Australian poster collectives explained

Australian poster collectives were artist collectives established in the late 1960s, 70s and 80s in the capital cities of Australia, largely led by women and focused on various forms of political activism.

There were also such collectives in the 1990s, such as RedPlanet.

History and description

The collectives were formed mainly in Sydney, Melbourne, and Adelaide, but also in other Australian capital cities, during the period from approximately 1965 to the 1980s. The collectives were formed by artists concerned with social justice, women's rights, political activism, anti-Vietnam war protest, environmentalism, LGBT rights and Indigenous Australians' rights.[1] [2]

Collectives made posters for concerts, bands, marches and community groups. Feminists were active in the collectives and some were women-only collectives.[3] Women were leaders in the poster collective movement, establishing groups, providing training, opening the groups up to other women and decision-making by consensus.[4]

The collectives were considered to be democratic art movements outside the gallery systems, able to quickly reflect changing social and political views and challenge social norms by designing, printing and displaying posters in public areas.[5] Some artists were members of more than one collective and often did not sign their name to posters but attributed them to the collective.

Similar collectives emerged in the UK, Europe, the US and Cuba during that time.[6]

This article covers Australian poster collectives from the 60s to 80s rather than later collectives from the 1990s such as RedPlanet.[7] [8]

Collections

Posters produced by the collectives are held in the National Library of Australia,[9] National Gallery of Australia (NGA),[10] [11] Flinders University Museum of Art,[12] Art Gallery of South Australia (AGSA), Art Gallery of NSW (AGNSW),[13] Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences[14] and Tin Sheds Gallery at the University of Sydney.

Poster collectives and artists

Poster collectives were influential in developing the community arts movement and some of the collectives expanded into training workshops, community arts projects, community food co-operatives and other community support.[15] Some artists within these collectives later worked in partnership with community arts groups and/or developed their own individual art practices and careers. The following list of poster collectives and artists is not exhaustive but shows the foundational influence of the collectives on the careers of some Australian contemporary and community artists.

By location, the poster collectives and their members included:

