Showing 293 items
matching linocuts
-
Greensborough Historical Society
School Magazine, Watsonia High School Magazine 1964, 1964_
Depicts events and attitudes, primarily of students as they go through their adolescent years in the early 1960's. Watsonia High School now has four levels with increasing student numbers.Annual record of teaching staff, students and events that took place over the year by using both photos and reports. Includes Roll Call section with names of all students.20 Pages, Blue cover, Title in black with linocut illustration. Headmaster / Principal - Mr. L.G.MillerOwner's name on coverwatsonia high school -
Greensborough Historical Society
School Magazine, Watsonia High School Magazine 1965, 1965_
Depicts events and attitudes, primarily of students as they go through their adolescent years in the mid 1960's. Watsonia High School now has five levels with increasing student numbers.Annual record of teaching staff, students and events that took place over the year by using both photos and reports. Includes Roll Call section with names of all students.28 Pages, Blue cover, Title in black with linocut illustration. Headmaster / Principal - Mr. K. Canty.Owner's name on coverwatsonia high school -
Federation University Historical Collection
Artworks, Artworks from the Ballarat School of Mines Students' Magazine, 1939, 1939
A number of pages from the Ballarat School of Mines featuring artworks, some linocuts, by students from the Ballarat Technical Art School.e. gribble, max coward, enid johnston, r. mchutchison, violet d'angri, marian peirce, f.p. manning, j.r. rowe -
Federation University Art Collection
Print - Artwork - Printmaking, Magnolia, 2001
Framed linocut depicting a Magnolia. You you can assist with information on this artist or artwork please use the comment box below.magnolia, linocut, printmaking, flora, available -
Federation University Art Collection
Work on paper - Artwork - Printmaking, Jack, Kenneth, 'The Woodcutter' by Kenneth Kack, 1954
Framed six block linocut showing two men cutting wood. Donated through the Australian Gifts Programme by Katherine Littlewood.Edition 17/50kenneth jack, printmaking, linocut, woodcutters, timber -
Federation University Art Collection
Work on paper - Artwork - Printmaking, Jack, Kenneth, "Glasshouse Mountains, Queensland" by Kenneth Jack, 1961
Kenneth JACK AM MBE RWS, (5 October 1924 – 10 June 2006) Australian watercolour artist Kenneth Jack who specialised in painting the images of an almost forgotten outback life; old mine workings, abandoned ghost towns, decaying farm buildings. He became a professional painter at the age of 39 after giving up his job as senior instructor at the Caulfield Institute of Technology. In 1977 he was elected to The Royal Watercolour Society and in 1982 was awarded the MBE, and the Order of Australia (AM) followed in 1987. Framed three block linocut depicting the Glasshouse Mountains in the Australian State Queensland. Donated through the Australian Gifts Programme by Katherine Littlewood.21/32artwork, artist, kenneth jack, printmaking, glasshouse mountains, queensland, available, linocut -
Federation University Art Collection
Work on paper - Artwork - Print, "Maldon - Side Street" by Kenneth Jacks, 1960
Framed limited edition linocut (3 blocks) depicting a street scene in Maldon, Victoria. Donated through the Australian Gifts Programme by Katherine Littlewood.37/40printmaking, kenneth jacks, maldon, available -
Federation University Art Collection
Printmaking - linocut, 'Painters and Things' by E. Robinson, 1932
This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Framed linocut. We are currently looking for information on the artist who created this work. If you are able to assist please leave details in the comments link below.art, artwork, robinson, e. robinson, linocut, alumni, available -
Federation University Art Collection
Work on paper - Printmaking - Linocut, Rona Green, 'Non Compos Mentis' by Rona Green, 1998
Rona GREEN (1972- ) Born Australia This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Linocut featuring three faces, one on a horse. 'Non Compos Mentis' is a musing on humankinds inability to fathom what is out there. It was produced for the Print Council of Australia. signed edition 16/40art, artwork, rona green, printmaking, linocut, print council of australia, edition, limited edition, available -
Hymettus Cottage & Garden Ballarat
Book - Naturalist book, From Range to Seas a bird lover's ways
non-fictionruby lindsay, naturalist, barrett, art nouveau, creswick, ballarat, australian naturalist -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Book, Wenn es Schneit, 1944
Illustrated book of poems and drawings by Alfons Koenig, an internee in Camp 3 made for Christmas 1944. 2 copiesFaded blue soft cardboard cover. Snow scene and 1944-45, on the front cover. Book has been handstitched to cover. Some pictures in the book have been hand coloured.Pictures: BDM Linocuts: Alfons Koenig Title page and Manuscripts: Alfons Koenig Editor: The Management of the German Internment Camp 3, Tatura Australiaanderson h, wied h, camp 3, tatura, ww2 camp 3, alfons koenig -
Federation University Art Collection
