood that the FMOs for 2005-06 will elect to expense all borrowing costs under the new Australian Equivalent standard. Accordingly, borrowing costs capitalised as at 1 July 2004 will be written-off to accumulated results. 78
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 Impairment of Non-Current Assets The Museum’s policy on impairment of non-current assets is at note 1.18. Under the new Australian Equivalent Standard, these assets will be subject to assessment for impairment and, if there are indications of impairment, measurement of any impairment (impairment measurement must also be done, irrespective of any indications of impairment, for intangible assets not yet available for use). The impairment test is that the carrying amount of an asset must not exceed the greater of (a) its fair value less costs to sell and (b) its value in use. ‘Value in use’ is the net present value of net cash inflows for for-profit assets of the Authority and depreciated replacement cost for other assets which would be replaced if the Museum were deprived of them. The most significant changes are that, for the Museum's for-profit assets, the recoverable amount is only generally to be measured where there is an indication of impairment and that assets carried at up-to-date fair value, whether for-profit or not, may nevertheless be required to be written down if costs to sell are significant. Employee Benefits The provision for long service leave is measured at the present value of estimated future cash outflows using market yields as at the reporting date on national government bonds. Under the new Australian Equivalent standard, the same discount rate will be used unless there is a deep market in high quality corporate bonds, in which case the market yield on such bonds must be used. 3.
ECONOM IC DEPENDENCY
The Australian National Maritime Museum is controlled by the Commonwealth of Australia. The Museum is dependent on appropriations from the Parliament of the Commonwealth for its continued existence and ability to carry out its normal activities.
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 2004
2003
$'000
$ 000
Appropriations for outputs
19,930
29,513
Total revenues from governm ent
19,930
29,513
4. OPERATING REVENUES 4A. Revenues from Government
The decrease in appropriations for outputs is due to the discontinuance of the Capital Use Charge, effective 1 July 2003, in accordance with a change in the accrual budgeting framework policy. 4B.
Sales of eoods and services Goods Services
577
523
4,183
4,301
4,760
4,824
Total sales of goods and services Provision of goods to: Related entities
2
—
External entities
_____ 575
_____ 523
Total sale of goods
577
523
RenderingProvision of services to: Related entities
37
21
External entities
4,146
4,280
4,183
4,301
298
269
Total rendering of services Costs of sales of goods 4C.
Interest Revenue
Deposits
336
______395
Total interest revenue
336
---
4D.
395
Net Gain from Sales of Assets
Infrastructure, plant and equipment Proceeds from sale Less: Net book value at sale
6
23
(3)
(19)
__ 3
__4
Net gain from disposal of infrastructure, plant and equipment 4E.
Other Revenues
Industry contributions Other- Donations and bequests Grants Total other revenues
159
320
1,187
1,063
^5
_______ 1,361
1,383
Donations include $1,028,700 (2002-03: $1,068,266) for service-related donationsin-kind from a range of donors.
80
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004
5. OPERATING EXPENSES
2004
2003
$’000
$ 000
5A.Employee Expenses Wages and Salaries
5,102
4,888
Superannuation
846
643
Leave and other entitlements
696
667
Other employee expenses
1,872
1,550
Total employee benefits expenses
8,516
7,748
Workers compensation premiums Total employee expenses
88
56
8,604
7,804
5B.Supplier Expenses Goods and services from related entities
1,066
951
Goods and services from external entities
8,351
8,593
Operating lease rentals Total supplier expenses 5C.
276
158
9,693
9,702
Grants Expense
The Museum makes grants to support the involvement of community groups in maritime heritage projects. Non-profit institutions 5D.
36
30
7,396
5,973
Depreciation and Amortisation
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment Amortisation of capitalised interest Amortisation of leasehold assets Total depreciation and am ortisation
68
68
978
1,082
8,442
7,123
The aggregate amounts of depreciation or amortisation expensed during the reporting period, for each class of depreciable asset are as follows: Land and Buildings
4,947
3,786
Capitalised interest
68
68
Leasehold improvements
11
13
Exhibition fitouts, plant and equipment
3,416
3,256
Total depreciation and am ortisation
8,442
7,123
Depreciation on the Museum's museum and exhibition centre building and leasehold, of $3,928,139 (2002-03: $2,712,560), increased following its revaluation on 1 July 2003. The 2002-03 depreciation charge was based on the net book value at the time of transfer to the Museum on 1 July 2000. 5E. Write-Down of Assets Plant & equipment - write-off on disposal
122
301
Total w rite-dow n of assets
122
301 81
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 6. BORROWING COST EXPENSE
2004
2003
$ ’000
$’000
Loan
973
1,074
Total borrow ing costs expense
973
1,074
7. FIN AN CIAL ASSETS 7A. Receivables Goods and services
206
96
—
134
Interest receivable
21
30
Receivable from Trust
12
38
318
389
557
687
552
682
Appropriations receivable
GST receivable
__
Total receivables (net) Receivables (gross) are aged as follows: Not overdue Overdue by: Less than 30 days
3
4
30 to 60 days
2
—
60 to 90 days
—
—
More than 90 days
________ 1
3 3 Total receivables (gross)
5
____ £
557
687
All receivables are current assets. 8. NON -FIN AN CIAL ASSETS SA.Land and Buildings Leasehold land - at valuation (2003-04)
60,000
—
Leasehold land - at valuation (2000-01)
—
10,500
Accumulated amortisation Total leasehold land
(158)
(216)
59,842
10,284
2,274
56,852
Buildings - at cost Buildings - at valuation (2003-04)
105,000
—
Buildings - at valuation (2000-01)
—
17,000
(5 ,1 54) 102,120
(11,069) 62,783
Accumulated depreciation
Leasehold improvements - at cost Leasehold improvements - at valuation (2001-02) Accumulated Amortisation Total buildings 82
Total Land and B uildings
17
—
128
128
_____ (80) 65 102,185 162,027
(69) 59 62,842 ________73,126
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004
8 B.Infrastructure. Plant and Equipment
Plant and equ ip m en t-at cost Plant and equipment - at valuation (2001-02) Accumulated depreciation
2004
2003
$'000
$’000
936
366
2,391
2,661
(1,999)
(1,782)
1,328
1,245
Exhibits fitouts - at cost
10,129
4,196
Exhibits fitouts - at valuation (2001-02)
34,772
35,053
(21,596)
(18,824)
23,305
20,425
24,633
21,670
Accumulated depreciation
Total Infrastructure, Plant and Equipm ent 80.
National Maritime Collection
National Maritime Collection - at cost National Maritime Collection - at valuation (2002-03)
395
173
23,709
23,709
24,104
23,882
Movement in Asset Revaluation Reserve Increment for Land and Buildings
92,961
—
—
14,964
Increment for Infrastructure, Plant and E q u i p m e n t ______ 10
________ 7
92,971
14,971
Increment for National Maritime Collection
All revaluations are independent and are conducted in accordance with the revaluation policy stated in Note 1. In 2003-04, a revaluation of Land and Buildings was completed by the Australian Valuation Office. The Government of the Commonwealth of Australia transferred the ownership of the Australian National Maritime Museum’s museum and exhibition centre building and leasehold to the Museum, at its net book value at the time of transfer, 1 July 2000. The first revaluation of the building and leasehold by the Museum was undertaken in 2003-04.
83
00
As at 1 July 2003 Gross book value Accumulated depreciation/amortisation Net book value Additions By purchase Net revaluation increment Assets transferred-in/out Depreciation/amortisation expense Disposals Other disposals is at 30 June 2004 Gross book value Accumulated depreciation/amortisation let book value
Infrastructure, Plant & Equipment $’000s
National Maritime Collection $'000s
Total $’000s
73,980 (11,138) 62,842
84,480 (11,354) 73,126
42,276 (20,606)
23,882
21,670
23,882
150,638 (31,960) 118,678
-
801
801
6,658
222
7,681
49,716
43,245 165 (4,868)
92,961 165 (5,026)
10
-
92,971
(165) (3,416)
-
(124)
167,419 (5,392) 162,027
48,228 (23,595) 24,633
10,500 (216) 10,284
-
(158)
-
60,000 (158) 59,842
107,419 (5,234) 102,185
-
-
(8,442)
(124)
24,104 24,104
239,751 (28,987) 210,764
o > r~ (D >
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
8D.Analvsis of Property. Plant and Equipment TABLE A Reconciliation of the opening and closing balances of property, plant and equipment Land Buildings Total Land Item & Buildings $'000s $’000s $’000s
Buildings
$’0008
$’000s
Total Land & Buildings $’000s
Infrastructure, Plant & Equipment $’000s
National Maritime Collection $’000s
Total $’000s
As at 30 June 2004 Gross value Accumulated Depreciation/Amortisation Net book value
60,000 (158) 59,842
105,128 (4,832) 100,296
165,128 (4,990) 160,138
37,164 (23,035) 14,129
23,709 23,709
226,001 (28,025) 197,976
As at 30 June 2003 Gross value Accumulated Depreciation/Amortisation Net book value
10,500 (216) 10,284
17,000 ( 1 ,686) 15,314
27,500 (1,902) 25,598
37,714 (20,531) 17,183
23,709
88,923 (22,433) 66,490
23,709
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FINANCIAL STATEM ENTS
Land
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004
TABLE B Assets at valuation as at 30 June 2004 Item
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004
8 E.
Inventory
Store inventory held for sale - at cost
2004
2003
$'000
$'000
74
92
218
303
15,007
16,510
All inventories are current assets.
8 F. Other non-financial assets Prepayments 9. INTEREST BEARING LIABILITIES 9A.
Loans
Bill of exchange
The Museum has a loan with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, which financed the construction of the Wharf 7 building. The Museum has no other debt facilities. The loan is due to be repaid by July 2010 and is payable as follows: Within one year
1,719
Within one to two years
1,944
1,719
Within two to five years
7,390
6,596
More than five years Total loan 10.
1,503
3,954
6,692
15,007
16,510
PROVISIONS
10A.
Employee Provisions
Leave Superannuation Aggregate employee benefit lia b ility Workers’ compensation Aggregate employee benefit liability and related on costs Current Non-current 11. IIA .
1,698
1,602
______173
______185
1,871
1,787
—
—
1,871
1,787
656
630
1,215
1,157
~~ 1^871
1,787
878
2,125
PAYABLES Supplier Pavables
Trade creditors
All supplier payables are current. Settlement is usually made net 30 days IIB .
Other Pavables
Advance revenue - Venue hire
65
78
Prepayments received
7
_______ 44
Total other payables
72
122
All other payables are current
NOTES TO AND FORM ING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 12.
EQUITY
Item
Opening balance as at 1 July Net surplus (deficit) Net revaluation increment Transactions with owner: Capital Use Charge Closing balance as at 30 June Total equity attributable to the Australian Government
Contributed Equity 2004 $’000 1,000
2003
$'000 1,000
Accumulated Results 2004 $'000 68,058 (1,480)
2003
$’000 67,499 10,085
Asset Revaluation Reserve
TOTAL EQUITY
2004 $’000 40,169
2003 25,198
92,971
14,971
2004 $’000 109,227 (1,480) 92,971
93,697 10,085 14,971
$’000
2003
$’000
1,000
1,000
66,578
(9,526) 68,058
133,140
40,169
200,718
(9,526) 109,227
1,000
1,000
66,578
68,058
133,140
40,169
200,718
109,227
13. CASH FLOW RECONCILIATION
2004 $’000
Note 13A:
2003 $’000
Reconciliation of Operating Surplus to Net Cash from Operating Activities:
R econciliation of operating surplus to net cash from operating a ctivitie s Operating surplus (deficit)
(1,480)
10,085
8,442
7,123
—
(20)
120
297
(lncrease)/decrease in receivables
130
(274)
(lncrease)/decrease in inventories
17
12
(lncrease)/decrease in other assets
85
(63)
lncrease/(decrease) in employee provisions
84
(65)
Non-Cash Item s Depreciation and amortisation Sponsorship-in-kind Net write down of non-current assets Changes in Assets and Liabilities
lncrease/(decrease) in liability to suppliers, deposits and accrued interest
(1,375)
1,024
Net cash from operating a ctivitie s
6,023
18,119
Note 13B:
Reconciliation of Cash
Cash balance comprises: Cash at bank and on hand
1,078
717
Deposits at call
4,969
8,450
Total cash
6,047
9,167
____ 886
844
886
844
6,933
10,011
10
20
Cash investments - bank bills Total investm ents Balance of cash as at 30 June shown in the Statement of Cash Flows Note 13C:
Non-Cash Financing and Investing Activities
Non-cash financing and investing activities
During 2003-04, equipment of $10,000 was received from a sponsor (2002-03: $20,000). 87
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 14.REM UNERATION OF COUNCIL M EM BERS The number of Council Members of the Museum included in these figures are shown below in the relevant remuneration bands $ Nil - $10,000
2
3
$10,001 - $20,000
7
6
$20,001 - $30,000
1
1
$ 210,001 - $ 220,000
____________ 1
1
Total number of Council Members of the Museum
11
Aggregate amount of superannuation payments in connection with the retirement of Council Members of the Museum
11
$
$
304
832
331,078
317,793
Other remuneration received or due and receivable by Council Members of the Museum Total rem uneration received or due and receivable by Council Members of the Museum 15.
____
______
331,382
318,625
RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURES
Council Members of the Museum during the year were: Mr Mark Bethwaite (Chairman) Ms Mary-Louise Williams (Director) Mr John Farrell (resigned 17 October 2003) Mr Marcus Blackmore Mr John Simpson Mr Brian Gibson Ms Eda Ritchie Ms Nerolie Withnall CDRE Russell Crane CSM RAN (retired 30 April 2004) Ms Gaye Hart AM Dr Andrew Sutherland Dr John Penrose (appointed 18 December 2003) CDRE Geoff Geraghty (appointed 1 May 2004) Mr John Rothwell (appointed 24 June 2004) The aggregate remuneration of Council Members is disclosed in Note 14. 16
REM UNERATION OF OFFICER S
The number of officers who received or were due to receive total remuneration of $100,000 or more:
88
2004
2003
$110,000 - $119,999
-
$120,000 - $129,999
-
1 2
$130,000-$139,999
2
-
$140,000-$149,999
1
_______ 3
Total
3
3
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 $
$
403,945
367,866
The aggregate amount of total remuneration of officers shown above.
The officer remuneration includes all officers concerned with or taking part in the management of the Museum during 2003-04 except the Director. Details in relation to the Director have been incorporated into Note 14: Remuneration of Council Members. 17.
REM UNERATION OF AUDITORS
Remuneration to the Auditor-General for auditing the financial statements for the reporting period
34,000
34,000
No other services were provided by the Auditor-General during the reporting period 18. AVER AG E STAFFING LEVELS The average staffing levels forthe Museum during the year were
100
97
89
o
AUSTRALIAN
19.
FIN AN CIAL INSTRUMENTS
Financial Instrum ent
Notes
Cash
13 B
13 B
Receivables
7A
Financial Liabilities 9A Loans
Trade Creditors
11A
Other Payables
11B
o > r" C/3
a m 2
m
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2 0 0 3 - 2 0 0 4
Investments
â– o > 33 H O â– n H
NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM
Financial Assets
Nature of underlying Instrument (Including sign ifican t term s and conditions affectin g the amount, tim in g and ce rta in ty of cash flows) Financial assets are recognised when control over future economic benefits is established and the amount of the benefit can be reliably measured. Temporarily surplus funds, mainly from monthly drawdowns of Deposits are recognised at their nominal amounts. Interest is appropriation, are placed on deposit at call with the ANZ Bank and credited to revenue as it accrues. the Commonwealth Bank. Interest is earned on the daily balance at the prevailing daily rate for money at call and is paid monthly. The bills are funds with the ANZ Bank, in 30 day accounts. Interest is The bills are recognised at cost. Interest is accrued as it is earned. earned at the prevailing rate and is paid monthly. Credit terms are net 30 days (2002-03: 30 days) Receivables are recognised at the nominal amounts due less any provision for bad and doubtful debts. Provision is made when collection of the debt is judged to be unlikely. Financial liabilities are recognised when a present obligation to another party is entered into and the amount of the liability can be reliably measured. Bills are issued at a discount reflecting market yields. They have an Bills are carried at the amount of their initial proceeds plus accrued average maturity of 90 days and an effective interest rate of 6.9%. interest. Interest is expensed as it accrues. The bills will be fully repaid in July 2010. Settlement is usually made net 30 days (2002-03: 30 days) Trade creditors are recognised at their nominal amounts, being the amounts at which the liabilities will be settled. Liabilities are recognised to the extent that the goods or services have been received (and irrespective of having been invoiced). Service revenue is recognised as it is earned, at the date the service Deposits for advance services are recognised at their nominal is provided. amounts. A cco u n tin g Policies and Methods (Including recognition criteria and measurement basis)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
557 557
Total 03-04 $’000 687 687
1,078 5,855 557 7,490
02-03
$’000
Weighted Avg Effective Interest Rate 03-04 02-03 % %
717 9,294 687 10,698
3.30 4.50 n/a
2.50 4.00 n/a
6.9 n/a n/a
6.9 n/a n/a
129,771 15,007 15,007
16,510
16,510
878 72 950
2,125
122 2,247
15,007 878 72 15,957
16,510 2,215
122 18,757 20,544
-
-
-
-
-
-
4,995
6,113
4,995
6,113
n/a
n/a
-
-
-
-
-
-
4,995 1,272
6,113 1,094
4,995 1,272
6,113 1,094
n/a
n/a
I 1272
1,094
1,272
1,094
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FINANCIAL STATEM ENTS
Total financial liabilities recognised Total Liabilities Unrecognised Instruments Schedule of Other Commitments commitments Total financial assets (Unrecognised) Schedule of Other Commitments commitments Total financial liabilities (Unrecognised)
Non-Interest Bearing 02-03 03-04 $’000 $’000
> 5 years 02-03 03-04 $'000 $’000
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004
19. b) Financial Instruments: Interest Rate Risk Fixed Interest Rate Notes Floating Financial 1 year or less 1 - 5 years Interest Rate Instrument 03-04 02-03 03-04 02-03 03-04 02-03 $'000 $’000 $000 $'000 $’000 $’000 Financial Assets 717 13B 1,078 Cash 844 13B 886 Investments 4,969 8,450 7A Receivables 844 6,047 9,167 886 Total financial assets recognised Total Assets Financial Liabilities 9A Loans 11A Trade creditors 11B Other Payables
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE A R ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 19.
