14/06/2026
Save the McDougall Campaign
The Robert McDougall Art Gallery in the Christchurch Botanic Gardens
Hello everyone,
Our petition is currently stuck on 1315. It seems to start and stop so needs another burst of supporters.
I had an interesting day on Friday as I was invited by Sarah Murray, Deputy Director of Canterbury Museum, to look over the whole of the Museum construction site including the McDougall Art Gallery building which is in the process of being earthquake strengthened, its basement being deepened, being base isolated and joined to the Museum at a cost to the Christchurch City Council of $24.5m.
At the moment, on the site of the Museum, base isolators are still being fitted in the bottom of their basement before they start constructing their new four storied building. And on the site of the Gallery the basement is being dug out to the same level as the Museum’s basement while it is being supported by about 300 posts which have been dug metres into the ground. When completed base isolators will be installed. Inside the Gallery, the walls have not yet been lined and you can see marks in the concrete where steel rods have been inserted in order to provide the necessary earthquake strengthening. The gallery will have a new roof lining installed and also new cork flooring. We should all be very grateful to the Council for it spending so much on it in order to bring it up to a full international gallery standard.
So, there is still a lot of work to be done to both the gallery and museum with an estimated opening in October 2029. In the meantime, the Council has not yet made any announcement about the future funding of either the Museum or the Cathedral projects and if there is no further support from the Government the future of both projects must be in doubt.
Afterwards Sarah Murray invited me to a discussion with the Museum’s Curator of Human History, Frances Husband, who has been going through the Museum’s historical art collection to establish what works they have in their collection of a public art gallery standard and looking at what conservation work is required on their frames. I was shown photographs of their best paintings which were all by well known artists and of a very high standard. As far as I know most of these works have never been shown to the public before. And they have already held discussions with the Christchurch Art Gallery about borrowing historical works from the city’s collection and have produced a plan for what they might show in the opening hang.
As far as oil paintings are concerned, the Museum probably have around 80 while the city’s collection has 600 and as the CAG no longer displays historical art the McDougall will come under a lot of pressure to show to the art loving public as much historical art as possible that the city as a whole has available. The gallery can display around 300 historical works at a time and given it will also want to display works borrowed from elsewhere it will have to be constantly circulating from time to time what it displays.
Thankfully there was no mention of displaying the Museum’s decorative arts and crafts in the gallery which as discussed before would be a totally unacceptable use of its beautiful neo classical picture galleries. So, I came away much more confident about its future being in accordance with the terms of my grandfather’s gift and the interests of the city’s art lovers who happen to own this beautiful gallery.
For a long time now the only historical art that the Christchurch Art Gallery has shown are around 20 works which include a few beautiful landscape paintings. One of these paintings I like is by John Macintosh Madden. Apart from these few paintings no others have been displayed for a long time.
Untitled Lake Scene 1904 John Macintosh Madden (1856-1923) oil on canvas purchased with assistance from the Olive Stirrat bequest 1992
The McDougall Art Gallery has been leased to Canterbury Museum for fifty years for their use but they do not have a sufficient art collection of a public art gallery standard to fully utilise it and while they intend to borrow works from the city’s collection to display they could, under the terms of the lease, also use it for their huge decorative arts and crafts collections.
If you wish to see the McDougall Art Gallery when it reopens used only for the historical art owned by the city as a whole it is imperative you sign my petition. The link is:
Save the McDougall as our Museum of Historical Art - Petitions.nz
Please send this posting on to all your Facebook friends and ask them to forward it onto their friends. In that way we can hopefully build the numbers up.
Thank you everyone for your support.
Tim Seay
Save the McDougall Campaign 14 June 2026