- Creator(s)
- Year
- 1993
- Classification / Medium
- Dimensions (H x W x D)
-
45 cm x 38 cm
- Description
-
Printed by RedPlanet which was a screen printing and design studio based in Melbourne actively producing political posters from 1992-99. This collective formed through the merger of two groups – Brunswick’s Redletter Press and Richmond’s Another Planet. RedPlanet produced work commissioned by community groups, youth and women’s groups, and on a range of topics including equality, housing, anti-nuclear action, sex health promoted by the Prostitutes Collective of Victoria. Their posters usually contained cutting political messages and images.
Political image making and poster production were often intertwined and particularly strong in the 1970s and up to the 1990s. Most of the posters were inspired by an anti-elitist approach that aimed to make art available to everyone instead of keeping it in gallery collections.
‘It opened up access for people who didn't have a voice in the community, including Aboriginal groups and migrant communities; people who were overlooked by the media.’ – Julia Church, co-founder of RedPlanet stated.
This feminist work by RedPlanet artist Carol Porter features a quote from the well-known art history text, Ways of Seeing (1972). English art critic, John Berger (b.1926 – d. 2017) summarised the conditions under which women have remodelled as objects of sight throughout Western art history.
- Credit Line
- Adelaide Festival Centre Works of Art Collection