FIN AN C IAL INSTRUM ENTS
19. c) Nat Fair Values of Financial Assets and Liabilities
2003-04
Financial Assets
Note
Cash Investments Receivables
13 B 13B 7A
Total Financial Assets
2002-03
Total
Aggregate
carrying
net fair
amount
value
Total carrying amount
Aggregate net fair value
$'000 6,047 886 557
$’000 6,047 886 557
$'000
$'000
9,167 844 687
9,167 844 687
7,490
7,490
10,698
10,698
15,007 878 72
15,412 878 72
16,510 2,125
17,543 2,125
122
122
15,957
16,362
18,757
19,790
Financial Liabilities (Recognised)
Loans Trade creditors Other payables
9A 11A 11B
Total Financial Liabilities (Recognised)
Financial Assets The net fair values of cash, deposits on call and receivables approximate their carrying amounts. The net fair values of bank bills are based on discounted cash flows using current interest rates for assets with similar risk profiles. Financial Liabilities The net fair value of trade creditors are approximated by their carrying amounts. The net fair value of the bills of exchange, which will be rolled over after 90 day maturity periods for up to 8 years to finance the long-term loan, are based on discounted cash flows using current interest rates for liabilities with similar risk profiles. d) C redit R isk Exposures The Museum's maximum exposures to credit risk at reporting date in relation to each class of recognised financial assets is the carrying amount of those assets as indicated in the Statement of Financial Position. The Museum has no significant exposures to any concentrations of credit risk. All figures for credit risk referred to do not take into account the value of any collateral or other security. 20.
APPROPRIATIONS
The Museum received the following appropriations during the year out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund:
D epartm ental Outputs
Year ended 30 June 2004
2004 $’000
2003 $’000
— 19,728 202 19,930 19,930
— 29,379 — 29,379 29,379
—
—
Balance carried forward from previous year Annual Appropriation Bill No 1 - Basic Appropriation Annual Appropriation Bill No 3 - Basic Appropriation Available for payment of CRF Payments made out of CRF Balance carried forward to next year
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 21.ASSETS HELD IN TRUST The Museum has established a number of Trust accounts which are detailed below. Donations and bequests are received for specified purposes under formal trust arrangements. Moneys received are placed in a special bank account and expended on the specified projects in accordance with the terms of the trusts. These moneys are not available for other purposes of the Museum and are not recognised in the financial statements. a)
USA Bicentennial G ift Fund
In December 1987 a gift of US$5 million was received to develop and maintain the USA Gallery at the Museum. Upon completion of the fitout the assets were transferred to the Museum. The financial position of the Fund is as follows: 2004 Opening balance at 1 July
2003
3,255,310
3,408,450
181,326
205,760
Receipts: Distributions Tax Credits
19.978
16,254 _______ 474
Exhibitions 3,456,614
3,630,938
Less payments: Acquisitions Other expenses lncrease/(decrease) in value of Managed Fund Closing balance at 30 June
25,808
24,658
130,300
83,343
263,272
(267,627)
3.563.778
3,255,310
Represented by: 3,486,874
3,163,802
Distributions Receivable
70,230
112,935
Tax credits receivable
19.978
16,254
(13,304)
(37,681)
3.563.778
3,255,310
Managed Funds
Liability to Museum
The USA Gallery funds are deposited into a long-term investment with Merrill Lynch Mercury Wholesale Balanced Fund. Ongoing operational expenses are financed from distributions payable from this Fund. b)
NZ Bicentennial G ift Fund
A fund was created to research and develop educational material and undertake maintenance relating to the yacht Akarana. The financial position of the Fund is as follows: Opening balance at 1 July Receipts: Interest Closing balance at 30 June
2004 $ 48,029
2003
$ 45,777
2,467
2,252
50.496
48,029
50,432
48,029
Represented by: Investment Interest Receivable
64 50.496
48,029
93
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 c)
M aritim e Museum Bequest Fund
In March 2003, a fund was created to accommodate non-specific bequests made to the Museum. The financial position of the Fund is as follows: 2004
2003
$ Opening balance at 1 July
$
101,318
—
Donations
3,000
100,000
Interest
5,325
1,318
109,643
101,318
109,503
101,318
Receipts:
Represented by: Investment Interest Receivable
d)
140
—
~ 1097643
101,318
Louis Vuitton Fund
In November 1988 Louis Vuitton Pty Ltd donated $30,000 to set up the Louis Vuitton Collection for the acquisition of material relating to the early French exploration voyages to the Pacific, as well as later maritime association between France and Australia. The financial position of the Fund is as follows: Opening balance at 1 July Receipts: Interest
13,312
12,688
684
624
13.996
13,312
Represented by: Investment Interest Receivable
22.
13,978
13,312
_______ 18
_________ —
13.996
13,312
REPORTING OF OUTCOM ES
Note22A:
Outcomes of the Museum
The Museum is structured to meet one outcome, being increased knowledge, appreciation and enjoyment of Australia’s relationship with its waterways and the sea. Only one Output Group is identified for the Outcome.
94
NOTES TO AND FORMING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 Note 22B: Net Cost of Outcome Delivery 2004
2003
$’000
$’000
Departmental expenses
27,874
26,053
Total expenses
27,874
26,053
Costs recovered from provision of goods and services to the non-government sector Departmental
4,721
4,803
Total costs recovered
4,721
4,803
Other external revenues Departmental Sale of goods and services - to related entities Interest Revenue from sale of assets Donation and bequests Industry contributions Total Departmental Total other external revenues Net cost of outcome Note 22C:
37
21
336
395
6
23
1,187
1,063
159
320
1,725
1,822
1,725
1,822
21,428
19,428
Departmental Revenues and Exoenses bv Outnut Groun Outcom e 1 Output 1
Operating expenses Employees
8,604
7,804
Suppliers
9,693
9,702
Grants Depreciation and amortisation Write-down of assets Value of assets sold Borrowing costs expense Total operating expenses
36
30
8,442
7,123
122
301
3
19
974
1,074
27,874
26,053
19,930
29,513
4,760
4,824
336
395
Funded by: Revenues from Government Sale of goods and services Interest Revenue from sales of assets Donations and bequests Industry contributions Other Total operating revenues
6
23
1,187
1,063
159
320
15
36,138
26,393
All the Museum's revenues, expenses, assets and liabilities are attributable to the one Output Group.
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2003-2004
NOTES TO AND FORM ING PART OF THE FIN AN CIAL STATEM ENTS FOR THE YE AR ENDED 30 JUNE 2004 23.
THE AU STR ALIAN NATIONAL M AR ITIM E FOUNDATION
The Australian National Maritime Foundation, a Company Limited by Guarantee, was established in December 2000 and is controlled by the Council of the Australian National Maritime Museum. Funds in the amount of $385,620 were transferred to the Foundation from the Patrons Fund. The Foundation’s objects are to create a capital fund, through gifts, bequests and fund-raising activities, for the purposes of: • Acquiring major additional items or collections of items to develop the National Maritime Collection; • Conserving the National Maritime Collection; • Other activities which enhance the National Maritime Collection. The financial position of the Foundation is as follows:
Opening balance at 1 July
2004
2003
$
$
378,630
362,676
Revenues: Interest Donations Sales of goods and services
7,490 —
6,866 1,300
— 386,120
33,900 404,742
1,767
26,112
Less expenses: Suppliers Closing balance at 30 June
384,353
378,630
383,615
378,186
Represented by: Cash at bank Receivables Payables
96
738
457
__________— 384x353
_______ (13) 378,630
97
APPENDIXES
Ralph Steadman Caricature o f Lord Nelson ŠRalph Steadman 1995 Opposite Details from a uniform ANMM collection
98
APPENDIXES section four
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 1 VISITOR & MEMBERS PROGRAMS SEMINARS 22/02/04: ‘Working Harbour - ships, docks and hard knocks', talks to Members by John Jeremy, Keith Murray and Robert Campbell 29/02/04: Finders keepers, losers weepers? lectures to Members by Derek Luxford (maritime lawyer) and Mark Spencer (diver and photographer) on the ethics and moral issues associated with shipwrecks, salvage and archaeology. In association with the Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology LECTURES AND TALKS 16/07/03: ‘Otters and turtles - the wild mariners of the sea’, Members lectures (in association with Earthwatch) by Dr Randall Davis and Dr Richard Reina 10/08/03: ‘Rozelle Bay: the future’, talks for Members by Waterways Authority experts, cruise to Rozelle and Blackwattle Bays 14/08/03: The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea, book launch and Members talk by author Robert Holden 14/09/03: Members talk by Captain Sara Parry, from Windward Bound 18/09/03: ‘A brief history of maritime cartography’, Members talk by Professor David Woodward 24/09/03: Sydney Working Harbour, Members special exhibition viewing and talks by Wayne Johnson and Shar Jones 27/09/03: ‘The fall of Singapore’, Members talk by Mr Jeyathurai A 08/10/03: Members talk and viewing of his new vessel, by Ken Warby 23/10/03: ‘Out of the farm gate - famous women in maritime history’ by Shirley Sinclair, Phil Renouf inaugural memorial lecture to Members (in association with Australian Heritage Fleet) 03/12/03: Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam, Members special exhibition viewing and talk by Dick Richards 19/12/03: Members talk by Captain Mark Miller, from USCG Polar Star 18/01/04 & 01/02/04: ‘British tall ships - their history and restoration’, Members lecture series with Colin Burring on Cutty Sark and HMS Victory, Warrior and Gannet 29/01/04: Vaughan Evans annual lecture, given by Dr David Stevens 11/03/04: ‘My life in yachting’ by Sir James Hardy OBE , Phil Renouf annual memorial lecture to Members (in association with Australian Heritage Fleet) 18/03/04: ‘South-East Asian treasures from the deep and beyond’, talk to Members by Kerry Nguyen-Long 25/03/04: Scrimshaw - Art o f the Whaler, Members exhibition viewing and lecture by Paul Hundley 25/04/04: ‘Across the sea to war’, Anzac Day talk to Members by Peter Plowman 23/05/04, 05&06/06/04, and 08/06/04: Transit of Venus lecture series and viewing for Members (in association with Powerhouse Museum and Sydney Observatory), lecturers Paul Brunton, Brian Greig, Dr Nick Lomb and Antonia Macarthur
02/06/04: What to do about whales? Film screening and talk for Members by Kate Clereand Michael McIntyre, International Fund for Animal Welfare 17/06/04: Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film, Members special exhibition viewing and talk by curator Rosie Nice TOURS AND WALKS 27/07/03: Sydney shipwrecks walk for Members at Watsons Bay, with National Parks & Wildlife Service guide 17/08/03: ‘Walk on water: Sydney’s water features', tour and talk for Members by Lisa Murray 07/09/03: ‘Superfish tales’, Members tour of Coogee led by Mary Flair 15/11/03: ‘Action stations!', Members tour of FIMAS Onslow and Vampire, led by Commander John Hodges and Rear Admiral Tony Horton 11/01/04: Balmain heritage walk for Members, led by Maureen Fry 08/02/04: Members tour of Newington Armory military site 20-2 1/0 3/0 4 : South Coast maritime heritage, Members tour to Jervis Bay Marine Park 17/04/04: Ships and shipwreck graves, Members tour of Rookwood cemetery 21/04/04: James Squire beer lovers' tour and tasting for Members, Malt Shovel 16/05/04: Members tour of North Head School of Artillery and North Fort ON THE WATER 17/07/03: Ferry cruise to welcome home HMAS Kanimbla 02/09/03: Solar Sailor cruise for Members with talk by Dr Robert Dane 14/09/03: Two sails on Windward Bound 24/09/03: Members inaugural winter jazz cruise, Sydney Harbour 09/10/03: Members tour of RAN repository, Spectacle Island, talk by LCDR Shane Moore 08/11/03: ‘Spring, spray & jacarandas’, Members Lane Cove River cruise, talk by Adam Woodhams 26/12/03: Sydney-Hobart yacht race start, Members cruise to Sydney Heads 26/01/04: Australia Day ferry cruise for Members 06/03/04: Harbour Week family ferry cruise for Members 07/03/04: Harbour Week HMAV Bounty sunset cruise for Members 04/04/04: Industrial heritage harbour cruise for Members, led by heritage engineers Michael Clarke and Don Fraser 02/05/04: ‘Maritime heritage & the sense of place', talk to Members by Professor Richard Mackay, on board the South Steyne, in conjunction with Sydney Working Harbour 08/05/04: ‘Autumn leaves’, Members Lane Cove River cruise, talk by Adam Woodhams 30/05/04: Three harbour cruises to commemorate the Japanese midget-submarine attack of 1942 14/06/04: Whale watching tour for Members outside Sydney Heads, in association with International Fund for Animal Welfare
APPENDIXES
OTHER PUBLIC AND MEMBERS PROGRAMS 13/07/03: Music & dance performances for Portuguese Day at the museum 13/07/03: ‘Gourmet from Goa: cruise ship cuisine’, lunch and talk by P&O historian Robert Henderson, Portuguese Day at the museum 28/07/03: ‘Oceans of Stories: illustrations from Australian children’s books’, exhibition viewing and talks by Halcyon Evans, Rick Pool and Kimberly O’Sullivan Steward (in association with WEA) 10/08/03: Dance performance by Lardil people, Mornington Island 11/09/03: HMAS Sydney models unveiling, talk by model-maker Kevin Dunn 21/09/03: Oceans of Stories family fun day for Members, with storytelling by actor Andy Rodoreda 01/10/03: New Members welcome reception 27/09/03-05/10/03: Operation Jaywick 60th Anniversary and Defence Special Operations week included: 27/09/03: ‘History of Australian Special Operations', talk by Captain Marc Preston 28/09/03:‘0peration Jaywick - Australian and Singaporean perspectives', talks by Mr Jeyathurai A and Lynette Ramsay Silver 29/09/03-05/10/03: ‘Introduction to Operation Jaywick and Australian Special Operations', daily short talks & film screenings 25/10-02/11/03: Mediterranean Tucker Festival included: 25-26/10/03: cooking demonstrations & tastings 30/10/03: Manfredi’s Australian Mediterranean Feast: Members dinner and talk by Stefano Manfredi 01 -02/11/03: Mediterranean Tucker carnival 02/11/03: Welcome Wall unveiling, 806 names on panels 33 & 34, guest speaker Stefano Manfredi 12/10/03: Sydney Working Harbour cruise forum series, cruise forum l: ‘Bridges across the harbour’ with Dr Don Frazer and Graham Jahn 26/10/03: Sydney Working Harbour cruise forum 2: ‘Historic harbour pools’ with Daina Fletcher, Evelyn Uyloan and Lavinia Morid 16/11/03: Sydney Working Harbour cruise forum 3: 'Working wharves of Sydney waterways’ with John McClymont and Captain Bart Pacheco 3 0 /1 1 /0 3 :12th Members anniversary lunch, speakers Kay Cottee and Mark Bethwaite 14/12/03: Members Christmas party and viewing of the new NAVY exhibition 26/01/04: Australia Day BYO picnic party for Members 06-07/03/04: 2004 Classic & Wooden Boat Festival, with talks by Ian Smith, Ron Hodge and John Vaughan; maritime craft demonstrations; film screenings, live concerts and entertainment; and the launch of Randi Svensen's book Wooden Boats and Iron Men, a history of Halvorsen boatbuilding in Australia 22/04/04: New Members welcome reception 03/05/04: Douglas Annand: The art of life, exhibition viewing and talk by Anne McDonald (in association with WEA) 102
09/05/04: Welcome Wall unveiling, 398 names on panel 35, guest speaker Lilliana Fernandez 29/05/04: Noah's Ark family fun day for Members, with actor Andy Rodoreda CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS 05-20/07/03: School holiday program in Oceans of Stories, including storytelling and paper mosaic workshops 21/06 /-02 /11 /0 3: Kids Deck program in Oceans of Stories, including storytelling and craft activities, weekends & school holidays 0 8 -30 /11 /0 3: 'Tugboats’, Kids Deck program 27/09-12/10/03: 'Tall ship adventures', school holiday program aboard James Craig 29/09-08/10/03: ‘All hands on deck’, performance by John Lamzies aboard James Craig 01/08-26/09/03: Mini Mariners programs in Oceans of Stories 11/2003: ‘Tugs & ferries', Mini Mariners Friday program 08/11-21/12/03: Kids Deck programs in Sydney Working Harbour 01-3 1/1 2 /0 3 : Christmas at sea on a 19th-century sailing ship (for ages 7-1 1 ) with Australian Fleritage Fleet and James Craig 27/12/03-25/01/04: School holiday program in Wetworid 3 - the wet fun centre, including the Wetworid Theatre Show - The Last Drop and X-Ray Man 07-22/01/04: Shipwreck workshops in Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam 31/01-29/02/04: Kids Deck activities in NAVY and on board HMAS Vampire & Onslow 1 3/0 3-04/04/04: Kids Deck 'Meet the fleet’ activities featuring the museum’s vessels 09/02-15/03/04: Mini Mariners programs - work boats for ages 1 -2 , fun boats for 3 -5 year olds in Watermarks - Adventure, Sport and Play 15/03-26/04/04: Mini Mariners programs - playgroups for ages 1 -2 , pirates for 3 -5 year olds 12-25/04/04: 'Flotsam and jetsam ’ autumn school holiday program, with Jigsaw Theatre Company 10-25/04/04: ‘Spotlight on lighthouses' school holiday program, celebrating the museum’s newly restored 1874 Cape Bowling Green lighthouse EXHIBITION FILM PROGRAM 06/03-31/08/03: An interview with May Gibbs (for Oceans of Stories), Joanjo: a Portuguese tale and The Secret Discovery of Australia (for Siglas de Pescadores) 24/09/03-23/01/04: Welcome to Cockatoo and Construction of the Sydney Harbour Bridge (for Sydney Working Harbour) 29/12/03-23/01/04: School holiday screenings of Hiidegarde 09-26/04/04: School holiday screenings of Finding Nemo 19-20/06/04: Sailor Style film weekend, with On the Town and South Pacific 103
