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'comic artist, illustrator and political cartoonist’ (according to
In 1991 Waite participated in Out of Line, an exhibition by feminist cartoonists Jane Cafarella, Trudy Clutterbuck (sp?), Kaz Cooke, Bronwyn Halls, Judy Horacek, Deborah Kelly, Kathleen McCann, Nicole McKinnon and Joan Rosser. The catalogue includes a short, tongue-in-cheek biography:
“Jo Waite first turned to cartooning to assuage the pain of being crossed in love. (Before that she had mainly drawn libraries and trees.) Her training in Art includes adult courses in film criticism and therapeutic massage, and graphic art (one year), which she failed. Born in 1964, the years until 1985 were full of childhood, adolescence and then too many drugs to remember. From 1985 to 1989 between demonstrations and arrests she drew for anarchist magazines, depicting the complexity of existence in tiny pictures. In 1988 and 1989 she participated in the Fringe Cartoonist exhibitions and the State Library [of
Ingrid Unger mentioned Get it Right (by 'Jo Wait’ sic) in Bonzer ed. A. Sheill (p.78). Funded by Youth Information Incorporated, it featured stories about abuse and was meant to be the first of a series.
In the early 1990s Waite contributed cartoons to Scratch! A scrapbook of radical cartooning in
Waite’s book of cartoons Random Play (Carlton South Vic.: J. Waite [1996]) was on order at Mitchell Library in 1999. She also illustrated the 1998 Sydney Road Brunswick Business Directory and Shopping Guide. Included in 2001 Bringing the House Down exhibition (organised by the National Museum of Australia at Old Parliament House, Canberra) with Negative role models, a cartoon of two white women drinking coffee and talking about the Liberals providing this very thing on the issue of Justice for Aboriginals [sic]: published Arena Magazine August-September 2000.