Earthworks Poster Collective Explained

The Earthworks Poster Collective was an Australian artist collective that operated out of the Sydney University Art Workshop, more commonly known as the Tin Sheds, in the 1970s. The collective, based in Sydney, New South Wales, was active from 1972 to 1979.[1]

History

The collective produced mainly screen-printed, political posters that sought to promote the rights of Aboriginal people, LGBT people, women, the unemployed and workers,[2] including the posters for the exhibition The D'Oyley Show (1979) by the Women's Domestic Needlepoint Group.[3] It also produced anti-nuclear, protest posters.

Earthworks Poster Collective disbanded in 1979, after failing to attract the funding needed to continue.

Today the Collective is regarded as having been the principal driving force in the early development of Australian political poster art during the 1970s.[4] Works produced by the collective are held within the collections of The State Library of New South Wales, National Gallery of Australia, Queensland Art Gallery, the Powerhouse Museum, and the University of Sydney.[2]

People

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Earthworks Poster Collective. Centre For Australian Art . 4 November 2017.
  2. Web site: Poster, 'Dance Black Lace', printed by Earthworks Poster Collective . Museum of Applied Arts & Sciences . 4 November 2017 . Museum of Applied Arts & Sciences, Australia.
  3. Web site: Dissenting Doilies: The women's domestic needlework group . 2022-03-13 . New England Regional Art Museum . en-AU.
  4. Web site: Toni Robertson. Taking Markettown by Strategy. Art Gallery of NSW. 4 November 2017.
  5. Book: Therese., Kenyon. Under a hot tin roof : art, passion, and politics at the Tin Sheds Art Workshop. 1995. State Library of New South Wales Press. Tin Sheds Art Workshop, Power Institute of Fine Arts.. 9780730589334. Sydney. 36180987.