APPENDIXES
PROGRAMS FOR VISITING SCHOOLS 19/06/03-12/10/03: Oceans of Stories - illustrations from Australian Children’s Books, general guided tours, 'artist for a day’ and Stormy Grey storytelling tours, general and marine mosaic workshops, for years K -12 13/09/03: Oceans of Stories, a one-day conference in conjunction with the exhibition, with illustrators Shaun Tan and Jeanette Rowe and children’s literature specialist Dr Robyn McCallum 03/12/03-27/04/04: Lost for 500 years ... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam, schools programs in conjunction with the exhibition for years 5 -1 2 history, science, and HSIE; junior and senior maritime archaeology workshops (years 7-12); shipwrecks workshops (years 5 -6 ) 24/09/03-18/07/04: Sydney Working Harbour programs for schools included: guided tours for years 10-12 history, geography, HSIE; ‘Investigating Pyrmont’ walks for years
10 - 12 history & geography; harbour cruise for years 10 - 12 geography; and transport tours for years K -2 HSIE 03-30/06/04: Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film exhibition tours for years 5 -1 2 visual arts, visual design, textiles & design, history, HSIE 19/03-30/06/04: Scrimshaw - Art of the Whaler tours and workshops for years 5 -8 visual arts, HSIE 22/06/04: Marine Careers Forum for years 11-12 PERMANENT PROGRAMS FOR SCHOOLS Splash! workshop (including a tour of the exhibition Watermarks - Adventure, Sport and Play) for years K -2 HSIE, PD, PE & health Science at the Maritime Museum for years 3 -1 2 science Maritime Archaeology for years 5 -1 0 history, HSIE, science Shipwrecks, corrosion & conservation laboratory workshops for year 12 chemistry Pirate School (includes James Craig) for years K -3 maths, English, HSIE, PE, PD & health VISITING SPEAKERS PROGRAM Throughout the year, lunchtime talks and seminars are given to museum staff and volunteers by visiting curators and specialists: 21/08/03: 'The WA Museum’, an illustrated talk by Michael Crayford, Michelle Linder and Lindsey Shaw 19/09/03: The National Museum of Denmark and two recent exhibitions’, talk by Peter Pentz, National Museum of Denmark 23/10/03: 'National Maritime Museum at Greenwich, and exhibition Elizabeth I', talk by Sian Flynn, exhibitions manager, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich UK 12/12/03: ‘ANMM and NMM Greenwich, insights from a secondment’, talk by Susan Sedgwick
104
APPENDIX 2 SELECTED ACQUISITIONS ARTW ORKS AND PRINTS A series of seven engravings and five original sketches titled The Surprising Events in the Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, by Robert Dodd, London, 1783 These works depict the 1659 trials and adventures of the fictional Robinson Crusoe based on the real life adventures of Alexander Selkirk. Images include the sinking of Crusoe’s vessel, finding safety on the island, his shelter, clothing and survival tactics. Purchased from Hordern House. W atercolour painting by Frederick Garling titled Brig Phantom, H T Fox Commanding Offr, Macquarie Fort, Sydney Cove, NSWaies, 1847 A finely executed ship portrait showing signal flags identifying the brig Phantom and the British Red Ensign at the stern worn by merchant ships. The painting shows details of Fort Macquarie and Government House, vessels and harbour activity. The Phantom is typical of many small vessels that came to the Australian colonies in the early-19th century. Purchased from Marani Fine Art. Watercolour painting by C E S Tindall titled Observatory Hill, Millers Point, SS Ascanius, undated, 1920s The painting shows the Blue Funnel Line passenger ship Ascanius leaving Sydney Harbour from Walsh Bay with a tug preparing to tow it into the shipping channel. SS Ascanius was built in 1910. The Scottish-born artist Charles Ephraim Smith Tindall was well-known for his watercolour paintings of shipping scenes of Sydney. He migrated to Sydney in 1887 and studied with Charles Conder and Frank Mahony. Purchased from Christopher Day Gallery. Oil painting on wood panel titled McMahons Point, 1937, unsigned, undated The painting presents a detailed offshore view before high-rise development of Sydney’s foreshores. It shows the replica of Phillip’s ship Supply, used in the 1938 sesquicentenary celebrations on Sydney Harbour, and documents the architectural character of 1920s Sydney, small craft and harbour life, including W Holmes’s boatbuilding yard. Purchased from Christopher Day Gallery. A series of 13 paintings by Gina Sinozich depicting her sea voyage on the Neptunia to Australia with her fam ily in 1951-5 In this compelling series Gina Sinozich (b 1930) gives a first-hand account of post-World War II migration from Croatia to Australia. She depicts her homeland, flight to a refugee hostel, those she left behind, and daily life on the Neptunia. It is rare for migrants of Sinozich’s generation to create original artwork about their migration story, which makes this a unique record of migration to Australia. Purchase and gift (including commission of ten paintings) from Gina Sinozich. Portrait of Peter Heywood by Mark Ulriksen, San Francisco, 2003 Depicts HMS Bounty mutineer Peter Heywood with Bounty in the background. The artist is a celebrated American illustrator whose works and caricatures of famous people and events are highly sought. Purchased from Mark Ulriksen. PHOTOGRAPHS I llladulla fishing series, 11 silver gelatin photographs by Jeff Carter, about 1959 These powerful and dramatic photographs are an excellent record of Italian immigrant fishing families on the NSW south coast, and depict the fishing methods of the time. Jeff Carter (b 1928) is a consummate photographer with a long career as a photo-journalist. Carter's work, described as having a remarkable clarity, honesty and laconic humour, is 105
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likely to become an important part of Australia’s visual memory. The photographs were recently reprinted from original negatives by the photographer. Nine works purchased from Sandra Byron Gallery. Photograph by Max Dupain, titled Sydney Harbour Crepuscule, 1937 Silver gelatin print, 2003 This striking image by one of Australia’s most celebrated photographers, (1911-1992) looks east across the inner harbour from the south pylon of the harbour bridge. It is taken with a long exposure to register the ferry paths across the film. Purchased from Jill White Photography. BOOKS First-edition rare book titled Jottings from the Pacific, by W illiam W yatt Major Gill, published by the London Religious Tract Society, 1885 Gill, employed by the London Missionary Society, reported on his travels to Easter Island and the Cook and Ellice Groups. The book describes missionary activities in the Pacific, giving zoological, botanical and ethnological details. Purchased from Edward J Lefkowicz Inc. First-edition rare book titled Story o f the Morning Star - the Children's Missionary Vessel, by Hiram Bingham Junior, published by The Am erican Board, Boston, 1866 Bingham was an American Congregationalist Missionary, appointed captain of the Morning Star in 1856. He founded a mission on Abaiang Island in the Gilbert Group (now part of Kiribati) and wrote this book about the work of the mission. It was published as part of a subscription to raise money for the construction of a second missionary vessel. Purchased from Edward J Lefkowicz Inc. Three handwritten journals detailing the naval career of Robert 0 Leach, cadet then midshipman then lieutenant in the Royal Navy, 1846 to 1861 The journals chronicle Leach’s career through the Portuguese Wars of 1846, naval cruises in the Mediterranean 1847-1852, the Crimean War 1854-1856, Africa 1856-1857, then the Australia Station 1857-1861 where he was appointed lieutenant to HMS Cordelia. Purchased from Stuart Fisher Marine Collectables. First-edition Voyage o f the Morning, by Gerald S Doorly, published by Smith, Elder & Co, London, 1916 Details the voyages of the steam yacht and Antarctic relief ship Morning, in its role as support to Robert Falcon Scott’s Antarctic Expedition of 1902-1904. Purchased from New Century Antiquarian Books. Three volumes and atlas of Voyage de Vancouver Autour du Monde, published in Paris, 1800 This French first-edition series documents Captain George Vancouver’s voyages surveying the Pacific Ocean and North-West Coast of America. Purchased in memory of ANMM councillor John Kirby of Hordern House. DOCUMENTS Eleven bundles of papers, invoices, bills and acquitted cheques relating to wharfage services provided to the brewing firm Tooth and Company in the 1920s The documents provide an insight into the way these financial services operated, and what they cost, at a time when shipping was the major means of freight and transport around Australia. Purchased from David Buckingham. 106
Illustrated w haling journal from the barque Terror, kept by Captain W illiam Henry Downes, 1846-7 A rare whaling-ship record of Pacific whaling in the 19th century, by one of Benjamin Boyd's whaling masters, this journal vividly records a ten-month whaling voyage on a round trip from Sydney via the Solomon Islands through the Pacific. The lavish watercolours by Captain Downes complementthescrimshaw panbone of the barque Terror by EMickleburgh. Purchased from Bonhams, London. COMMEMORATIVE ARTEFACTS German navy lifejacket from a survivor of HSK Kormoran, World War II This lifejacket was the property of Oberleutenant Fleinz Messerschmidt, adjutant to Kormoran’s commander Theodore Detmers. Havingsurvivedthe battle in the Indian Ocean against HMAS Sydney II, the German survivors were transferred to POW camps. The jacket was presented to Warrant Officer H Scanlon who was stationed at Messerschmidt's camp. Purchased from Noble Numismatics Pty Ltd. Souvenir painting of HMAS Vampire, 1966 Painted on a velvet-like fabric, this image depicting Vampire in Hong Kong harbour was executed by a local artist for sale as a memento for the ship’s complement visiting Hong Kong in 1966. Mementoes of this kind were typical of the souvenirs available at Asian ports. Purchased from Simon du Boulay. MODELS Scale model of Matthew Flinders’ ship HMS Investigator Built by Melbourne modelmakers Lynne and Laurie Hadley, the model depicts the Investigator after it was altered in Sydney in 1802. The model is a symbol of one of the greatest circumnavigation voyages of Australia, undertaken by Matthew Flinders in 18011803. Purchased from Lynne and Laurie Hadley. VESSEL PARTS AND ACCESSORIES Bridge telegraph from the Manly ferry paddle steamer Brighton, about 1883 Brighton was the largest of the paddle steamers operated by the Port Jackson Steamship Company on the Sydney to Manly passenger service. It was in use from 1883 to 1916. Made by France and Morgan Instrument Makers of Glasgow, the telegraph is a fine example of bridge to engine room communications technology commonly employed prior to the use of electrified systems in 1930. Purchased from R Goodrick. OTHER Chinese export porcelain plate, about 1817 From the service of Gabriel Henry Manigault, the plate is decorated in a Fitzhugh Brown pattern, the centre bearing a Manigault family crest, originally designed by the Australian convict Samuel Clayton. A scrim shaw panbone depicting Ben Boyd's whaling barque Terror in pursuit of a whale, inscribed with the title and showing the Boyd fam ily crest. Signed by E Mickleburgh, about 1840 This rare and important piece of scrimshaw appears to have been made by a ship’s captain, possibly a Captain Mickleburgh, who sailed from Melbourne to the US in 1841-42. The whaling barque Terror depicted on the panbone sailed out of Boyd Town between 1843 and 1845; the scrimshaw complements the illustrated journal kept by one of Ben Boyd’s whaling masters, recording a voyage of the Terror in 1846-47. Purchased from Christies, New York.
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INDIGENOUS ACQUISITIONS Two paintings, titled Ngalkunburriyaymi (Mermaid and mermen) and Ngalyod (Rainbow serpent) The paintings are by artist and senior elder Lofty Bardayal Nadjamerrek (language Kundedjnjenghm, Arnhem Plateau area, Central Arnhem Land, Northern Territory). Both are of natural earth pigments on paper. Ngalkunburriyaymi, 105cm x 75cm, was painted at Jabiru, NT; Ngalyod, 38cm x 105, was painted at Kabulwarnamyo, NT. Purchased from Annandale Galleries. Woven sedge yabbie trap, Murray River region, South Australia A traditional fibre-craft artefact, the trap was woven by Yvonne Koolmatrie (language group Ngarrindjeri), who also collected and harvested the materials. Its distinctive weaving is characteristic of the region. Purchased from Aboriginal & Pacific Arts. Painting titled The one that got away, by Daphne Wallace In mixed media with opal chip, the picture depicts a river scene from north-western New South Wales, between Armidale and Lightning Ridge. Daphne Wallace (language group Gamilaroi/Uralli-Ullaro) sees her artwork as a way of recording her clan’s history, passed to her from her mother and grandmother. Purchased from the artist. Dance machine, Torres Strait Islands, Queensland Dance machines and headdress and body ornaments are commonly decorated with and represent totemic beings relating to ancestral events unique to families and clans of the Torres Strait Islands. Many dance machines, while grounded in the traditional expression of culture through dance, use modern materials such as plastic. This machine, from Erub (Danely) Island, was made by Ken Thaiday who was born in 1950. Acquired at Sotheby’s. Set of six linoprints titled Yalbarra Suite The prints were made by Banduk Marika (born 1954) of the language group Yolngu, moiety Dhuwa, clan Rirratingu, and community Yirrkala, north-east Arnhem Land. Yalanbarra is one of the most important sites in north-east Arnhem Land, because it is here, according to tradition, that the Djang'kawu sisters - 'the two who created the world’ - landed in their canoe. The prints depict the sisters’ journey. Purchased from the Buku-Larrngay Mulka Centre, Yirrkala, NT. TASMANIAN ACQUISITIONS Tasmanian Indigenous culture is rich and diverse, and many Indigenous Tasmanians continue to use traditional skills such as basket-weaving and shell-working. Access to resources is seasonal and unique to certain places; their use maintains traditional knowledge and upholds particular Indigenous identities. Contem porary woven vine basket, two coiled flax baskets The artist, Vicki West, was born in 1960 at Launceston, Tasmania. The form and weave of the large twinned basket are based on traditional diving bags. The two small, domed baskets are based on traditional Tasmanian shelters. Large coiled flax basket with shells Small coiled flax basket with shells The artist, Muriel Maynard, was born in 1937 at Launceston, Tasmania.
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Sculpture, bull-kelp water carrier The artist, Lola Greeno, was born in 1943, on Cape Barren Island, Tasmania. The brown leathery fronds of the bull kelp (a seaweed prolific on the islands off the Tasmanian coast) have been smoke-cured and buried in hot sand before being sculpted into the shape of a water carrier. Contemporary woven basket The artist, Delia Summers, was born in 1960 on Flinders Island, Tasmania.
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APPENDIX 3 DONORS TO THE NATIONAL M ARITIM E COLLECTION Ms Mandy Allen Three recreational fishing rods used by Keith Hardaker from 1948 to about 1980 A spinning rod made by W Southam in 1948; a thread-line rod made by W Southam in the 1940s; and an 11-foot cane rod made by K Hardaker. Australian Anti-Bases Campaign Coalition Three badges The badges were produced by the Australian Anti-Bases Campaign Coalition opposing Australian military involvement in Tandem Thrust 2001. Tandem Thrust is a joint United States and Australian military exercise involving the Australian Army, Royal Australian Navy and Royal Australian Air Force. Mrs W endy Baldock Silver gelatin photographic prints of Oskar Speck taken at Orokolo, Papua New Guinea, in September 1939 Oscar [Sic] Speck in his canoe; Speck’s canoe being carried along the beach; and boys carrying Speck’s canoe ashore at Orokolo. Mr Frank Barnsley Three menus from SS Orara, for breakfast, lunch and dinner, 8th March 1931 Saved by passenger Frank Barnsley, whose choices are marked on the menus. Brambles Australia Seven photographs and one lithograph of tugboats and other vessels owned by Brambles Australia Lithograph Newburgh 1888; photograph Hero 1939; photograph tugboat Hero towing Pamir 1945; photograph Himma 1951; photograph Himma 1952; three framed photographs, tugboats towing oil tanker Petroleum 1930s; colour photograph of container ship MV Tasmanian Achiever about 1999. Mr John Caddy Rowing blues Greater Public School (GPS) rowing blue presented to John Caddy for competing in the 1953 Head of the River regatta in the Sydney Boys High Eights rowing team; Sydney Boys High rowing blue 1953 presented to John Caddy as a member of the Sydney Boys High Eights rowing team. Mr John Carroll Collection o f ship's plumbers tools Collection of ship’s plumbers tools used by John Carroll from 1940-1955 when he worked for the Union and New Zealand Steamship Company on the conversion of passenger and merchant ships to troop ships and their postwar reconversion. Mr Jeff Carter Two silver gelatin photographic prints Made by Jeff Carter from a series depicting the Sicilian fishing community at Ulladulla, south-coast New South Wales, 1959.