Printmaking - Linocut, 'Black and White' by Don Refshauge, 1932
This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Framed original linocut by student of the Ballarat Technical Art School. We are currently looking for information on the artist who created this work. If you are able to assist please leave details in the comments link below.art, artwork, don refshauge, refshauge, aborigines, alumni, available -
Snuff Puppets
Print, Andy Freer, Front Cover for Snuff Puppets 1993 Promotional Book, 1993
Between 1992 and 1998 Snuff Puppets was housed on the third floor directly above the Melbourne Museum of Printing at the old Bradmill Cotton Mills building on Moreland St in Footscray. Museum proprietor Michael Isaacsen was keen to share his resources and gave Snuff Puppets carte blanche to use his Museum. Nearly all the promotional posters and materials from this time were printed in limited edition runs at the Museum using scrounged paper, odds and ends of ink, lead type, wooden type, lino cuts and an old press. A4 linocut print in two colours. Black background. Right side of page has a skeleton walking on hill waving his left hand and holding a red flag with letters "SP". The iconic fish skeleton logo in top right corner. art, flag, print, snuff puppets, lino cut, puppetry, andy freer, melbourne museum of printing, puppets, footscray, theatre, performing arts, promotional book, skeleton -
Federation University Art Collection
Work on paper - Printmaking, University of Ballarat Printmakers Book, 1994, 1994
This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Red hard covered book with original limited edition prints by printmaking students at the University of Ballarat (now Federation University Australia). The book includes an overview of printmaking processes such as etching, drypoint, linocut, woodcut, collograph, monoprint, monotype and Chine Colle.art, artwork, printmaking, alumni, artist's book, andrew gunnell, emma stoneman, nathan ward, theresa driscoll, donna miller, marisa corral, leah warrick, mel evans, pamela christofas, ashley tracey, antonini atzori, nino atzori, liz minns, sonia e, pacey, vivienne bozanic, tamara gervasoni, melisa waight, jaqui white -
Federation University Art Collection
Work on paper - Printmaking - Linocut, 'Hen Party' by Max Coward, 1964
Max COWARD ( -1991) Born Ballarat Max Coward was training to be an art teacher at the Ballarat Technical Art School from 1937 to 1941. He enlisted in the A.I.F. and was a Naval Trainee at Flinders Naval Depot in 1941. During these years Max Coward was described as a cartoonist and illustrator, and was was attached to the Naval Intelligence Division in 1945, producing stories and drawings for the Navy newspaper Dit. His work was reproduced in the Christmas annual, HMAS Mk IV and the Army educational journal, Salt. He was a foundation staff member at the Burwood Teachers' College art department when it opened at Box Hill in 1954, transferring to the Burwood Campus in 1955. Upon his retirement he moved to Queensland to start a graphic arts consultancy. Coward was active as a printmaker during the 1970s. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Framed limited edition linocut by Max Coward. 'Hen Party' uses simplified forms reminiscent of the shapes gracing 'moderne' interiors of the 1950s and 1960s. The simplification of form and decorative pattern achieved through repetition shows the influence of Paul Klee's work and imagery. lls 'Hen Party' lower centre edition '8/28' lrs 'Max Coward 64' art, artwork, max coward, printmaking, alumni, hens, linoprint, linocut -
Federation University Art Collection
Work on paper - Artwork - Printmaking, Jack, Kenneth, "Mt Porndon and the Stony Rises - No 6 Volcanic Plains of Victoria" by Kenneth Jack, 1962
... linocuts ...Kenneth JACK AM MBE RWS, (5 October 1924 – 10 June 2006) Australian watercolour artist Kenneth Jack who specialised in painting the images of an almost forgotten outback life; old mine workings, abandoned ghost towns, decaying farm buildings. He became a professional painter at the age of 39 after giving up his job as senior instructor at the Caulfield Institute of Technology. In 1977 he was elected to The Royal Watercolour Society and in 1982 was awarded the MBE, and the Order of Australia (AM) followed in 1987. Framed three block lino print showing the volcanic plains of Victoria around Stony Rises. It is Number 6 in the Volcanic Plains of Victoria series. Donated through the Australian Gifts Programme by Katherine Littlewood.31/40artwork, artist, kenneth jack, printmaking, volcano, mt porndon, mount porndon, linocuts -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Artwork, other - Linocut Template, Leslie Van Der Sluys, Kookaburra and Waratah, 1982
Leslie van der Sluys (1939-2010), an Australian artist - painter and printmaker - was born in Victoria. He grew up in Mary Street, Kew with his family before moving to Deepdene. His sister Robin Kelly (nee Vandersluys) donated this artists' linocut to the Kew Historical Society as part of a larger collection in 2018.Original linoleum block of Kookaburra and Waratah, 1982, by the Melbourne artist Leslie Van Der Sluys. The block is broken, preventing its use for further editions of the print. The incised linoleum block shows the reverse of the finished print. The design is of a kookaburra, in profile perching on a Waratah with eucalyptus leaves at the top.leslie vandersluys, robin kelly collection -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Artwork, other - Linocut Print - Seventh in a suite of 16 in the Admella Rescue Series, Admella Rescue Series, 2009
