Written by Miranda K. Metcalf Published 23rd October 2019
I studied printmaking during my master’s in art history and loved every minute of it, making me, and I don’t know if this is an exaggeration to say, one of the few people working within the contemporary printmaking global community strictly as a curator, writer, and advocate without a personal printmaking practice. I’ve dabbled of course, but always, when looking over my attempts, come back to the apt phrase: stay in your lane. This is when I first had the idea for PCL. I wanted a place where our close knit, but geographically divided community could gather, share our stories and learn from one another – our successes as well as our filled in tusche washes.
Like many lithographers – and one could argue that perhaps it is a necessary if not sufficient quality to be a lithographer – Lancaster enjoyed the challenges of all things lithography. When something doesn’t go the way it should, there are innumerable possibilities. In lithography one is dealing with mercurial chemistry, the temperature and humidity of the day, or even where the sun comes in through the window. All of that could affect how the printing went. Lancaster eventually found his way to the Tamarind Book of Lithography, which he lovingly refers to as the bible during our interview, and admits that he probably highlighted the book from cover to cover before he was done with it while mastering the craft.
When he learned about the Tamarind course he knew he had to attend. He got his references, applied, packed up and moved from Melbourne to Albuquerque to attend their printer trainer program. At the time, what is now a year long course was condensed into four and a half months, “It was like military school,” he recalls. From that first year of students, then as now, only two people are selected to go on to the second. In the second year, students work in the Tamarind editioning studio alongside the master printer creating lithographs with incredible artists from around the world. Tamarind has produced editions with George Miyasaki, Jim Dine, Judy Chicago, Nick Cave and Kiki Smith to name a few. Yet, Lancaster didn’t even apply for the second year. He was too keen to get to Melbourne are start his own print shop.
Once he was back in Australia, he worked for a year as the technician at the University of Melbourne before he threw it all in to focus on his own publishing shop. “People thought I was crazy, it was a regular salary,” he says, “but I was driven to start my own print shop.”
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Anne Smith: Blue Mountains City Art Gallery
Connections: Art & Collaboration
26 October – 1 December
Focusing on renowned visual artists Bernard Ollis, Wendy Sharpe, Anne Smith and Ian Smith, this exhibition delves into the intriguing creative relationships essential to the production of collaborative work. The painter and the potter, the drafter and the printer, each artist bringing their individual skills to the table to produce works greater than the sum of its parts.
While the practical benefits of working together on complex artworks are obvious, the creative process of art making also lends itself to partnership. Working through the many demands of bringing an idea to realisation requires a resilient relationship in which elucidation, conciliation, stubbornness, and shared respect exists in equal measure. Often, this can result in firm, life-long friendships such as those of the four artists that are the focus of this exhibition.
A Blue Mountains City Art Gallery exhibition
Thea Weiss: My Mother, My Muse
Exhibitions Page update
Those who submitted work for the Boundless and Borderless exchange exhibition with the Open Studio, Toronto, Canada, in 2013 will be pleased that there is now a link on the exhibitions page to images of the work. Go here to see the images.
Megalo International Print Prize Finalists 2020 Announced.
Sydney Printmakers Carolyn Craig and Rew Hanks are finalists.
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Review of Borderless by Sasha Grishin in the Canberra Times
Sydney Printmakers: Borderless. Megalo Print Gallery, 21 Wentworth Avenue, Kingston. Until November 2. megalo.org.
Printmaking is probably the most collaborative of all of the major art mediums. Shared facilities and shared expertise have characterised printmaking since its earliest days and many printmakers see themselves as part of an extended network of professional artists.