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Mr Norman Cooke Signal flag from the second HMAS Vampire Made on board the ship, the flag features the ship's logo - a bat. During HMAS Vampire’s major 1970-71 refit the ship was stripped on its upper works, and the flag locker and its contents thrown out. The donor was working at the dockyard and retrieved the flag from the garbage bin. IVIr John Corry Black and white postcard Postcard of the periscope controls in the interior conning tower of one of the Japanese midget submarines that attacked Sydney Harbour on 31 May 1942. It is the seventh in a series of postcards produced as souvenirs of the display of the remains of two Japanese midget submarines that toured New South Wales, Adelaide and Victoria in July 1942 to raise funds for the Naval Relief Fund. Mr Graham Curtis Framed silver gelatin photographic print Shows Blue Funnel Line's SSMeriones passing under Sydney Harbour bridge, 9 September 1932. Mr Teki Dalton Yachting memorabilia The collection relates to Teki Dalton's career in ocean racingand includes souvenir baseball caps, beer glasses, Sydney-Hobart yacht race board game, kit bags, pennants, flags, embroidered fabric patches, Australia Post souvenir postcards, first-day issue stamps, stickers, envelopes, plaques, crew shirts, t-shirts, skite plates, windcheaters, jackets, from various races including Sydney-Hobart, America’s Cup, Corum China Sea race, Lexcen Cup, the Southern Cross series, Southern Ocean Racing Conference, the Sydney-Gold Coast, Melbourne-Hobart and Sydney-Mooloolaba yacht races, Australian Yachting Masters, the Montagu Island, San Fernando and Club Med Noumea races, Hiroshima Cup, and the Kenwood Cup series. Departm ent of Defence, Public Affairs and Corporate Communications CD containing 28 jpegs taken from HMAS Adelaide, 8 October 2001 Images of the people-smuggling vessel Olong sinking, with naval personnel in the ocean rescuing asylum seekers. Asylum seekers are shown on board HMAS Adelaide after being rescued. The photographs are often described as the ‘children overboard’ photographs. Captain A M Downes Kelvin compass deflector in timber box Unsigned but probably made by Kelvin Bottomly and Baird of Glasgow, Scotland, about 1920. Ms Daina Fletcher Collection of 92 Sydney 2000 Olympics Souvenir Edition newspapers and magazines Collected during the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. Ms Cynthia Foley Malaysian flag Flagfound on the vessel Krait by Mervyn Goetze of the Royal Volunteer Coastal Patrol when the vessel was returned to Australia in 1964. Ill
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Fremantle Anti-Nuclear Group Ephemera produced by the Fremantle Anti-Nuclear Group The material was produced to oppose the presence of United States naval vessels in Western Australia. It documents the beliefs of those against US naval visits and the war in Iraq and provides information about strategic defence alliances between Australia and the United States. Mr Rex Frost Souvenir felt pennant from HMAS Vampire Featuringthe battle honours of thefirst HMAS Vampire, the pennant was probably produced for the commissioning of the ship in 1959. Mr Neilson George Souvenir oar, Bairnsdale Easter regatta program dated 1952 and King's Cup regatta program dated 1971 Souvenir oar awarded to George Neilson for winning the single scull race held at the regatta commemorating the unveiling of William Beach’s memorial in 1938. Mr Jano Gibson University Technology Sydney student newspaper Vertigo Edition 1, 2003 of Vertigo features a satirical advertisement relating to naval recruitment and the war on Iraq. A response to the advertisement appears in Vertigo edition 2, 2003. In Vertigo edition 3,2003 an advertisement satirises Prime Minister John Howard, Defence Minister Robert Hill and the war on Iraq. Mr Kevin Gibson Brass, single draw, refracting telescope or spyglass complete with objective, intermediate and ocular lenses The telescope was reputably used by Peter Hibbs, former seaman on board HMS Sirius, flagship to the First Fleet. Hibbs settled on Norfolk Island following the wreck of the Sirius in 1790 and later became master of the 25-ton decked sloop Norfolk which took part in Flinders’s expedition to Van Diemans Land. Point Hibbs, Hibbs Bay, Hibbs River and Hibbs Pyramid were all named after Peter Hibbs. Mr Graham Goodfellow Verbal Notes and Sketches for Marine Engineers, by J W M Sothern, Glasgow, Scotland, James Munro and Company, 1921 A manual of marine engineering practice compiled for the use of naval and mercantile engineer officers of all grades and naval E R A S . Sothern was a member of the Institute of Engineers and Shipbuilders, Institute of Marine Engineers and principal of Sothern’s College of Marine Engineering, Glasgow. He wrote a number of influential works on marine engineering including Marine Engine Indicator Cards, The Marine Steam Turbine and Oil Fuel Burning in Marine Practice. Mrs Lola Greeno Buli-keip water carrier This bull-kelp water carrier was cured and treated with traditional methods by Lola Greeno; the strings were treated and made by Vicki West. Water carriers like this were once common throughout Tasmania.
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Halvorsen Boats Pty Ltd Hand plane, three large photograph albums, loose photographs and 206 original plans The plane, with initials HH, was used by Harold Halvorsen. The plans were drawn by Lars Halvorsen in Norway, South Africa and Australia. Mr Trygve Halvorsen America’s Cup and Admiral's Cup yachting memorabilia Collection includes clothing worn by Trygve Halvorsen including a 1962 America's Cup team blazer, yachting cap, a 1965 Admiral’s Cup Freya crew jumper. Personal papers include a 1962 America’s Cup cheque book with list of signatories, and four letters from Edward Heath to Trygve and Noreen Halvorsen, 1970-1972. Mr Trygve Halvorsen Handbook of the Volunteer Coastal Patrol, second edition, 1939, 22pp, blue card cover and stapled binding Printed by Offsett Printing Company, Waterloo, Sydney, NSW and stamped with TRYGVE HALVORSEN on front cover and first page. The booklet (issued to Trygve Halvorsen) contains information on the organisation and role of the Volunteer Coastal Patrol during WWII. Mr Geoff Hatfield Cast metal security badge Badge No 273 from Lars Halvorsen Sons Pty Ltd from 1940 bears the legend LARS HALVORSEN SONS PTY LTD above the starboard view of a Halvorsen cruiser. These badges were made for workers at the Halvorsen boat yard at Ryde under WWII security measures required for vessels produced under contract for the Royal Australian Navy. Mr John Hodges Black and white photograph Shows Oberon class submarine HMAS Ons/owatthe Singapore Naval Base in June 1974. The ship’s company stands along the casing and hull to pose for the photograph. Mr John Hodges Naval ephemera HMAS Ovens decommissioning luncheon booklet 1995; HMAS Ovens decommissioning ceremony booklet 1995; Royal Australian Naval College promotion parade booklet 1970; photographic print HMAS Orion commissioning ceremony 1977; and four photographic prints of HMAS Sydney in Vietnam. Mr Neville Horner Diary and document The diary was written on board the 903-ton clipper Kmimjee Oodowjee on a voyage from Liverpool to Bombay, India in 1877-1878. Samuel Bailey was the captain of the iron, threemasted barque, built at Liverpool, England, and owned by E Bates and Sons of Liverpool. The document concerns work carried out at the North Head Quarantine Station between 23 March and 14 May 1900 during the Sydney bubonic plague epidemic. Mr Michael Hyland Thirteen photographs of Captain Cook Graving Dock under construction at Garden Island 1941-1945 Most if not all were taken by Herbert Fishwick of Sydney. The stamp Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners refers to the engineering company. Many of the photographs are panoramas made from two or more photographs taped together. Two are of rails being laid at a wharf: the ship depicted is the SS Cochrane, the port possibly Lagos in Nigeria.
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Mr Des Kerns Allbright (Stanley) polar planimeter, serial number 28736 and a J Halden and Company polar planimeter, complete with instruction manuals and instrument cases A planimeter is a type of analogue computer, which mechanically calculates an area and records that area on a drum and disk, as a tracing point moves over the boundary of the figure to be measured. Planimeters are used to calculate irregular areas on maps such as lakes and fields, on blueprints and plans such as in naval engineering and to calculate volume and space on steam engine and other types of line gauges.
Dr David Lark and Mrs Irene Thrupp Trophy and receipt The trophy, in the form of a silver kettle with wickered handle on a removable silver stand, was won by the yacht Pleiades for second place in the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron’s Commodore’s Handicap on 20th January 1883. The receipt for restoration of the spirit kettle and re-wickering the handle by H Knowles-Brown, London, is dated March 1952. Mr Sidney Lazarus Two small fabric octopus toys wearing sailor style hats One toy has the word Oriana on its hat, the other Ocean Monarch. They were bought by Sidney Lazarus on board Oriana and Ocean Monarch during family holidays in 1974. Mr John Lukins Child’s canoe and paddle, 1940s, used by three generations o f the Lukins family Single-person canoe made from Queensland maple, hard chine hull with maple deck and pinewood seat and backrest and paddle for a child. Mr W illiam Madigan Personal papers Various papers relating to apprentice shipwright William Madigan's work at Lars Halvorsen Sons Pty Ltd in the 1950s. Mr Mike McKay Rowing racing suit and sunglasses worn by Mike McKay Racing suit and sunglasses worn at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games by Mike McKay, one of the Oarsome Foursome. The lycra suit was manufactured by Adidas; sunglasses and case were made by Oakley. Mrs Beryl Montgomery Walking stick made from timbers from the first HMAS Sydney A small plaque commemorates the battle between HMAS Sydney and the German raider SMS Emden off the Cocos Islands in 1914, when HMAS Sydney defeated Emden. Mr Bruce and Mrs Joan Morrison K2 (kayak for two people) named Needle, and paddles Made by George Whymark in 1949, the kayak is wood, with canvas over stern and bow decks. The two paddles were used with the kayak from the 1950s. Mr Nelson Heart-shaped silver pendant inset with compass This type of object was sometimes worn as a fob watch accessory or charm. Found on Norfolk Island in 1942 during the building of the airstrip, it is believed to have belonged to 114
Edward Young of HMAV Bounty.
Mr Eric Olufson Bums Philp and Company house flag A tricolour of red, white and blue set diagonally, and a green thistle with purple flower at centre. Mrs Cynthia Retter Framed print of an oil painting of the vessel Krait by Dacre Smyth The teak frame is said to have been made from the original decking of Krait. Date unknown, possibly 1980s. Mrs Robin Richards Two Royal Life Saving Society medals awarded to Robin Richards nee Burton The bronze medallion was awarded in 1957. The 1960 Award of Merit to R Burton is still attached to its ribbon. Mr Ian Rumsey Wooden chest Wooden chest carried by third-class passenger Robert (Bert) Rumsey on a voyage from England to Sydney via Fremantle and Melbourne on the Australasian United Steam Navigation Company vessel SS Arawatta, November 1889-January 1890. The vessel, on its first voyage to Australia, was purpose-built for the AUSN by Denny of Dumbarton, Scotland, for its profitable Brisbane-Cooktown run. The steamer was converted into a coal hulk before being scuttled off Sydney Heads in September 1936. Mrs Gina Sinozich Three oil on board paintings The paintings, signed ‘Gina 2001-03', depict aspects of the sea journey to Australia of the Sinozich family. Southern Cross Outdoors Group Seven items of ephemera produced for the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras swimming carnival Programs from 1995, 1997 and 1999; ticket books from 1997. Ticket book from 1999 for a carnival at the Andrew (Boy) Charlton Pool, unused and printed on plain green paper. Mrs Jean Stanbury Four books used by Australian shipping agents Gilchrist Watt & Sanderson Instruction books for Norddeutscher Lloyd and Hamburg-Amerika Linie for 1954-1967 and 1967-1970; code book for Norddeutscher Lloyd and Hamburg-Amerika Linie 1935 edition; and a code book for the Dutch shipping line Vereenigde Nederlandsche Scheepvaartmaatschappij (United Netherlands Navigation Co). Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Mardi Gras pool party ephemera Two posters advertising the Mardi Gras pool party at Victoria Park Pool on 8th February 1997; a full-colour pamphlet advertising the party and other events; four digital colour prints/digitised copies on CD reproduced from colour slides of the ‘Save Boy Charlton Pool’ float in the 1997 Mardi Gras parade.
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Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority Two coal shovels Coal shovels used at the Ballast Point Caltex site at Birchgrove. The shovel with the narrower plate was used for clearing drains and pipes as well as for shovelling coal. Date and maker unknown. Ms Leilani Tomaszewski Two tins of food from Blackmores First Lady Some of the provisions taken on board Blackmores First Lady by Kay Cottee for her round-the-world voyage in 1987-88. Ms Linda Tuson-Hancox Blue-green English faience vase Blue-green English faience vase supposedly recovered from the wreck of the Dunbar in 1857 by Captain Miller of Miller’s Shipping Company. The base of the vase is marked Burmantofts’ Faience England no 2098. University of Sydney Archives Four half-block models made by Morts Dock & Engineering Co Half block model of Wyrallah; half block model of Foam; two half-block models of surfboats mounted on one board, the boats titled W Andrews and Lamb & Brown; half-block model of an un-named vessel. University of Sydney Archives Two commemorative rowing oars The oars, from Sydney University Boat Club, celebrate SUBC’s victories at the InterUniversity boat races of 1894 and 1895. The oars are connected in the form of a cross, with the names of the victorious rowing eight inscribed on each blade. Wallenius W ilhelmsen Lines Orange fluorescent life buoy and orange fluorescent life jacket from the MV Tampa The objects were on the ship during the 26 August-3 September 2001 rescue of asylum seekers while the ship was en route between Australia and Singapore. MV Tampa is one in a series of three large Ro/Ro vessels, called the Mark 11, built by Hyundai, Korea, in 1984. In 2003 the Mark 11 vessels were the largest Ro/Ro vessels afloat. Mr Les Watson Union badge worn on a cap or lapel Sydney Wharf Labourers Union membership no 2508. Made of nickel, and bearing two clasped hands on the obverse, the badge is stamped with membership dates 1901, 1902 and 1903 and the initials of the secretary of the union William Morris Hughes (18641852), later Prime Minister of Australia. Mr David W illiam s Planked model and plans of Gretel Planked model of Gretel with mast, jib, mainsail and stand made by David Williams about 1963; hull and deck plan of Gretel by Alan Payne; Gretel sail plan by Alan Payne; drawing on tracing paper by David Williams of scaled-up hull lines, sections and frames and plan profile along top of keel, patterns for jib and mainsail.
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APPENDIX 4 MMAPSS GRANTS 2003-2004 One of the museum’s most important cultural outreach programs is the Maritime Museums of Australia Project Support Scheme (MMAPSS), administered by us and jointly funded by the museum and the Australian Government through the Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts. The grants are awarded to non-profit maritime museums and historical societies, most of them community-based and run by volunteers, to fund restoration, conservation, collection management and exhibition development projects. The scheme was initiated in 1995 and since then 101 projects across all Australian states and most of its territories have been supported. This year, 11 grants totalling $33,120 were awarded. In addition, a partnership program allows people from smaller regional museums managing maritime heritage collections to spend up to four weeks here developing their skills. In November 2003 Dot Hammond from the Echuca Historical Society was awarded a month’s internship and worked in registration and conservation. Echuca Historical Society itself received a MMAPSS grant for a conservation project which will be enhanced by Dot's experience here. Bondi Surf Bathers Life Saving Club, NSW: A grant of $4,000 to fund exhibition display cases for an archival collection relating to the surf lifesaving movement, and technological advances in rescue systems and equipment. More efficient design, better lighting and environmental control and attractive mounting, will give this display more impact and make a better contribution to the lifesaving club's community education program. Clarence Town Former Court House Historical and Maritime Museum, NSW: Funding of $4,000 to assist a long-term preservation, planning and materials protection project for this museum’s collection of maps, diaries and navigation reports from the early settlement of Clarence Town, where colonial Australia’s first ocean-going steamship was built in 1831. Echuca Historical Society, Vic: $4,000 to fund a preservation survey, collection assessment, training and advice for the conservation of the society's collection of photographs relating to riverboats and barges. Many are rare and fragile and the grant will ensure their preservation and accessibility for researchers. Hay Gaol Museum, NSW: An award of $2,000 to employ a conservator to work on the Wiradjuri bark canoe in the museum's care, and provide interpretation labels for a proposed public display. In addition to assisting Hay Gaol to look after the maritime heritage collection relating to the Murrumbidgee River, the project is expected to provide a benchmark for community museums in rural NSW on the care of Indigenous cultural material. Kingscote Area School Marine Studies, SA: $1,120 to digitise an important collection of marine archives dealing with South Australian shipping incidents from 1837 to 1899. Conversion to electronic form will preserve the extensive collection of documents and photographs for use by archaeological and genealogical researchers. The archiving will be carried out by students from the school and related to the curriculum. Port Albert Maritime Museum, Vic: $3,500 to be spent on the restoration the Citadel Island lighthouse mantle. The lighthouse, in the Glennie group of islands, off the southern end of Wilsons Promontory,
H 7
APPENDIXES
was the first to be constructed by the Commonwealth Lighthouse Service, in 1913. Once restored, the mantle will complement other significant Bass Strait lighthouse material already on display. Port of Echuca Authority, Vic: $3,000 to employ a mentor for ten months to develop policies and oversee the work of volunteers in cataloguing the historic artefacts owned by the Port of Echuca Authority. Port Welshpool & District Maritime Museum, Vic: $3,000 to install a dehumidifier to help prevent deterioration of paper documents and charts relating to the Corner Inlet area, preserving these valuable records of the navigation practices of past eras. The museum’s proximity to seawater, the climate, and storage in an old building place the documents at high risk of deterioration. Runnymede Com mittee, National Trust of Australia, Tas: $3,000 will complete the restoration of an oil painting (about 1873) by R B Spencer of the whaleship Solar Globe. The painting is one Runnymede’s collection of seven oils of ships owned by the Tasmanian Bayley brothers, most painted by Spencer. The restoration will add to the enjoyment of visitors to the historic house museum. Western Australian Museum - Geraldton, WA: A grant of $3,000 will help develop a public interpretation program for the replica of the Batavia longboat. The grant will cover research and design for three plaques describing the shipwreck of the Dutch East Indiaman off WA in 1629, the subsequent voyage by the ship’s longboat to Batavia in the Dutch East Indies, and the building of the replica. The plaques will be accessible to visually impaired audiences - a ‘first’ for cultural heritage signage in Geraldton - and demountable, for display at other venues. Wooden Boat Guild of Tasmania Inc, Tas: An award of $2,500 to develop a public education program for the Tasmanian yacht Terra Linna (a Huon pine yacht built around 1880andarareexampleof local design requirements). The award will fund a writer, web designer, graphic designer and educator, as well as the design and construction of the model, and production of exhibition posters and brochures.