See 5377Linocut print. Seventh in a suite of 16 in the Admella Rescue Series. Depicts two people holding on to one another. Reaching out to another person whose left hand and forearm only are visible. All surrounded by waves. Printed in black on white archival paper. -
Snuff Puppets
Print, Andy Freer, Back Cover for Snuff Puppets 1993 Promotional Book, circa 1994
Between 1992 and 1998 Snuff Puppets was housed on the third floor directly above the Melbourne Museum of Printing at the old Bradmill Cotton Mills building on Moreland St in Footscray. Museum proprietor Michael Isaacson was keen to share his resources and gave Snuff Puppets carte blanche to use his Museum. Nearly all the promotional posters and materials from this time were printed in limited edition runs at the Museum using scrounged paper, odds and ends of ink, lead type, wooden type, lino cuts and an old press.A4 hand printed linocut on thin cream card in 3 colours; blue black, yellow, red. Depicts a pensive skeleton sitting on a small hill with a lowered flag with the initials SP, partly concealed by a giant yellow worm. The print also features the iconic fish skeleton logo. lino cut prints, skeletons, snuff puppets, puppetry, andy freer, melbourne museum of printing, footscray, michael isaacson -
Merri-bek City Council
Reduction linocut, Jazmina Cininas, A two-legged dingo stole Lindy’s tears, 2008
Jazmina Cininas’ printmaking practice is best known for its technically demanding reduction linocuts. A two-legged dingo stole Lindy’s tears draws on the complex mythologies and rhetoric that have become embedded in the protracted Lindy Chamberlain saga. The work is a critique of the media’s unfair treatment of Chamberlain when the case broke in the 1980s. This is a key work from Cininas' Girlie Werewolf Project, which explores how female 'otherness' has been depicted through history. Donation by the artist -
Federation University Historical Collection
Magazine, Ballarat School of Mines Students' Magazine, 1939, 1939
Ballarat School of Mines was a predecessor institution of Federation University Australia. Soft covered magazine with blue, green, yellow and black cover. Images include: Original linocuts, Ballaraat School of Mines Students' Magazine Committee, Ballarat School of Mines Football Team, Ballarat School of Mines Athletic Team, Ballarat School of Mines Hockey Team, Ballarat School of Mines Basketball Team, Ballarat Junior Technical School Tennis Team, Ballarat Junior Technical School Football Team,max coward, ballarat school of mines students' magazine, m. linklater, j.j. hassell, a. helm, f. malseed, richard e. rowlands, museum, w.g. coates, charles mcnamara, frank ponsonby, railway workshops, g.t. myers, model mine, ballarat school of mines literary society, white flat, papua, junior red cross, free indergarten, berlin, chemist and astronomer, port pirrie smelters, ballarat junior technical school -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Print, Nanette Bourke, The Growth of Tourism, 1988
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Nanette Bourke, Opening up the Land, 1995
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Nanette Bourke, Return of the Grasstrees, 2007
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Print, Nanette Bourke, No, I don't want to live to 100, Thank you, 1992
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Print, Nanette Bourke, Watch Over All Living Things, 1996
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Print, Nanette Bourke, Starleaf Grevillea, 2008
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Print, Nanette Bourke, Blue Devils, 1992
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Print, Nanette Bourke, Casuarina Grove, 2003
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Print, Nanette Bourke, Grasstrees, a different perspective, 1992
Settling in Moyston in 1984, Nanette Bourke is a prominent figure in the Ararat and Grampians arts community, perhaps best known as a member of the ‘Grampians Four’ group of artists. Bourke has been a printmaker since the late 1960s, having studied at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney, and at art societies and the CAE in Melbourne before relocating to Western Victoria. Inspired by the woodcuts and linocuts by Melbourne artists of the 1920s and 1930s - Napier Waller, Murray Griffin, and especially Eric Thake - Bourke embraces the sophisticated results that can be achieved in this medium. Bourke holds a deep affinity with the natural environment, which is integral in her artistic life. Many of the works in this exhibition are inspired by the natural environment of the Grampians. In contrast to the often joyous depictions of Australian native flora, Bourke’s imagery also presents a poignant reminder of humankind’s negative impact on the environment.