This week I had the pleasure of meeting Napier City Council’s new CE, Louise Miller, the second ever female CE for Napier City Council, and presently the only female Council CE in the region.
Three of the region’s four mayors, however, are female. Tararua also has a female mayor.
In the museum sector, all the professional public museums/art galleries in Te Matau-a-Māui currently have female leaders – Central Hawke’s Bay Museum, Hastings City Art Gallery, Wairoa Museum and MTG Hawke’s Bay.
Regional museums around Te Ika-a-Māui / the North Island are almost exclusively run by female directors - from Whangārei through to Te Papaioea / Palmerston North. While regional art galleries across the North Island have a more even split between male and female directors.
Our major metropolitan institutions do not fare as well – with Auckland Museum, Canterbury Museum and Otago Museum all run by men, two of them from overseas. Te Papa is a stand-out among this group with New Zealand female director, Courtney Johnson. Art galleries tend to do a bit better and this is reflected in the metropolitan galleries with a 50/50 split between male and female directors.
Of course, such a small pool of metropolitan institutions is hardly statistically significant, but it does seem to be unusual for female directors to break the glass ceiling in Aotearoa / New Zealand’s major museums.
Te Papa, in its 25 year’s existence, has had two female directors compared with five male directors. Auckland Museum has only had one female director in its 171 years. Canterbury Museum and Otago Museum, to the best of my knowledge, have never had female directors. So, in the museum/gallery sector, the regions are really leading the way.
Laura Vodanovich is MTG director.