118
APPENDIX 5 ANMM PUBLICATIONS BOOKS Wooden Boats, Iron Men - The Halvorsen Story by Randi Svenson, published by Halstead Press in association with the Australian National Maritime Museum, 2004. ISBN 1920831 11 8 . Jacketed hardcover, 176 pp, over 100 photographs in colour and black & white Volunteers Handbook 2003-04, handbook of the Australian National Maritime Museum Volunteers, 40pp, editor Gillian Matthews. Published every two years. Free to ANMM volunteers EXHIBITION PUBLICATIONS 2004 Classic & Wooden Boat Festival, souvenir program, 14pp including illustrations Operation Jaywick 6Oth Anniversary - the story of Australia's most daring and successful WWII special operation, by Lynette Ramsay Silver. ISBN 0-9751428-0-1. 12pp including illustrations Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film, exhibition catalogue, editor Dr Wendy Wilkins, designer Jeremy Austen, essays by Dr Fiona Allon and Rosie Nice. ISBN 0-9751428-1-X. 40pp with 52 illustrations in colour and black & white SERIALS Signals quarterly colour magazine of the Australian National Maritime Museum 64-67. ISSN 1033-4688, 36pp, editor Jeffrey Mellefont. Published September, December, March, June. Free to Members Australian National Maritime Museum Annual Report 2002-2003. ISSN 1034-5019. 118pp, editor Jeffrey Mellefont All Hands, magazine of the Australian National Maritime Museum Volunteers, 28pp, published quarterly. Free to ANMM volunteers. Issues 44-47 Newsletter, monthly newsletter of the Australian National Maritime Museum Volunteers, lOpp, editor Peter Wood, published monthly. Free to ANMM volunteers. Issues 110-121 EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES Portholes - free newsletter for Teacher Friends of ANMM, 4pp, published winter, spring and autumn, editor Jeffrey Fletcher Shipwreck, Corrosion and Conservation - additions to worksheets and changes to workshop in line with the syllabus changes. Additions by Richard Neville, teacher guide Ocean of Stories - resource kits for primary and secondary students to be used with the exhibition Oceans o f Stories. Written by Jeffrey Fletcher Senior Maritime Archaeology - revised to address syllabus changes to stage 6 ancient history. Written by Genevieve Milton (teacher guide) and edited by Jeannie Douglass Dipping into History - developed as a stage 4 history tour of the museum's permanent galleries. The complementary workshop addresses related historical concepts. Written by Genevieve Milton (teacher guide) and edited by Jeannie Douglass Pyrmont Walk -
senior geography - developed to address stage 6 geography syllabus.
Written by Marina Comino (teacher guide) 119
APPENDIXES
Pyrmont Walk - guided tour of Pyrmont, with worksheets, for stage 4 history (site study) and stage 5 geography. Written by Jeannie Douglass Making History in Museums - stage 6 modern history workshop and tour with worksheets adapted to focus on the posters in the Patriotism Persuasion Propaganda exhibition. Written by Jeannie Douglass WORLD WIDE WEB Australian National Maritime Museum web site http://www.anmm.gov.au. Updated continually. Webmaster Jeffrey Mellefont, publications manager The Welcome Wall http://www.anmm.gov.au/ww Searchable database of all Welcome Wall
registrations including personal histories. Online registration for intending
participants ANMM Image Library - searchable database of selected ship images from the collection (http://www.anmm.gov.au/pics/search/index.cfm). This is the museum’s contribution to the national heritage portal coordinated by the National Library of Australia PictureAustralia (http://www.pictureaustralia.org/)
12 0
APPEN DIX 6 STAFF PUBLICATIONS Steven ADAMS, ‘Managing floating heritage’, feature article, Signals No 65 2003-04: 25-29 Max DINGLE, ‘Fundraising for Friends', article, Friends Review (newsletter of the Australian Federation of Friends of Museums), August 2003 - ‘Australian Friends of Museums', article, British Federation o f Friends of Museums Newsletter, No 80, Summer 2004 Nigel ERSKINE, 2002 HMS Sirius Exhibition Report, unpublished report for Environment Australia 2003 - Kingston Ceramics - a dictionary o f ceramic wares in the Norfolk Island Museum, Norfolk Island Museum publication 2003 - Norfolk Island Strategic Plan, for Norfolk Island Administration 2003 - HMS Sirius plan of management, for Environment Australia 2003 - ‘Pitcairn after the Bounty', Maritime Life and Traditions Vol 21 2003:58ff Maria Jose FERNANDEZ, 'Negotiation Identity: Migration, colonisation and cultural marginalisation in Lara Rios and Vicky Ramos' Mo and Carmen Lomas Garza’s In My Famiiy/En Mi Familia', Children's Literature Association Quarterly, vol 28 no 2 Summer 2003: 8 1-89 Daina FLETCHER, ‘Sydney Working Harbour - The Waterfront', article, Signals No 66 2004: 27 - ‘Swimmers, sharks & social control', feature article, Signals No 67 2004:10-14 Kieran HOSTY, ‘Colonial consumers’, review of Material Culture and Consumer Society by Mark Staniforth, Signals No 64 2003: 34 - ‘Sunken Treasures make a vibrant exhibition at the National Maritime Museum, Antiques in New South Wales, December 2003-M ay 2004:32 - ‘Lost for 500 ye a rs ... Sunken Treasures o f Brunei Darussalam’, Signals No 65:4-8 - ‘500-year old treasure recovered’, Dive Log Australia, January 2004 No 186:80-81 - ‘Lost for 500 ye a rs ... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam’, Educare News - the Independent Journal o f Australian Education, March 2004 N o l45:52-54 Paul HUNDLEY, ‘Scrimshaw - Art of the Whaler', feature article, Signals No 66 2004: 8-1 1 - ‘Acquisitions: Hawaiian Isles, by George F Gregory’, The World of Antiques and Art, August 2003-February 2004: 226-227 - ‘Scrimshaw - Art of the Whaler, feature article, The World of Antiques and Art, February-August 2004: 5 2 -56 - ‘Scrimshaw - Art o f the Whaler, feature article, Collectables Trader, March-April 2004: 9 -1 2 Shar JONES, ‘Sydney Working Harbour’, article, Signals No 64 2003: 4 - 7 Michelle LINDER, ‘NAVY - revitalised and looking good', feature article, Signals No 66 2004: 4 -6 Ewen MCPHEE,' The Archaeology of the Pearl Shelling industry in Torres Strait’, Torres Strait Archaeology and Material Cult ure, Memoirs of the Queensland Museum Cultural Heritage Series, Vol 3 Part 1 Jeffrey MELLEFONT, ‘Paris in India', feature article, Signals No 64 2004: 24-27 - & Kimberly O’Sullivan Steward, ‘A celebration of East Timor’, article, Signals No 64 2003: 2 8 -2 9 - 'The schooner of old’, review of The Global Schooner by K H Marquardt, Signals No 64 2003:34
121
- ‘Wooden Boats, Iron Men’, review of The Halvorsen Story by R Svensen, Signals No 66 2004: 30 - Th e engaging couta boats’, review of The Couta Boat by Garry Kerr, Signals No 66 2004: 31 - ‘Lord Jim on the Murray’, review of The Incomparable Captain Cadell, Signals No 67 2004: 31 - ‘1421 - The year China discovered the world by Gavin Menzies', book review, The Great Circle, Journal of the Australian Association for Maritime History \/ol 25 No 2 2003: 4 4 46 Rosie NICE, ‘Something about a sailor - a voyage of discovery', catalogue essay, Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film, published by ANMM, 2004: 6 -1 3 - ‘Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film’, feature article, Signals No 67 2004: 4 -7 Kimberly O’SULLIVAN STEW ARD, ‘Tampa - into the eye of a storm’, article, Signals No 65 2003-04: 30-31 - ‘Mahjar: the story of Australia’s Lebanese', article, Signals No 67 2004: 24-25 - & Jeffrey Mellefont, 'A celebration of East Timor’, article, Signals No 64 2003: 28 -2 9 Bill RICHARDS, ‘Viva Mediterranean Tucker!', article, Signals No 65 2 0 0 3 -0 4 :1 2 -1 4 Lindsey SHAW, ‘National Maritime Museum salutes the Royal Australian Navy', Antiques in New South Wa/es, December 2 0 0 3 -May 2004: 33 - ‘The Flinders Papers’, web site results of Caird Fellowship 2000, www.nmm.ac.uk Gaynor STANLEY, ‘Coastal shipping collection', feature article, Signals No 64 2003: 30-31 - ‘A personal place in NAVY, article, Signals No 66 2004: 7 Wendy WILKINS, ‘Tribal Warrior voyage ends at museum’, article, Signals No 64 2003: 36 - ‘Publishing coup for museum Friends', review of Port Adelaide: Tales from a ‘commodious harbour' by John Couper-Smartt and Christine Courtney, Signals No 65 2003-2004: 16 - ‘Sand in our souls’, review of Sand in our souls: The beach in Australian history by Leone Huntsman, Signals No 65 2003-2004: 15 - Turtle Tracks: Indigenous knowledge and Western science’, feature article, Signals No 65 2004: 10-11 - 'Our own Big River’, review of Riverboats of the Clarence by Stuart Lee, Signals No 66 2004: 31 - ‘Little Brit battler cuts a dash at ANMM’, article, Signals No 66 2004: 36 - ‘Picture perfect’, article, Signals No 67 2004: 23
APPENDIX 7 STAFF CONFERENCE PAPERS & LECTURES Zara COLLINS, 'Finders Keepers’ exhibition of jewellery design, toured JamFactory at Adelaide, Craft Qld Brisbane and GIG Gallery Sydney, 2003-2004 - Sydney University visiting artist program, Sydney College of the Arts, Glass Studio, 06/2004 Penny CUTHBERT, volunteer guide training, Watermarks exhibition, 05/11/2003 & 17/02/2004 Max DINGLE, ‘Setting up a Friends group’, paper, Sydney Chapter, Museums Australia seminar, Sydney Jewish Museum, 08/08/2003 - participant in debate, ‘Which are more important, your visitors or your collections?’, Getting the balance right, AICCM seminar, Museum of Sydney, 31/03/2004 Mariea FISHER, ‘Lost for 500 years ... Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam', lecture to ANMM Members and Asian Art Society, 18/03/2003 - ‘Starving for shows - temporary & travelling exhibitions’, chair SIG Group, Museums Australia, 17/05/2004 - Exhibition critique, National Gallery Victoria International Schaeffer Gallery, chair, Museums Australia Conference, 20/05/2004 Daina FLETCHER, volunteer guide training, Watermarks exhibition, 28/07/2003 - ‘Bathing, swimming and the development of public baths in Sydney', Sydney Working Harbour Historic Harbour Pools cruise forum, ANMM lecture and cruise commentary, 26/10/2003 - ‘Sydney Working Harbour', public lecture, Heritage Week, 29/04/2004 Jeff FLETCHER, ‘School groups - where would we be without them?’, paper, Museums Australia Annual Conference, Australian Maritime Museums Council Special Interest Group, Melbourne, 17/05/2004 Elizabeth HADLOW, ‘Polyester film as a protective barrier', poster presented to the Sydney Symposium Collaborations and Collections 2004, 01-03/04/2004 Kieran HOSTY, volunteer guide training, Age o f Sail exhibition, 01/07/2003 - ‘ANMM and the Endeavour Project’, Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology conference paper, Port Arthur, Tasmania, 11/11/2003 Michelle LINDER, volunteer guide training, NAVY exhibition, 19/08/2003 W ill MATHER, ‘Careers in the arts', talk to Sydney University students, Sydney University, 11/09/2003 Patricia MILES & Peter WOOD, Cape Bowling Green Lighthouse volunteer guide training, 09/12/2003,16/12/2003, 18/02/2004, 03/03/2004, 24/03/2004, 06/04/2004 Rosie NICE, ‘Sailor Style - A rt Fashion Film’, Members special exhibition viewing and talk, 17/06/04 Kim berly O’SULLIVAN STEW ARD, ‘Oceans of Stories', WEA course lecture, 28/07/2003 Susan SEDGWICK, ‘ANMM and temporary and travelling exhibitions program', presentation to National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, UK staff, 24/09/2003 - ‘NMM secondment', presentation to ANMM staff, 12/12/2003 Lindsey SHAW, volunteer guide training, NAVY exhibition, 12/09/2003 - ‘Putting the Navy exhibition together ’, talk to ANMM Members, 14/12/2003 123
APPENDIXES
- ANMM and the new NAVY exhibition', talk to staff, Fleet Air Arm Museum, Yeovilton, UK, 25/03/2004 Martin TERRY, volunteer guide training, Navigators exhibition, 22/07/2003 and 21/10/2003 - ‘Explore - the art of paper’, lecture to Museums and Galleries Foundation of NSW, 1/09/2003 - ‘The Black Ship’, lecture to Asian Art Society of Australia, 25/10/2003 Mary-Louise W ILLIAMS, host, Welcome Wall unveiling ceremonies, 02/11/2003 & 09/05/2004 - speaker, opening of Whyalla Maritime Museum, 05/07/2003 - speaker, launch of Wooden Boats, Iron Men - The Halvorsen Story, 06/03/2004 - speaker, launch of Illustrated History o f Newcastle, 19/03/2003 - speaker, launch of Forgotten Fleet: US Small Ships (vol 2), 15/05/2004 - address to Santa Sabina debutantes, 03/04/2004 - T h e devil and the deep blue sea: managing a fleet of historic vessels' and ‘Interpreting Blackmore’s First Lady', papers, ICMM (International Congress of Maritime Museums) Conference, Falmouth, UK, 10/10/2003 - ‘Outreach programs for maritime museums’, paper, Australian Maritime Museum Council, 20/03/2004
124
APPENDIX 8 STAFF MEDIA APPEARANCES This appendix lists appearances by museum staff communicating their research and special expertise to a wider audience. Michael CRAYFORD. ‘Sunken Treasures of Brunei Darussalam', interview with Grant Denyer, Sunrise, Channel 7, 29/01/2004 - ‘What’s on at the Australian National Maritime Museum’, interview with Kerry Peck, 2BS Radio, 30/04/2004 Penny CUTHBERT, - ‘Oskar Speck - the museum’s search for his sextant', interview, ABC North Queensland Radio, 06/02/2004 - ‘Oskar Speck', interview, Foxtel History Channel, 09/02/2004 - 'Oskar Speck’, interview in History Detectives, Film Australia/ABC-TV, 22/03/2004 - ‘Surf rage’, interview, Sunrise, Network 7-TV, 22/03/2004 - ‘Beach culture', interview, Sunrise, Network 7-TV 04/04/2004 - ‘Oskar Speck’, interview, SBS Radio, 07/04/2004 Diane FENTON, ‘Yesteryear afloat’, interview about mini-tugboat Albert and children's activities at the museum, The Daily Telegraph, 06/10/2003 Kieran HOSTY, ‘A historical detail accounted for below decks’, interview about the film Master and Commander, Sydney Morning Herald, 27/11/2003 - Master and Commander, interview with Sally Loane, ABC Radio 702, 27/11/2003 - ‘Brunei Shipwreck', interview, Foxtel History Channel, 02/02/2004 - 'Centurion shipwreck', interview, Totally Wild, Channel 10, 10/02/2004 - ‘CLS4 Lightship', interview, Totally Wild, Channel 10, 23/04/2004 Paul HUNDLEY, ‘Scrimshaw - Art of the Whaler’, interview with Angela Caterns, ABC Radio, 24/03/2004 - ‘Scrimshaw - Art of the Whaler', interview, 2NBC Radio, 25/03/2004 - ‘Scrimshaw - Art of the Whaler', interview with Brian Bateman, 31/03/2004 Darren ISAACS, ‘Classic & Wooden Boat Festival', interview with Scott Levi, ABC FM Radio 92.5, 05/03/2004 - ‘Spotlight on lighthouses’, school holiday program, interview 2NBC, 07/04/2004 - ‘Spotlight on lighthouses’ school holiday program, interview 2NSB, 14/04/2004 - ‘Spotlight on lighthouses’ school holiday program, interview with Khara Edwards, 2RES FM 89.7, 20/04/2004 Brendan JACKSON, ‘A place in history’, report on NAVY exhibition by Gaynor Stanley, South Coast Register, 24/12/2003 - ‘A personal place in NAVY’, story by Gaynor Stanley, Signals No 66 2004: 7 - photographed as Gulf War participant, Anzac Day report, Sydney Morning Herald, 25/04/2004 - photographed as Gulf War participant, Anzac Day report, The Age, 25/04/2004 - ‘My time in the Gulf in the Navy', video interview, Sydney Morning Herald web site Shar JONES, Sydney Working Harbour, interview, RTV Channel 31,18/05/2004 Michelle LINDER, interview with John Cecil about the Voyager tragedy, ABC South Coast WA Radio, 10/02/2004 Patricia MILES, ‘A working harbour remembered', the Sam Hood photographic collection, interview with Steve Meacham, Sydney Morning Herald, 20/09/2003 Jeffrey MELLEFONT, The Chinese Discovery of Australia 1421 according to the visiting Chinese Premier Hu’, interview with Derryn Hinch, Drivetime, Radio 3AW 24/10/2003
APPENDIXES
