
Rafael Butron, Anna Russell, Gary Shinfield, Anne Starling and Anthea Boesenberg have work in this exhibition in Taiwan, opening 8th April.
Promotion of Australian printmaking and members work.

Rafael Butron, Anna Russell, Gary Shinfield, Anne Starling and Anthea Boesenberg have work in this exhibition in Taiwan, opening 8th April.

Anthea Boesenberg and Anna Russell, together with Rhonda Nelson have been successful in their submission for Climarte’s poster project with this ‘Canary in the Coal Mine’ poster with a nod to Spike Milligan. The posters will be pasted up across Melbourne over the next few weeks, together with 9 other posters from other artists.
Go HERE to read about the project.


Salvatore Gerardi, Angus Fisher, Nathalie Hartog-Gautier, Anna Russell and Lea Kannar Lichtenberger have been selected as finalists for the 2021 Northern Beaches Environmental Art and Design Award.
The exhibition will open on November 12th and continue until December 12th at Manly Art Gallery and Museum and other Northern beaches venues.
Salvatore is also a finalist in the Paddington Art Prize. This will be shown at Defiance Art Gallery, October 15th to October 24th


Anna Russell has been hard at work setting out and reorganising our Artists portfolios on the Artists page, with bigger and better slide shows of your prints.
Please go and check it out. Your feedback is welcome, both positive and negative.
Anna will be contacting artists by email over the next little while for further information from you for the website and blog. Please wait until you are contacted.

| Old Post Office Gallery, 86 Atherton Herberton Rd, Atherton QLD 4883 Tuesday to Saturday 10am to 2pm until Saturday October 30. |
| A narrative of mystery and metaphor marks the forest: searching within this place, the forest reveals hidden treasures and monumental moments that celebrate movement, sound, energy and eventually change.This exhibition examines the challenges of scale, pattern and texture found within the rich ecosystem of the forest – the flickers, twists, sounds and webs, reminding us that we are not in control, that we are primal in nature and that we should be alert to the danger of losing our way, falling into the unknown. |
Anna Russell has been selected for this exhibition at No Vacancy Gallery, Melbourne.
resist/relief takes the technical language of making, conceptualising this process to create a duality between these two forms.
The resist technique exposes and endures, withstanding corrosive agents to continually occupy space. The artists in this exhibition have responded to this theme through works that reflect acts of resistance; be they highly visible social issues that are crying for action, or smaller acts of everyday resistance that would otherwise go unseen.
Acts of resistance, however, require us to practice self-care. Relief techniques carve out a space that offers clarity and calm. Artists have considered the ways in which we look after ourselves within resistance. This has taken the form of whatever acts of self-care mean or look like to them.
Anna Russell
Plants resist by persisting. They start out soft and flexible, but can become so determined and irresistible that they move mountains. An encouraging exemplar for artists.
The text embedded in the prints offers some relief in the zeitgeist of the climate emergency. It offers hope through resistance to ecological and social injustice – if only we realise the urgency. Is there another exemplar in the print studio? The chemicals we use to resist can be swept aside when they are no longer fit for purpose (hopefully without solvents).
My prints are in relief. The plates used are waferboard, woodblock, photopolymer and etched zinc, a nod to plates usually reserved for intaglio printing.

Boundary Relief print (unique state) 29 x 26cm
Most of us can’t get down to Burnie to see the works in the Print Prize this time. I will be publishing as many of the successful Sydney Printmakers works as I can here, together with the artists statements where available.
Anna Russell, Voyagers, woodblock, stencil, collage, 55×58 USP 2019
Voyagers
This is a whale’s eye view of voyaging from the harshness of the Antarctic to the warmth of calm subtropical waters, the land appearing from time to time on the horizon. The voyage depends on successful avoidance of the land in an ocean of distracting sounds.
Tensions in this work suggest navigation into the unknown, facing risk, bracing for the unexpected. Safe harbours are hard to find. We’ve made progress internationally in saving whales from slaughter but they still live with hazards we have created.
Meanwhile we have our own voyage into the unknown as the climate changes. Can our work with the whales show us how to act collectively, to make order and balance out of the chaos of our current consuming?
Northern Perspectives
14 – 31 October
Northern Perspectives is designed to provide insights into the current practices of artists living and working North of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
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