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Know My Name is an exhibition in two parts at the National Gallery of Australia. It is the largest and most comprehensive exhibition of work by women, presented in a thematic rather than chronological form. It reveals relationships between the present and the past, relationships between artists, and common concerns.
A Widening Gap: The Intervention, 10 Years On witnesses a world that is remote from the essential services that the rest of Australia takes for granted. The tenth anniversary of the introduction of “the Intervention” — the Northern Territory National Emergency Response — has come and gone.
The exhibition Some Posters / Local Positions aims to blur the line between studio, street and social/political art practice. A modus operandi of artists Alison Alder and Mini Graff is to use a fluid community residency to engage with social justice issues; their print and poster works or stencils often pose puzzling, persuading or provoking questions.
The exhibition Some Posters / Local Positions aims to blur the line between studio, street and social/political art practice. A modus operandi of artists Alison Alder and Mini Graff is to use a fluid community residency to engage with social justice issues; their print and poster works or stencils often pose puzzling, persuading or provoking questions.
Death of a Broadsheet refers to the demise of the hard copy newspaper, the portrayal of public figures in the mainstream print media and the manipulation of images through print. Like paper rolling through the giant presses of yesterday and the contemporary scrolling of digital news feeds, Death of a Broadsheet disseminates news via reformatted images sourced from online news feeds and hard-copy newspapers.
Ghost Citizens follow us and infiltrate our daily lives. In a continent full of the ghosts and shadows of colonialism, the historical, social, and physical landscape is pitted. Each story is a ghost story loaded with shadows – a kind of ‘scar’ story. Djon Mundine OA
An exhibition of political posters and prints from Canberra 1981-83 (ACME/Megalo?) by Alison Alder, Colin Little, David Morrow, Stephanie Dale, Stephanie Radok, Roland Manderson, Mark Denton, Tony Ayres, Nick Cosgrove, Colin Russell, Virginia Killen, Suzanne McCorquodale, Toni Robertson. Source: Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery History Archive.
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Date modified | Dec. 11, 2020, 11:34 a.m. | July 30, 2019, 2:39 p.m. |
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