Rosie NICE, ‘Sailor Style - Art Fashion Film', interview with Alan Saunders, Comfort Zone, Radio National, 05/06/2004 Kimberly O’SULLIVAN STEWARD, ‘Oceans of Stories', The Time of Your Life, RTV Channel 31, 08/07 and 11/07/2003 - ‘Oceans of Stories', interview with Caroline Jolley, 2SER-FM, 14/07/2003 - ‘Oceans of Stories’, interview with Steve Sim, 2NSB-FM, 14/07/2003 - ‘Oceans o f Stories', interview with Thomasin Litchfield, 2RES-FM, 25/07/2003 - ‘What’s on at ANMM during Refugee Week’, interview with Brian Bateman, 2NBC breakfast program, 20/10/2003 ‘What’s on at ANMM during Refugee Week’, radio interview, Merryn Jones, 2RSR, 20/10/2003 - interview on the work of Casula artist Gina Sinozich’s ANMM commission, Liverpool Champion, 15/10/2003 - interview for Book News, University of Technology Sydney magazine, 8/10/2003 Bill RICHARDS, 'Museum fleet’, interview, Australia All Over, ABC local radio, 10/08/2003 - ‘Museum fleet’, interview, Australia All Over, ABC local radio, 14/09/2003 - ‘NAVY exhibition’, interview, 2SM Radio, 12/12/2003 - ‘Museum holiday program’, interview, 2UE Radio, 03/01/2004 - ‘Museum holiday program’, interview, 2UE Radio, 09/01/2004 - ‘Ken Warby and Classic & Wooden Boat Festival’, interview, Australia All Over, ABC local radio, 07/03/2004 - ‘Museum visitor programs’, interview, SBS Radio, 13/04/2004 - ‘Sailor Style’, interview, Radio 2BS, 23/06/2004 Susan SEDGWICK, Antarctic Heroes, NSW English Teachers’ Association, CD-ROM Lindsey SHAW, interview on board HMAS Vampire and HMAS Onslow, with Grant Denyer, Sunrise, Channel 7, 06/11/2003 Chris WAUGH, interview about the celebrations for Operation Jaywick’s 60th anniversary, FM Radio 93.3, 22/11/2003 Mary-Louise W ILLIAMS, ‘150th anniversary celebration of navigation along the Murray River’, interview, ABC Riverina, 24/09/2003 - interview with Gail Brigdon (on free admission), 2NSB FM Radio, 21/11/2003 - interview with Gary O’Callaghan (on free admission), 2UE Radio, 21/11/2003 - interview with Malcolm Elliot (on ANMM summer program & future Vikings exhibition), 2UE Radio, 22/11/2003 - BBC (UK) interview, 14/11/2003 - interview (on the new NAVY exhibition, HMAS Onslow, free admission and holiday activities), 2UE Radio, 24/12/2004 - interview (on the new CEO of the Australian Museum), ABC 702 Sydney Radio, 12/01/2004 Josie WORMER, ‘Restrictions dampen sales’ water restrictions and Wetworld, interview in Toy & Hobby Retailer, 01/02/2004 Elizabeth ZAMM IT-ESTRADA, interview about Maltese food in the Mediterranean Tucker Festival, 2SER Radio, 10/08/2003
126
APPEN DIX 9 STAFF PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS Adrian ADAM, committee member, Australian Federation of Friends of Museums Steven ADAMS, auditor, Australian Registrars Committee Susan BRIDIE, council member, Museums Australia - chair, Museums Australia Standing Committee for Visitor Services and Marketing - executive committee, Australian Federation of Friends of Museums Michael CRAYFORD, member, board of directors, AusFleritage: Australia’s Network for Cultural Heritage Services Max DINGLE, Australian delegate, World Federation of Friends of Museums council - World Federation representative, Australian Federation of Friends of Museums council - vice-president, Friends and Volunteers Special Interest Group, Museums Australia - board member, Darling Harbour Business Association - member, Adelaide University Research Centre for the History of Food and Drink Nigel ERSK1NE, member, NSW Maritime Archaeology Advisory Panel Maria Jose FERNANDEZ, delegate, Ethnic Communities Council of New South Wales Mariea FISHER, council member, Museums Australia - president, Temporary and Travelling Exhibitions Special Interest Group, Museums Australia Jeff FLETCHER, treasurer, Australian Maritime Museums Council, Special Interest Group, Museums Australia Kieran HOSTY, executive member, Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology - chairperson, Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology Diving Standards Panel - chairperson, NSW Maritime Archaeology Advisory Panel - referee for Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology journal and the Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology special publication (approximately 20 papers a year) Brendan JACKSON, secretary, HMAS Sydney Association Matt LEE, president, Museum Shops Association of Australia Denise MACKENZIE, honorary secretary, Australian Registrars Committee Ewen McPHEE, council member, Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology Jeffrey MELLEFONT, vice-president, Australian Association for Maritime History - referee, one research paper for The Great Circle, Journal of the Australian Association for Maritime History Susan SEDGWICK, secretary, Temporary and Travelling Exhibitions Special Interest Group, Museums Australia - secretary, Museums Australia (NSW) Lindsey SHAW, president, Australian Association for Maritime History - newsletter editor, Australian Association for Maritime History Dr W endy WILKINS, editor, Friends Review, newsletter of the Australian Federation of Friends of Museums
127
APPENDIXES
Mary-Louise W ILLIAMS, president, American Friends of the ANMM Inc - chairperson, Museums and Galleries Foundation of NSW - vice-president, International Congress of Maritime Museums - member, Council of Australian Museum Directors - board member, HM Bark Endeavour Foundation - board member, Australian National Maritime Foundation
APPENDIX 10 STAFF OVERSEAS TRAVEL Max DINGLE, assistant director, Commercial and Visitor Services: USA, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, New Orleans, 25/04-10/05/2004. Promoted American Friends of the ANMM and attended American Association of Museums Conference and Museum Expo Elizabeth HADLOW, conservator: UK, 08/09-14/11/2004. Awarded fellowship by the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust, supported by the Ian Potter Foundation, to train at the Centre for Photographic Conservation Patricia MILES, curator of commerce: Denmark, Sweden, England and Ireland, 0 3 15/11/2003. Visited museums to research and negotiate loans for the Vikings exhibition Susan SEDGWICK, curator, temporary and travelling exhibitions: secondment, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, UK, 26/08-03/10/2003 Lindsey SHAW, senior curator, maritime technology, exploration and Navy: Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth and National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, April 2003; recall to duty and object selection for Nelson exhibition Mary-Louise WILLIAMS, director: Falmouth, UK, 8-12/10/2003. Attended ICMM (International Congress of Maritime Museums) Conference Endeavour, Yarmouth; National Maritime Museum, National History Museum, Science Museum and Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the National museums at Merseyside, Albert Dock, Liverpool; Musee national de la Marine, Channel Archives (Sailor Style), Paris; York archaeological site and Jorvik Museum, York; 4-21/10/2003. Participated in discussions on shared exhibitions and programs
128
APPENDIX 11 ORGANISATION CHART AS AT 30 JUNE 2004
Minister for the Arts and Sport ANMM Council D irector - M-L William s
Secretariat - R Smylie
Fleet- S Adams
External Relation* - B Richards
Collections
Commercial &
Corporate
& Exhibitions M Crayford
Visitor Services
Services Q Howarth
Maritime Communities D Fletcher
Maritime Technology Exploration & Navy
M Dingle
Visitor Programs J Douglass a/g
Financial Services
M arketing
Human Resources G Matthews
S Bridie
J Miller
L Shaw Sp ecial Projects
Publishing J Mellefont
Mariea fisher Paul Hundley John Waight
Customer Services
P Haggarty
Communications & information
D Churchill
Building Services
R McMaster
Library Services
F Prentice
Property Liaison & Capital Works 1McKellar
Conservation
J Engelbert
Registration S Fletcher
Design
S Fielder
129
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 12 APS STAFF AT 30 JUNE 2004 This appendix lists only APS staff employed under the Public Service Act 1999 EXECU TIVE Mary-Louise Williams MA
Director
Inger Sheil BA
Executive Assistant
Russell Smylie BBus
Manager, Secretariat & Fleet
Fleet services Steven Adams Eng C12 BBus CertMusStud CertMarEng CertlndElect ASA
Fleet Manager
Neil Brough Eng C l l DipNavArch DipMarEng CertMusStud
Fleet Engineer Superintendent
Robert Parish JP Coxswain CertElect
Shipyard Foreman
Lee Graham Coxswain CertShpbldg
Shipwright
Matthew Dunn CertShpbldg
Shipwright
Todd Maiden CertBlrmkg
Shipwright
Matthew Spillard CertFitMchng
Shipwright
Michael Whetters CertShpbldg
Shipwright
Robert Townsend
Shipwright
Vince Maguire
Shipkeeper
Christine Finlay
Shipkeeper
Peter Lightbody Coxswain CertBlrmkg
Shipkeeper
George Hannaford, JP CertShpbldg ASTC
Shipkeeper
Noel Burgess
Shipkeeper
External relations unit Bill Richards BA DipJourn DipPubAdmin
Media & Communications Manager
Samantha McDonough BACom
Promotions Assistant
COLLECTIONS & EXHIBITIONS BRANCH Michael Crayford BA(VisArts) MA(CultSt&Comm)
Assistant Director & Branch Head
DipMusStud Kim Tao MA
Project Assistant
Special projects unit Mariea Fisher BA(Hons) MM
Manager, Temporary & Travelling
Exhibitions Bliss Jensen MA BSc DipPR
Curator, Temporary & Travelling
John Waight CertEd
Indigenous Curator & Liaison Officer
Paul Hundley MA
Senior Curator, USA Gallery
Exhibitions
Maritime communities Daina Fletcher BA(Hons)
Senior Curator
Patricia Miles BA
Curator, Commerce
Penny Cuthbert BA DipMusStud
Curator, Sport & Leisure
Ewen McPhee BASocWelf GradDipArts
Curator
Maritim e technology, exploration & Navy Lindsey Shaw BA DipMusStud
Senior Curator, Maritime
Michelle Linder MA DipMusStud
Curator, Navy
Nigel Erskine BA GradDipMarArch GradCert MusStud
Curator, Exploration
Kieran Hosty BA DipMarArch
Curator, Ship Technology & Maritime
Technology, Exploration & Navy
130
Archaeology, on leave
Design Sharne Fielder BDes CertProjMgt
Manager
Adrienne Kabos MDes DiplndDes CertCompGraphics Graphic Designer/Coordinator Daniel Ormella MDes AssDipGraphDes
Graphic Designer
Lisa Carrington BDes
Graphic Designer
Johanna Nettleton BA
Exhibition Designer
Ezster Matheson AdvDiplntDes
Exhibition Designer
Tanguy Le Moing
Exhibition Designer
Stephen Crane MVisArts
Senior Preparator
Kevin Bray DipVisArts
Team Leader, Preparation
Adam Laerkesen BVisArts
Preparator
Peter Buckley BVisArts DipVisArts
Preparator
Registration Sally Fletcher BA DipMusStud
SeniorRegistrar
Denise Mackenzie MA DipMusStud
Registrar, Information Management
Simon Hawkes BA CHM
Assistant Registrar, Storage &
Kristina Stankovski BA DipMusStud
Registration Assistant
&
Loans
Handling Anupa Shah BCom
Registration Assistant
Will Mather BA(Hons) DipMusStud
Assistant Registrar Documantation
Andrew Frolows CertPhoto
Photographer
Amanda McKittrick
Photographic Librarian
Sabine Escobar MAMusStud BASocSc
Registration Assistant
Sarah Milgate BFinArts
Assistant Registrar, Storage & Handling
Claire Campey BA DipMusStud
Registration Assistant,
Andy Atkins
Registrar, Storage & Transport,
Documentation, on leave on leave Conservation James Engelbert BFinArts
Manager
Sue Frost AssocDipMatCon
Senior Conservator
Elizabeth Hadlow BAppSc
Conservator
Library Services Frances Prentice BA(LibSc)
Manager
Jan Flarbison BA GradDipLib
Technical Services Librarian
Gillian Simpson BA DipLib
Public Enquiries
Karen Pymble DipLib AssocDipCommunityWeI
Library Technician
Kathryn Vandine BSc GradDipLib
Library Technician
C O M M ER CIAL & VISITOR SERVICES BRANCH Max Dingle
Assistant Director & Branch Head
Maria Jose Fernandez MA
Project Assistant Customer Services
Customer Service Peter Haggarty JP
Manager
Jan Mclnnies
Receptionist
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APPENDIXES
Marketing Susan Bridie Dominic Mackintosh BA(Hons) Elizabeth Zammit-Estrada BTourism Adrian Adam BBus Ben Stonehouse BSc Lisa Faye AssocDipHospMgt Natasha Clark BATour
Manager Marketing Services Manager Marketing Assistant Members Manager Members Service Coordinator Venue Hire Manager Evaluation & Visitor Research Officer
Publications Jeffrey Mellefont BA DipEd
Manager
V isito r Services Jeannie Douglass MA DipEd
a/g Manager, Visitor Services
Darren Isaacs BEd DipSocSc Dallas Bicknell BA(Hons) DipEd
Visitor Programs Officer Public Programs Officer
Jeffrey Fletcher DipTeach Carolyn Allen BA MPS
K-6 School & Programs Coordinator Education Project Officer
Marina Comino BA'
Education Officer
CORPORATE SER VICES BRANCH Quentin Howarth
Assistant Director, Branch Head
Xanthe Kerr
Project Assistant
Communications & Information Management Services Dianne Churchill BA(Hons) DipEd DipiM Manager Robyn Gurney BA DipEd MIM
Records Manager
Fifi Brown DipTeach BEd
Records Officer
Financial Services Joan Miller BCom ACA CPA William Good BA James Egan Tina Lee Tony Ridgway BA Human Resources Gillian Matthews BAppSc John Miranda BA JP Cindy Fung DipHRM Brendan Jackson CertBus(HR) Peter Wood MasterMariner MAqua DipVoiMg Michelle Durant BSC Zara Collins BVisArts Building Services Ray McMaster DipEng AssocDipConMaint Ian McKellar AssocDipConMaint
132
Manager Assistant Finance Manager Accounts Supervisor Accounts Officer Accounts Officer
Manager Manager Personnel Services Personnel Officer Assistant Personnel Officer Volunteers Manager Volunteers Assistant Volunteers Assistant
Keith Buckman
Building Services Manager Maintenance Manager Assets Coordinator
Property Liaison Greg Edmondson
Property Liaison Manager
APPENDIX 13 COUNCIL MEMBERS CHAIRMAN Mr Mark BETHWAITE BE (Civil), MBIdSc, MBA Term: 30 June 2001-29 June 2004 30 June 200 4 -29 June 2007 Attended all council meetings Mark Bethwaite is managing director and CEO of the leading industry organisation, Australian Business Limited. An engineer by profession, he has been chief executive of two major listed Australian mining and manufacturing companies. His current non-executive directorships, in addition to the Australian National Maritime Museum, include the Reserve Bank’s Note Printing Australia Limited, Deacons - Lawyers, the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal and the Australian Institute of Management NSW & ACT Ltd. As a member of the Australian yachting teams for the 1972, 1976 and 1980 Olympic Games, and a world champion in a number of international classes, Mark Bethwaite has a strong affinity with Australia’s maritime heritage. MEMBERS Mr Marcus BLACKMORE AM (NSW) Term: 22 November 2000-21 November 2003 22 November 2003-21 November 2006 Attended four council meetings Executive chairman of Blackmores Ltd, Mr Blackmore is chairman of the board of the Young Endeavour Youth Scheme, chairman of the Industry Advisory Committee of the National Marine Safety Committee, a member of the Waterways Authority Council and a trustee of CEDA (Committee for Economic Development of Australia). Mr Blackmore is an experienced yachtsman and his company sponsored Kay Cottee’s solo voyage in 1988. Mr John FARRELL (WA) Term: 30 June 1997-29 June 2000 29 August 200 0 -28 August 2003 29 August 2003-16 July 2004 (Resigned 17 October 2003) Attended two council meetings Mr Farrell is a marine consultant with strong business experience in the marine area. He was formerly CEO of ship builder Oceanfast Marine Group. The Hon Brian GIBSON AM, BScF, BA, FAICD (Tas) Term: 26 June 200 2 -2 5 June 2005 Attended all council meetings Brian Gibson was a Liberal senator for Tasmania from 1993 until February 2002. In 1996, he was parliamentary secretary to the treasurer and responsible for corporations law and the Australian Securities Commission. Before entering parliament, he was managing director of Australian Newsprint Mills Ltd during the 1980s, chairman of the Hydro-Electric Commission of Tasmania 1988-1992, chairman of Unitas Consulting Ltd, and a director of several other companies. He is a director of Talent 2 International Limited.