Roslyn Kean, Weaving Ancestral Voices II in Sydney Printmakers at Megalo. Picture: Supplied
In the almost 60 years of its existence, Sydney Printmakers has included most of the major printmakers of the time and the situation has not changed.
Today, there are about 60 members in Sydney Printmakers, 33 of whom are included in this exhibition. It is an exceptionally rich and diverse show with some brilliant work.
As a sweeping generalisation, Sydney printmaking, as epitomised here, is becoming far less new-media driven and more artists focus on analogue techniques. Woodcuts, linocuts, etchings plus the occasional screenprint hold sway, while digital and inkjet prints are the exception. It may be foolhardy to leap to conclusions on the basis of this exhibition, but it appears that digital technologies are being increasingly absorbed into the toolbox of Australian printmakers rather than being seen as an end product. Many may employ computers to formulate an image but employ traditional technologies to realise the final print.
The exhibition is dominated by some brilliant and ambitious woodcuts worked on a large scale by established masters, including Roslyn Kean, Susan Rushforth, Anthea Bosenberg, Angela Hayson and Helen Mueller. Rew Hanks is represented by one of his unbelievably detailed narrative linocuts, Josephine’s Ark (2019), while Graham Marchant’s linocut, The Cranford Rose Garden (2015-18), has an intriguing complexity produced through a deceptive simplicity of means.

Seraphina Martin, Finding solace in the land, 2019 in Sydney Printmakers at Megalo. Picture: Supplied
It is exciting how some of the “elders” of the printmaking tribe are branching out in new directions. Seraphina Martin’s Finding solace in the land (2019) is a light and highly evocative etching with watercolour, while Susan Baran’s huge tour de force Allure (2019) is a complex piece where she has collaged etchings and relief prints into a rippling, intricate composition.
One beauty of printmaking is its sense of intimacy through which it can convey an artist’s personality. Examples include the refined lyrical sensibility of Tanya Crothers’ collagraph Black Springs re-visited (2019), Wendy Stokes’ delicate Blended geographies (2019) combining relief, monoprint and stencil, Salvatore Gerardi’s striking Pervading memories: shadow lines (2019) or Andrew Totman’s spatially ambiguous floating monoprint, Touch (2018).
There are also some of the classics of Sydney printmaking, such as Barbara Davidson’s etching collagraph Voters and parliamentarians (2019) with its humour and brilliance of observation, and Bernhardine Mueller’s All the rivers run? (2018) with its dry humour and a created personal narrative.

Nina Juniper, Self supporting #1, 2019, in Sydney Printmakers at Megalo. Picture: Supplied
There is a strong, punchy inkjet print by Marta Romer, Borderless (2019) and a bold, inventive screenprint by Nina Juniper, Self supporting #1 (2019), that depicts a crumbling industrial site she has screenprinted on a block of concrete. Her print conveys a range of possible readings with effective humour.
This is an exciting, adventurous exhibition that demonstrates that printmaking in Sydney is in ascendancy.
The Opening of Borderless at Megalo Print Studio
Sydney Printmakers who ventured to Canberra for the opening of our exhibition at Megalo had a wonderful time. Alison Alder, past Director of Megalo, opened the exhibition, and Susan Baran talked about the history of Sydney Printmakers. Here are some photos from the Opening, and from the party afterwards at Mark Lewis and Dianne Fogwell’s place. The pizza oven got a good workout. Thanks to all at Megalo and especially to Dianne for such warm and generous hospitality. We even had a peek inside Dianne’s studio.
Geraldine’s Studio Sale
Two Exhibitions at the Art Gallery of NSW
Paintings and prints by artists of the Balgo Hills
The small community of Wirrimanu (Balgo) in Western Australia has been home to some of Australia’s most extraordinary artists. Drawn from the Gallery’s collection, this exhibition will feature works by leading Aboriginal artists — including Eubena Nampitjin, Elizabeth Nyumi, Boxer Milner and Helicopter Tjungurrayi — to provide an insight into the strength of practice in the community over the past 40 years.
Image: Eubena Nampitjin Kinyu 2007 (detail), Art Gallery of New South Wales © Estate of Eubena Nampitjin. Licensed by Copyright Agency
Barbara Hanrahan’s suite of 12 Linocut Prints are on display in the Members Lounge.
Borderless at Megalo
The works exhibited at Megalo for our Borderless exhibition are now available for viewing on the website. Go here. They look even better in the gallery. Why not pay a visit to Canberra and visit Megalo?
While you’re there you could go and see Lichtenstein to Warhol at the NGA!
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