Sydney

Melbourne

Canberra

Adelaide

Brisbane

Darwin, Katherine, Northern Territory

External links

For images of posters, go to these sites.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mayhew. Louise. Jill Posters Will Be Prosecuted: Australia's women-only print collectives from the 1970s and 1980s.. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20190226130706/http://crossart.com.au/images/stories/exhibitions/xap106_MiniGraff/Jill_Posters_will_be_prosecuted_Australi.pdf . 2019-02-26 . 8 September 2020. Crossart.
  2. Web site: Tin Sheds Poster Collection. 2020-09-09. Research Data Australia. en.
  3. Web site: Eye Magazine Feature Political clout: Australian posters. 2020-09-08. www.eyemagazine.com.
  4. Perin. Victoria. 2017-02-18. Don't be too Polite: Posters and Activism. Memo Review. en. 2017. 7.
  5. Web site: Baines. Jess. 10 October 2012. Experiments in democratic participation: feminist printshop collectives. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20131031223244/http://culturalpolicyjournal.wordpress.com:80/past-issues/issue-no-6/feminist-printshop-collectives/ . 2013-10-31 . 8 September 2020. Cultural policy journal.
  6. Web site: Bond. Liz. 2014-04-15. Poster Magic. 50 years of loud silence.. 2020-09-14. This Magnificent Life. en-AU.
  7. Web site: State Library Victoria The politics of poster making: the RedPlanet archive. 2020-10-06. blogs.slv.vic.gov.au. 11 November 2016 . en-US.
  8. Web site: RedPlanet Press and the politics of poster making . State Library Victoria . 18 February 2021 . 20 January 2023.
  9. Web site: Bill Posters Welcome Here. 2020-09-08. www.nla.gov.au. en.
  10. Web site: The story of Australian printmaking 1801-2005. 2020-09-08. nga.gov.au.
  11. Web site: For the man who said life wasn't meant to be easy - make life impossible. 2020-09-08. nga.gov.au.
  12. https://www.flinders.edu.au/museum-of-art/collections/australian-political-posters Flinders University Museum of Art
  13. Web site: See you at the barricades: Declarations. 2020-09-08. www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au.
  14. Web site: Posters from the Earthworks Collective and Tin Sheds. 2020-09-09. collection.maas.museum. en.
  15. Web site: Tsara. Olga. The Art of Revolution: Political Posters in the Red Planet Archive - No 75 Autumn 2005. 2020-09-11 . latrobejournal.slv.vic.gov.au. en-AU.
  16. Web site: Marie McMahon - Printing in Three Registers. (1989) by Ewington, Julie. · Australian Prints + Printmaking. 2020-10-06. www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au.
  17. Web site: Posters . Jessie Street National Women's Library. 2020-10-31. en-US.
  18. Book: Robertson, Toni. Writing on the fence is better than sitting on the fence. 1977. Earthworks Poster Collective. Sydney.
  19. Web site: Mark Arbuz - Doug Ashdown & Kirk Laorange. - Search the Collection, National Gallery of Australia . 2023-02-24 . National Gallery of Australia . en.
  20. Web site: Arbuz, Mark. (1953–) · Related works · Australian Prints + Printmaking . 2023-02-24 . printsandprintmaking.gov.au.
  21. Web site: LUCIFOIL POSTER COLLECTIVE (1980–1983) · Related works · Australian Prints + Printmaking. 2020-10-30. www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au.
  22. Web site: Eye Magazine Feature Political clout: Australian posters. 2020-09-11. www.eyemagazine.com.
  23. Web site: Poster, 1988. 2020-10-30. Museums Victoria Collections.
  24. Web site: ABOUT BOOMALLI. 2020-10-30. Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-op. en-US.
  25. Web site: Poster, 1988. 2020-10-30. Museums Victoria Collections.
  26. Web site: BUGA-UP. 2020-10-31. www.bugaup.org.
  27. Web site: Bailey. Stuart. 2018. Redback Graphix and its aftermath. 8 September 2020. Fresh Blood.
  28. Web site: Printmaking. Prints and. ACME INK. 2020-10-28. printsandprintmaking.gov.au. en.
  29. Web site: Printmaking. Prints and. Bitumen River Gallery presents -. 2020-10-28. printsandprintmaking.gov.au. en.
  30. Web site: Printmaking. Prints and. Bitumen River Gllery presents - Off the beach. 2020-10-28. printsandprintmaking.gov.au. en.
  31. Web site: Mother Nature is a Lesbian: Political Printmaking in South Australia 1970s-1980s. 2020-10-06. Artlink Magazine. en.
  32. Web site: Australian Political Posters FUMA. 2020-09-09. Flinders University. en.
  33. Web site: NFAW and The University of Melbourne. Women's Art Movement - Organisation - The Australian Women's Register. live. 2021-03-06. www.womenaustralia.info. en-gb. https://web.archive.org/web/20041028173259/http://www.womenaustralia.info:80/biogs/AWE1034b.htm . 2004-10-28 .
  34. Web site: May Day poster. 2020-10-06. collection.maas.museum. en.
  35. Web site: hutr. Posters Empowering Community: A Historical Snapshot of SA Poster Artmaking. 2020-10-06. www.unisa.edu.au. en.
  36. Web site: The Trades Hall Poster collection – University of Melbourne Archives. 2020-10-06. en-US.
  37. Web site: Dance against the new right. 2020-10-06. AGSA - Online Collection. en.
  38. Web site: Community poster, 'Our Land is Our Life', paper, designed by Kurwingie (Kerry Giles) with Deborah Kelly and Kate Breakey at Co-Media, Adelaide, South Australia, 1988. 2020-10-06. collection.maas.museum. en.
  39. Web site: Northcott. Sarah. 2018. Catalogue: The history of Prospect in posters. 14 September 2020. Prospect Council.
  40. Web site: Printmaking. Prints and. MANTIS PRINTS. 2020-10-31. www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au. en.
  41. Williamson, Clare & Queensland Art Gallery Signs of the times : political posters in Queensland. Qld. Art Gallery, South Brisbane, Qld, 1991. https://remix.org.au/RemixPDFPublications/fullPDFSIgnoftheTimes.pdf
  42. Web site: Williamson. Clare. 2008. Cram guide 2008: Rebel Posters!. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20111129063618/http://www.3cr.org.au/files/CRAM%202008%20Spring.pdf . 2011-11-29 . 31 October 2020. 3CR.
  43. Web site: 2015-06-13. Black Banana Poster Collective. 2020-10-31. ARI Remix - A Polyvocal Memory of Australian Artist-Run Culture and Heritage "Work in Progress". en-AU.
  44. Web site: Printmaking. Prints and. Cabaret.. 2020-10-31. www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au. en.
  45. Web site: Jalak Graphics MCA Australia. 2020-10-30. www.mca.com.au. en.
  46. Web site: JALAK GRAPHICS (1982–) · Related works · Australian Prints + Printmaking. 2020-10-30. www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au.