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APPENDIXES
Ms Gaye HART AM, BA, MEd, DEd (honoris causa), FACE, FAICD (NSW) Term: 14 May 2003-13 May 2006 Attended all council meetings Gaye Hart is the director of the Hunter Institute of TAFE NSW. She is also a director of the Newcastle Port Corporation and president of the Australian Council for International Development. Ms Hart has a Bachelor of Arts from Sydney University and a Masters in Education from Canberra CAE. She is a Fellow of the Australian College of Education and the Australian Institute of Company Directors. In June 1989 she was awarded membership of the Order of Australia (AM) for her services to the comm unity and Australia's Bicentenary. In 1999 she was awarded an honorary doctorate in Education by the University of Newcastle. Emeritus Professor John PENROSE AssAppSc (PTC), Phd (City, London), (W A) Term: 18 December 2003-17 December 2006 Attended three council meetings Professor Penrose was founding director of Curtin University’s Centre for Marine Science and Technology. He is currently project manager of. the National Coastal Water Habitat Mapping Program of the Cooperative Research Centre for Coastal Zone, Estuary and Waterway Management. His research interests are in marine science and technology; particularly marine acoustics, oceanography, remote sensing and maritime archaeology. He is an honorary associate of the Western Australian Museum and was the founder in 1970 of the Perth welfare association volunteer task force. He has been diving and sailing in Australian waters for over four decades. Mrs Eda RITCHIE MusA, GradDipBus (Vic) Term: 26 June 2002-25 June 2005 Attended all council meetings Coming from a farming and business background, Mrs Ritchie has had a strong community commitment mainly through local government, the Arts and as trustee of the R E Ross Philanthropic Trust. She is an active sailor and has worked in natural resource management and coastal strategic planning and was a member of Environment Conservation Council whose recommendations on marine parks have recently been adopted by the Victorian government. She is a member of the Victorian Environmental Assessment Council. Mr John ROTHWELL AO (WA) Term: 24 June 2004-23 June 2007 With over 30 years shipbuilding experience Mr Rothwell is founder and executive chairman of Austral Ships Pty Ltd, a world leader in the construction of aluminium vessels. In January 2004 he was appointed an Officer in the General Division of the Order of Australia for service to the Australian shipbuilding industry through the development of trade links and for significant contributions to vocational education and training. Mr Rothwell is a member of the Bureau Veritas Classification Society as well as past chairman of both the Australian Shipbuilders Association and the State Training Board of Western Australia. He is a keen sailor and diver with a strong interest in maritime history. Mr John SIMPSON BA, MAICD, FPRIA (Vic) Term: 22 November 2000-21 November 2003 22 November 2003-21 November 2006 Attended all council meetings Mr Simpson is director of Shell Australia Limited and Shell Energy Holdings (Australia) Ltd. He is director of External and Corporate Affairs for Shell and also a director of several community and educational organisations. These include the Melbourne Symphony 134
Orchestra, Scotch College Melbourne, NGV Foundation and the Hitchin Foundation.
Dr Andrew SUTHERLAND MB, BS, FRCSC, FRACS, GradDip BA (SA) Term: 14 May 2003-13 May 2006 Attended all council meetings Dr Andrew Sutherland is chief of the Division of Surgery and Head of the Orthopaedic Department at the Adelaide Women’s and Children’s Hospital. He was educated at St Peter’s College and the University of Adelaide, graduating MB, BS in 1967 and GradDip BA in 2000. He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Canada and a Fellow and Treasurer of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons. He is a keen amateur maritime historian and an accomplished sailor, having represented South Australia in the Southern Cross Ocean Racing Regatta and completing three Sydney-Hobart races as navigator. Ms Mary-Louise W ILLIAM S (NSW) Term: 9 November 2 0 0 0 -8 November 2003 9 November 2 0 0 3 -8 November 2006 Attended all council meetings Ms Williams began her career at the Australian National Maritime Museum as senior curator in 1988, then became assistant director responsible for the Collections and Exhibitions branch. She was appointed Director in November 2000. She is vice-president of the International Congress of Maritime Museums and chair of the Museums and Galleries Foundation of NSW. Mrs Nerolie W ITHNALL BA, LLB, MAICD (Qld) Term: 26 June 2002-25 June 2005 Attended all council meetings Mrs Withnall is a consultant (former partner in law) with Minter Ellison lawyers. She is past chair of the Queensland Museum Board and a director with Campbell Brothers Group, Pan Australian Resources NL, Alchemia Ltd, the Brisbane Institute and the Major Sports Facilities Authority. She is also a member of the Takeovers Panel. NAVAL MEMBER The naval member holds office at the pleasure of the Chief of Navy. CDRE Russell CRANE CSM, RAN (ACT) Term: 1 February 2 0 03 -3 0 April 2004 Attended four council meetings CMDR Crane joined the RAN in 1970, serving in the carriers HMAS Melbourne and Sydney as well as HMA Ships Anzac, Duchess, Stalwart, Brisbane and Derwent. CMDR Crane took his first command in HMAS Curlew. He assumed the position of Commander Australian Navy Systems Command in October 2001. CDRE Geoff GERAGHTY RAN (ACT) Term: 1 May 2 004Attended one council meeting Commodore Geoff Geraghty joined the RAN in 1969 as a seaman officer. After gaining his Bridge Watch Keeping Certificate he specialised in hydrography. In addition to serving in various ships and shore postings CDRE Geraghty has commanded HMAS Flinders and HMNZS Monowai and served in foreign navies including the United States Navy, the PNG Defence Force, the Royal Navy and Royal New Zealand Navy. In 1998 he was appointed director of the RAN Staff College and completed his Graduate Certificate in Business Administration. CDRE Geraghty was appointed Australian Hydrographer and Hydrographic Force Element Group Commander in 1999, and head of the Australian Defence Staff, London, from 2001 to 2004. He assumed command of Australian Navy Systems Command on 30 April 2004.
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 14 COUNCIL MEETINGS & COMMITTEES 2003-2004 MEETINGS Meeting No 69
30 July 2003
Meeting No 70
17 September 2003
Meeting No 71
10 December 2003
Meeting No 72
5 March 2004
Meeting No 73
13 May 2004
FINANCE & AUDIT COMMITTEE The Committee’s terms of reference are to provide advice to the Council and management on matters relating to the museum's human, financial, information and other corporate resources including: Strategic and operational planning Budgets and estimates Audit matters Occupational Health and Safety Accounting policies and practices Staff levels Staff and volunteer issues Records and communications management Accommodation Met five times. Members/attendance: Brian Gibson / 5 Mrs Eda Ritchie/ 5 Ms Mary-Louise Williams / 4 Others / attendance: Mr Quentin Howarth, ANMM (Secretary) / 5 Ms Joan Miller, ANMM / 5 Mr Graham Johnson, Australian National Audit Office / 5 Mr Aziz Dindar, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu /3 Ms Pamela Robertson-Gregg, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu / 1 MAJOR CAPITAL WORKS COMMITTEE Met five times. * Members / attendance: Mr Mark Bethwaite / 4 Mr Marcus Blackmore/ 1 Mr John Fa rre ll/ 2 Ms Mary-Louise Williams / 5 Mrs Nerolie Withnall / 3 Others / attendance: Mr Quentin Howarth ANMM (Secretary) / 5 Greg Edmondson, ANMM / 5 Ms Joan Miller ANMM / 5 Mr Steven Adams, ANMM / 1 Mr Russell Smylie, ANMM / 1 * The committee also convened a number of teleconference meetings
136
MARKETING, PROGRAMS & SPONSORSHIP COMMITTEE Met five times. Members / attendance: Mr Marcus Blackmore / 1 Ms Gaye Hart / 3 Mr John Simpson / 2 Ms Mary-Louise Williams/4 Others / attendance: Mr Max Dingle, ANMM (Secretary) / 4 Ms Susan Bridie, ANMM / 1 COLLECTIONS & EXHIBITIONS COMMITTEE Met five times. Members / attendance: Dr Andrew Sutherland / 5 Prof. John Penrose / 2 Ms Mary-Louise Williams / 4 Mrs Nerolie Withnall / 5 Others / attendance: Mr Michael Crayford, ANMM (Secretary) / 5 Ms Daina Fletcher, ANMM / 1 Ms Frances Prentice, ANMM / 1 FLEET COMMITTEE Met five times. Members / attendance: CDRE Russell Crane / 2 Mrs Eda Ritchie / 5 Dr Andrew Sutherland / 1 Ms Mary-Louise Williams / 3 Others / attendance: Mr Russell Smylie, ANMM (Secretary) / 5 Mr Steven Adams ANMM / 5 USA GALLERY CONSULTATIVE COMMITTEE Met three times. Members / attendance: Ms Eileen Malloy US Consul General, co-Chair/ 3 Ms Mary-Louise Williams, co-Chair / 3 Mr David Gilmour US Consulate / 3 CDRE Russell Crane / 2 Mr Paul Hundley ANMM (Secretary) / 2 Others / attendance: Mr Michael Crayford ANMM / 3
137
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 15 AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL M ARITIM E FOUNDATION
CHAIRMAN Mr Bill CUTBUSH Company Director DIRECTORS Mr Mark BETHWAITE Managing Director & CEO, Australian Business Limited; Chairman, Australian National Maritime Museum The Hon Peter COLLINS RFD QC Former State Opposition Leader and Commander in the Naval Reserve Miss Kay COTTEEAO Record-making solo sailor; former Chairman, Australian National Maritime Museum Mr Peter DEXTER Regional Director, Wallenius Wilhelmsen Captain Trevor HAWORTH AM Executive Chairman, Captain Cook Cruises Mr Rob MUNDLE Author and Journalist Ms Mary-Louise WILLIAM S Director, Australian National Maritime Museum SECRETARY Mr Russell SMYLIE Australian National Maritime Museum
APPENDIX 16 SPONSORS, PATRONS & SUPPORTERS
PRINCIPAL SPONSOR ANZ
Lockwood Security Products Pty Ltd Maritime Union of Australia Penrith Lakes Development Corp
MAJOR SPONSORS
Scandinavian Airlines Systems
Australian Customs Services State Forrest of NSW
SBS
Major sponsors Akzo Nobel
Sydney Ports Corporation
Blackmores Ltd
Wallenius Willhelmsen
Raytheon Australia Pty Ltd Spotless Tenix Pty Ltd SPONSORS
Sydney by Sail Visions of Australia
FOUNDING PATRONS Alcatel Australia ANL Limited Bovis Lend Lease
Australian Maritime Safety Authority Abloy Security Bill and Jean Lane Blackmores Ltd BT Australasia Centenary of Federation Institution of Engineers Australia Lloyd’s Register of Shipping Louis Vuitton Novotel Century Hotel Speedo Australia Spotless Wallenius Wilhelmsen
BP Australia Bruce & Joy Reid Foundation Doyle’s Seafood Restaurants Howard Smith Limited James Hardie Industries P G .T G & M G Kailis National Australia Bank P&O Nedlloyd Telstra Westpac Banking Corporation Wallenius Willhelmsen Zim Shipping Australasia PATRONS
PROJECT SPONSORS ASSA ABLOY Australia Pacific Aurora Expeditions CSIRO
3M Australia Crawford Partners Architects Harbourside Darling Harbour Maxwell Optical Industries
Enviro Doctor eR&D Pty Ltd
ING
Forrest Training
DONORS
Freedom Group Lan Chile Airlines
State Street Australia
GrantPirrie Gallery
139
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 17 CORPORATE AND SUPPORTING MEMBERS
CORPORATE MEMBERS AT 30 JUNE 2004 Abloy Security Pty Ltd Adsteam Marine Art Exhibitions Australia Ltd Asiaworld Shipping Service Bulk Consultants Pty Ltd CP SHIPS (UK) Ltd Defence Community Organisation (DCO) DSTO - Aeronautical & Maritime Research Laboratory HMAS Albatross Welfare Fund HMAS Coonawarra HMAS Harman Welfare Fund HMAS Kuttabul HMAS Vampire Association HMAS Waterhen HMAS Watson Welfare Fund - RAN LOPAC Pty Ltd Maritime Worker’s Credit Union Naval Association of Aust. PMI Mortgage Insurance Ltd Randwick Barracks Officers’ Mess Seawise Australia P/L Shell Australia Ltd SME Regimental Trust Fund Submarine Association of Australia Sydney Pilot Service Pty Ltd Sydney Ports Corporation Symrise Pty Ltd Thales Underwater Systems Pty Ltd The Smith’s Snackfood Company Van Der Meer Consulting Zim Shipping Australasia P/L SUPPORTING MEMBERS and HMAS Sydney appeal donations ($100 and over) Mr James Peter Abbottsmith Mr Joseph Allbeury Mr Barry Anderson Mr Asmus Mr Peter G Bailey Mr Michael Bennett Mr Greg Blackburne Mr Raymond John Brown CDRE Ian Malcolm Burnside Mr David Leo Calmyre
$300
Cmdr Thomas Reed Fisher
$100
Mr Paul Vincent Fleming
$145
Mr & Mrs Peter & Robyn Flick
$200 $100 $100 $200 $100 $100 $100
$200 $100 $100 $100 $10000 $100 $100 $100 $200
Mr John E Gibson
Mr & Mrs Richard Godson
$125
$125
Dr Graeme Goldin
Mr Michael Ford Dr Foster Captain J A Glass Mr David Charles Glasson Mr John Glover
Mr Rodney Stuart Chandler
$150
Mr Damian Greenwood
$100 $100
Mr Ken Chapman
$200 $200 $100
Captain Ronald William Hart
$150
Mr Philip Hartog
$100 $100
Mr B Casey & Ms C Fleming
Mr & Mrs John & Pat Davis Mr Murray Doyle
Mr Bill Henderson
Mrs Christine Kondratenko
$200 $100 $200 $100 $100 $200 $200 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
Dr John Seymour
$150
Mr John Leng
$250
Mr John Southwell
Ms Nina Eveline Loder
$100
CMDR Stanbury RANR
Mr Robert Wallis
$100 $100 $200 $100 $100 $100 $200 $100 $100 $100 $200 $100 $100
Mr Brian Herrmann Rev William Koenraad Hoekstra Prof Clifford Hughes Mr & Mrs Peter & Helen Isbister Mr Murdoch Johnson Mr Rhys Jones Mr Sydney Jones Mr & Mrs Paul & Valerie Keys Mrs Margaret Kiley-Balas Mr Ken Stewart Kilmore Miss Kathleen Anne Kirk
Mr Chris Pickering Mr Graham Pickett Mr G W Quayle
$100 $200 $200
Mr Mark Eckhard Raddatz
$125
Mr Martin Lennox Rathbone
Mr & Mrs Douglas Rogers
$200 $200 $100 $100
Mr & Mrs Mark Sampson
$500
Mrs Kathrine Reynolds Mr & Mrs John Robinson
Mr Peter Sandilands
$425
Mr Edward Scardifield
$100
Miss Pamela Lowbridge
$145
Mr Wilfred Victor Stanfield
Mr Gregory John MacMahon
Mr Allan David Sturgess
Mr John Manning
$200 $100
Mr & Mrs Richard & Mary Mason
$125
Mr Colin Thew
Mr & Mrs John McCaughey
$125
Mr Bill Thompson
Mr W Robert McComas
Mr & Mrs David & Karen Toyne
Mr Neil McCowan
$200 $100
Mr & Mrs Richard McKenzie
$125
Dr Hein Vandenbergh
Dr Mark McLachlan
Mr Waghorn & Helen Nickson
Mr & Mrs Danny O’Meley
$100 $100 $200 $100
Mr Phillip John Watts
$150
Mr John Daniel O’Toole
$150
Dr Rae Weston
Ms Valerie Packer
$100 $100 $100
Dr Alan C S Winkworth
$100 $ 11 0 $100
Mr & Mrs Peter Mecklem Mr O’Loughlin
Mr & Mrs Nicholas Panos Ms Ann Parry
Mr Eric Arthur John Sweet
Mr Joseph Van Blargan
Mr Stuart Walker
Mr Arthur Charles Witten
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APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 18 VOLUNTEERS 2003-2004 Warwick Abadee
Ian Campbell
Diane Finlay
Arnold Abicht
John Campbell
Tony Fisher
Steve Adamantidis
Lisa Campbell
Geoffrey Francis
Steven Affleck
Marion Carter
Ted Franken
Don Aggar
Paul Cheng
Roy Freere
Ena Alcorn
Victor Chiang
Barry Fregon
Jessica Allen
Leslie Church
Peter French
Alan Anderson
Helen Churven
Chanel Friend
Del Anderson
Bob Clampett
Brian Frizell
Geoff Anderson
Charles Clancy
Jim Furlong
Lilian Andrew
Geoff Clarke
Bryan Gale
Grant Arbuthnot
Helen Clift
Aileen-Lee Gardner
Gwen Ashcroft
Brian Clough
Noreen-Lee Gardner
Barry Astle
Jim Colvin
Allan Garrick
Pat Austin
John Connor
Karen Gaynor-Sperring
Naysa Balcazar
Sylvia Cordiner
Peter Gerrey
Vivian Balmer
Mary Correa
John Gibbins
Howard Bate
John Corry
Tony Gibbs
Wendy Bate
Don Coulter
Col Gibson
Lyndyl Beard
Ken Cox
Peter Goertz
Ian Beckett
Reg Craft
Brad Golding
Carey Bell
Shirlea Crook
David Golding
Colin Bell
Patricia Cullen
Leslie Gulliver
David Bell
Andrew Custodio
Joy Halstead George Hancock
Estelle Billing
Tom Dalton
John Blanchfield
Bert Danon
Gordon Hannam
Wim Blome
Peter Davey
Shirley Hannam Ted Hannon
David Bloom
Caroline Davy
Gwen Bonnefin
Ken Deere
Brian Hansford
Jim Bonnefin
Jim Dennis
Joy Hanson-Acason
Alex Books
Terry Dickson
Wendy Hardiman
David Boult
Jim Dillon
Peter Hardy
David Boulton
Vincent Dorahy
Dorothy Harpley
Colin Bowes
Roy Dow
Evelyn Harris
Ron Bowrey
Ron Downie
Jane Harris
Frank Boyd
John Duckworth
Keith Harrison
Kel Boyd
Michael Duffett
Jennifer Heap
Gus Braun
Anthony Duignan
Bob Hetherington
Ian Bray
Jean Dunworth
Ken Heylbut
Bob Bright
John Eager
Shirley Heywood
John Brooke
John Ebner
Bill Hill
Mary Brookes
Andrew Ellis
Kevin Hilton
Norm Brooks
John Elphick
Frank Hines
Bernie Brown
John Emdin
Tiaki Hita
Deanne Brown
Jeff Evans
John Hodges
George Brown
Rob Everett
Clive Hoffman
Merv Brown
Ken Fair
Phil Hogan
John Buckland
David Farlow
Mai Horsfall
Pam Burden
Barry Fegan
Ziggy Hort
John L Butler
Jeanette Felton
Warwick Howse
Charles Hughes
Lyn McHale
Brian Peters
Don Humphrey
Robert Mclnally
Trevor Pickering Trevor Pike
Ethel Humphreys
Ronald McJannett
Jack Hutchinson
Sheila McLean
Paul Pisani
Penny Hyde
Kate McLoughlin
Shirley Pitman
Warren Hyslop
Ken McRorie
Richard Pocock
Lynne Jacobson
Lynn McWilliams
Len Price
Derek James
Allan Meddings
Peter Puckeridge
Jim Jeans
John Mees
Helen Puddick
Ian Jenkins
Peter Mellor
Ike Quinn
John Jewell
Harry Miller
Fran Rabbitts
Tobiah John
Ron Miller
Judith Randall
Aif Johnson
Byron Mitchell
Bill Ratcliffe
D’Arcy Johnson
Danielle Mitchell
Philip Rattray
John Jones
Tony Mockler
Ken Raven
Jeanette Kaestner
Linda Moffatt
Greg Rawson
David Kane
Clare Moloney
Russell Rea
Salley Kelly
Therese Moloney
Leonard Regan
Keith Kennedy
Myles Mooney
Alfred Reitano
John Kent
David C Moore
Phil Rennie
Richard Keyes
David H Moore
Mayra Restgo
Bob Killingsworth
Elizabeth More
Judith Roach
Joan Killingsworth
Brian Moules
Jay Robertson
John King
David Mueller
Dorothy Robinson
Colin Kline
Jill Mueller
Gordon Robinson
Lewis Klipin
Ross Muller
Janet Robinson
Alfred Knight
Valda Muller
Don Robson
Olivia Lanchester
Alwyn Murray
Henry Roda
Alex Lange
Keith Murray
Helen Rodewijk
Roger Langsworth
Brian Nash
Graham Roe
Brock Lawes
Barry Nesbitt
Nikolai Rofe
Shane Lawrie
John Newlyn
Ab Rootliep
David Leach
Chiu Ng
John Rosenblum
Derek Lewis
Clem O'Donoghue
Barney Ross
Roslyn Lockyer
John O'Grady
Peter Rossiter
Adele Lucas
Eric Olufson
Gwyn Rothwell
Paul Maile
Arthur Ongley
Terry Ryan
Peter Maile
Barry O'Regan
Casey Schreuder
Terry Manning
Henno Orro
Peter Scutts
Derek Mansfield
Ron Osborn
John Shaw
Stephen Martin
Len Oudenryn
Colleen Sheerin
Robert Matchett
Delia Page
Kenneth Sherwell
Casimiro Mattea
John Palmer
Richard Sims John Skidmore
Roy Matthews
John Papenhuyzen
John Maxwell
Bob Parker
Brian Skingsley
Jack McBurney
Jenny Patel
Joy Smart Gerry Smith
Phil McColl
Warren Peachman
Colleen McDonell
Gervase Pearce
Ian Smith
Robert McGeorge
George Pepperall
JT Smith
Frank McHale
Patrick Perry-Bolt
Kevin Smith
APPENDIXES
M. Ruth Smith
GuyTuplin
Jeannette Wheildon
Barry Squires
Jan van den Broek
Eric Willcock
John Steel
David van Kool
Herman Willemsen
Barbara Stein
Bill Vanneck
David Williams
Verlie Stevenson
Alf Vincent
David E Williams
Max Surman-Smith
Riet Vroegh
Bill Wilson
Vera Taylor
Allan Walker
Norman Wilson
Eric Tilt
John Walker
Peter Wilson
Sonia Tokyurek
Derek Walsh
John York
Geoffrey Tonkin
Graham Walton
James Zhao
Van Tram
John Weekes
Victor Zonca
Victor Treleaven
John Weston
APPENDIX 19 VOLUNTEERS SPEAKERS PANEL A panel of experienced and enthusiastic volunteer speakers continues to visit service clubs and similar organisations to promote the museum to new audiences. Many of these successful speaking engagements result in group bookings for museum visits. There were 28 visits in the last financial year, the same number as in the previous year. SPEAKER
ORGANISATION
DATE
Bert Danon
Concord Rotary Club Burger Club
14/07/03
Bert Danon Lewis Klipin
Marrickville Rotary Club
17/07/03 22/07/03
Bob Matchett
Engadine Rotary Club
18/08/03
David Moore
Roseville Chase Rotary Club Epping War Widows Association
18/08/03
David Boult Bert Danon Bob Matchett Bob Matchett Warwick Abadee
Burwood Rotary Club Hurstville Historical Society Bankstown Probus Club Vienna Cottage, National Trust
20/08/03 01/07/03 10/09/03 15/09/03 21/09/03
David Moore
Woy Woy View Club
15/10/03
Bob Matchett
Sutherland Rotary Club Superannuated Commonwealth
19/11/03
John Blanchfield Graham Roe Bob Matchett Warwick Abadee John Buckland Warwick Abadee Warwick Abadee John Blanchfield John Blanchfield Lewis Klipin John Emdin David Moore
Officers Association
28/11/03
Lane Cove Rotary Club Grandviews Probus Club
09/12/03 06/01/04
Woolawear Probus Club
28/01/04
Retired Independent Teachers Association Montefiore Nursing Home Montefiore Nursing Home Tuesday Group, Hornsby Hospital Cronulla Sutherland Self-funded Retirees
23/03/04 23/04/04
Frenchs Forest Lions Club
05/05/04
Blue Mountains Rotary Club Sydney Northern Beaches Sub-branch,
05/05/04
National Servicemen's Association David Moore David Boult Bob Matchett Lewis Klipin
13/02/04 09/03/04 09/03/04
11/05/04
Liverpool West Rotary Club Epping War Widows Association
18/05/04 19/05/04
Men's coffee morning, South Cronulla
07/06/04
Belrose Probus Club
21/06/04
APPENDIX 20 CONSULTANTS
Seventy-three consultants, contractors and service providers provided services to the museum to a total value of $1,246,180. Consultants who were paid in excess of $10,000 in 2003-2004, and the areas in which they provided services, appear below. The details of consultants providing services below $10,000, a summary of the museum’s policy on the selection and engagement of consultants, and the basis of selection of consultants engaged during the year, are available on request. CONSULTANT
SERVICES
FEE
AHA Management
Engineering
$15,048
Aust Govt Solicitor
Legal services
$40,316
Barham Comouter Services
Software suooort
$62,837
Beattie Vass Design
Design
$52,624
Blake Dawson Waldron
Legal services
$32,447
Coolong Consulting
CMIS design
$37,330
Cox Richardson
Design
$25,732
CPM ANAO Cunningham Martyn Design
Audit
$40,165
Design
$96,564
David Payne Yacht Design
Design
$10,500
Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
Audit
$18,555
Holmes Fire & Safety Ltd
OH&S
$24,557
Inspire Risk Management
OH&S
$41,156
International Media Communication
Project management
$ 11,000
Low & Hooke (Aust) Pty Ltd
Engineering
$56,254
Moxon, Green & Associates Pty Ltd
Disability
$14,506
Nice Exhibitions
Curatorial
$42,919
Ove Arup Pty Ltd
Engineering
$65,000
Shar Jones & Associates
Curatorial
$ 12,000
Sigma Management Science
Project management workshop
$23,000
Starfish Advertising & Design
Advertising
$49,348
Teaching & Learning Collective
Exhibitions
Van der Meer Consulting
Engineering
$23,474 $299,363 TOTAL $1,094,695
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APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 21 CUSTOMER SERVICE CHARTER The Customer Service Charter is available to visitors on arrival at the museum foyers and is available on the museum web site at http://www.anmm.Sov.au/customer.htm. Staff and volunteers are made aware of the charter and its objectives through their induction and training. Our prim ary focus is to our visitors and other users of the museum and we aim at all tim es to provide high-quality external and internal service. Who we are We aim to be the prime cultural resource for developing the community’s knowledge, appreciation and enjoyment of Australia’s relationship with its waterways and the sea. We will achieve this by: • Providing the highest standards of service • Generating the widest understanding and enjoyment of maritime history by creating exciting products and programs that inform and entertain • Fosteringthe care and research of Australia’s cultural and material maritime heritage, in particular the National Maritime Collection • Enhancing the level of recognition of the museum as a dynamic cultural institution. W ho are our customers? As a national museum we serve the whole Australian community, but in particular our visitors, schools, researchers and historians, other cultural, government and commercial organisations, community groups, Members, sponsors, users of our venues and other services. We also represent Australia internationally, and welcome many overseas visitors. Our internal ‘customers’ include volunteers, colleagues, contractors and service providers. W hat we provide • An accessible maritime cultural heritage resource, developed and maintained to the highest professional standards. • Relevant exhibitions and programs that educate, entertain, and reflect community needs and values. • Services extended as widely as possible throughout Australia and abroad. Our service standards The museum is committed to providing services to all its customers, both external and internal, in a way that is courteous, equitable, prompt, professional and ethical. To the fullest extent our resources allow, we will provide: • Courteous, well-trained and knowledgable staff at all levels • A safe, clean and accessible environment • Quality services to all segments of our community • Up-to-date information about our products and services • Prompt, efficient and accurate responses to enquiries • Opening hours that reflect community needs.
146
Tell us what you think We welcome your suggestions for improving our services, and provide a variety of ways for you to communicate with us. We will pass your message to the person who can act on it, and aim to resolve any problems promptly. We are committed to regular museum user surveys and research to ensure we are meeting your needs. Here are some of the ways you can com municate with us: • Speak to a staff member in person. All staff, including the director and senior management, take turns attending the information desk. • Complete the Comments Book in the museum foyer which is reviewed regularly and responded to where possible. • Express your views on the subjects we feature in exhibitions at a discussion point in our galleries from time to time. • Fill in a formal complaint form at our information desk. • Contact our Customer Services manager on (02) 9298 3777 fax (02) 9298 3780. • Write to us at GPO Box 5131 Sydney NSW 2000. We strive to reply within 14 days. • Contact staff directly by phone, fax or email. Details from (02) 9298 3777, or visit us at 2 Murray St, Darling Harbour. Our web site at http://www.anmm.gov.au has direct email links to key staff.
APPENDIX 22 LIST OF ACTS ADMINISTERED The museum was established by the Australian National Maritime Museum Act 1990 (No 90 of 1990), where its functions and powers are set out. The Act was amended in the Arts, Sport, Environment, Tourism and Territories Legislation Amendment (No 2) Act 1991 (No 179 of 1991), principally to provide for a Naval member of Council. The Australian National Maritime Museum Regulations (Statutory Rules 1991 No 10) under Section 54 of the Act were signed by the Governor-General on 29 January 1991, and notified in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette on 5 February 1991. The Regulations were amended (Statutory Rules 1991 No 220) by the GovernorGeneral on 27 June 1991, and notified in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette on 5 July 1991 and revised again (Statutory Rules 1991 No 348) on 4 November 1991, and notified in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette on 12 November 1991.
147
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 23 FUNCTIONS AND POWERS OF THE MINISTER The ministers responsible for the Australian National Maritime Museum during 2 0 03-04 were Senator the Hon Richard Alston, Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts (until 3 October 2003), the Hon Daryl Wiliams MP, AM, QC, Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts (from 7 October 2003), and Senator the Hon Rod Kemp, Minister for the Arts and Sport. Key ministerial powers under the Australian National Maritime Museum Act 1990 include the minister's ability to: • Transfer property, real or personal, held on lease or otherwise by the Commonwealth, to the museum for its use or for inclusion in the National Maritime Collection (Section 8 ) • Approve criteria and guidelines for the National Maritime Collection (Section 8) • Approve the disposal of material in the National Maritime Collection with value exceeding $20,000 (Section 10(4)(b), amended 1991) • Give direction to the Council with respect to the performance of the functions or the exercise of the powers of the museum (Section 14) • Appoint a member to act as chairperson of the Council or appoint a member of Council (for no more than 12 months) where there is a vacancy (Section 18) • Convene a meeting of the Council at any time (Section 23) • Approve and table in Parliament Strategic and Annual Operational Plans and variations to them (Sections 25-28) • Approve leave of absence to the director on such terms or conditions as she or he determines (Section 34) • Be advised in writing by the director of direct or indirect pecuniary interest (Section 37) • Appoint a person (not a member of Council) to act as director during a vacancy with such appointment not to exceed 12 months (Section 38) • Approve the form of the museum's estimates and the estimates (Section 46), and • Approve contracts exceeding $1,000,000 (Section 47, amended 1991).
148
APPENDIX 24 FUNCTIONS AND POWERS OF THE MUSEUM The functions and powers of the museum are defined in Sections 6 and 7 of the Australian National Maritime Museum Act 1990. Functions of the museum (Section 6) • To exhibit, or make available for exhibition by others, in Australia or elsewhere, material included in the National Maritime Collection or maritime historical material that is otherwise in the possession of the museum, • To cooperate with other institutions (whether public or private) in exhibiting, or in making available for exhibition, such material. • To develop, preserve and maintain the National Maritime Collection. • To disseminate information relating to Australian maritime history and information relating to the museum and its functions. • To conduct, arrange for and assist research into matters relating to Australian maritime history. • To develop sponsorship, marketing and other commercial activities relating to the museum’s functions. Powers of the museum (Section 7) • To purchase, commission the creation of, lend, borrow or hire maritime historical material either in its own right or jointly with others. • To collect material relating to Australian maritime history and dispose of that material under certain conditions. • To recover or arrange for or assist in the recovery of maritime historical material from the Australian marine environment and from other areas. • Accept gifts, devises, bequests and assignments of money or property whether as trustee or otherwise. • Acquire and operate vessels anywhere, whether or not the vessels are maritime historical material. • Disseminate information relating to Australian maritime history and sell replicas or reproductions of maritime historical material. • Enter contracts, acquire, hold and dispose of real or personal property, charge fees (in addition to the charges fixed by regulation) appoint agents and attorneys and act as an agent for other persons, as well as raise money, by appropriate means for the purpose of the museum.
149
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX 25 DIRECTOR S STATEMENT The Australian National Maritime Museum is a Statutory Authority set up under the Australian National Maritime Museum Act 1990 and responsible to the Minister for the Arts and Sport, the Hon Rod Kemp MP within the portfolio of the Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts (Senator the Hon Helen Coonan). This Annual Report is a report of operations for the first financial year of the Australian National Maritime Museum’s 2003-2006 Strategic Plan. It has been made in accordance with a resolution of the directors of the Australian National Maritime Museum on 17 September 2004, those directors being responsible under Section 9 of the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies (CAC) Act 1997 for the preparation and content of the report. The report was prepared in accordance with the document Requirements for annual reports for departments, executive agencies and FMA Act bodies, Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet June 2004. Certain categories of information do not appear in full but are available to Members of Parliament and Senators on request.
Mary-Louise W illiam s Director
150
APPEN DIX 26 INDEX
Accounting policies
71 Functions of the museum 147 Glossary
Acts administered Acquisitions
16, 42,105-1 16
Admission charges Advertising APS staff Assets & liabilities Assets held in trust Auditor General Auditors, remuneration of Australian National Maritime Foundation
Grants
2 Independent audit report 56,62
Industrial democracy
130 Information technology 67, 82 Internal & external scrutiny 93 Investing activities 29,64
Key result areas
89 Liabilities 96, 138
Market research
Appropriations
92 Mission Statement
Borrowing cost expense
82 MMAPSS
Calendar of events Capital works Cash flow reconciliation Cash flows, statement of Chairman Commitments, schedule of Committees of Council Compliance with requirements Contact officer Contingencies, schedule of Consultants Corporate governance Corporate Members Corporate overview Council Council members, remuneration of Customer Service Charter Director’s overview Director’s statement Donors Energy management
100 National Maritime Collection 18, 50 Non-financiai assets 87
Non-Government funding
68 Notes (Financial Statements) 3, 133 Occupational health & safety 69 Organisational developments 136 Operating activities
149 N/A 117 64 52 50 28
68 32-61 67 36
6 117 16, 42,105, 110 82 3 9 ,6 6 ,6 8 70 28, 52 18
68
28, 150 Operating expenses
81
2 Operating revenues
80
69 Organisational chart
129
145 Outcomes 62 140 12 133
94
Overseas travel
128
Patrons
139
Payables
86
Powers of the minister
148
88 Powers of the museum
149
146 12 150 110, 140 29, 50
Professional appointments (staff) Provisions
127
86
Program performance reporting
32
Reports by Auditor General
29
Revenues
39, 66 , 68 53 ,66
Environmental performance
28
Salaries
Equity
28
Schedule of commitments
14, 20, 34
Schedule of contingencies
69
Social justice & equity
28
Exhibitions (ANMM) Expenses
66,81
External scrutiny
29
Sponsors
Financial assets
82
Staffing levels, average
Financial instruments
90
Staff list
Financial statements Financial performance, statement of
66-68 Staffing overview 66 Staffing resources summary
69
58, 59, 139 53 130 53 53
Financial position, statement of
67
Statement by Council members
63
Financing activities
68 Statutory information requirements
28
Fraud control
29
Trust monies
Freedom of information
29
Vision statement
Functions of the minister
148
Workplace Diversity
93 1 28, 53 151
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