Ecologies of Change
16 September - 28 November 2021
Ecologies of Change, installation view, ROSL Clubhouse, London
Margaret Ashman | Jacki Baxter | Sally Beaumont | Alexis Beckett | Helen Benson | Alison Bernal | Kit Boyd | Pauline Bradley | Ian Brown | Pengpeng Chen | Susan Vera Clarke | Joanna Cohn | Marian Crawford | Jo Darvall | Stephanie Draper | Eleanor Durbin | Jeannelise Edelstein | Caroline Elliott | Eric Gaskell | Colin Gillespie | Eleanor Havsteen-Franklin | Heather Haythornthwaite | Bridget Hillebrand | Heather Hesterman | Jan Hogan | Paul Hogg | Tessa Holmes | Julie Hoyle | Clare Humphries | Winsome Jobling | Michael Kennedy | Martin King | Jo Lankester | Tammy Mackay | Clyde McGill | Diane McLellan | Rebecca Mayo | Antoinette Momtahan | Loraine Monk | Lindsey Moran | Peg Morris | Stephen Mumberson | Clare O’Hagan | Theresa Pateman | Bronwen Paterson | Sumi Perera | Venessa Pugh | Sue Ribbans | Irene Riley | Kate Robertson | Sue Roe | Annika Romeyn | Hilary Rosen | Janet Sang | James Tylor | Jill Vigus | Philomine Wales | Christine Watson | Carol Wilhide Justin | Kate Willows | Stella Yarrow
Ecologies of Change is a collaboration between invited artists from Australia and Printmakers Council UK on display at The Royal Over-Seas League Clubhouse in Westminster, London.
This group exhibition is a collective artist vision of the impact and consequences of human activity on Earth's ecosystems. The project brings together Australian and British artists who share an ethics of care to create images recognising the way we are responsible for altering the planet. These changes include global warming, habitat loss, changes in the chemical composition of the atmosphere, oceans and soil, and animal extinctions. Collective response can be cathartic, art often providing a sense of relief or resolve; Ecologies of Change is an invitation to reimagine our participation in a hope for change in the future. This exhibition is cocurated by Clare Humphries (Australia), Jacki Baxter (UK) and Venessa Pugh (UK).
Ecologies of Change, installation view, ROSL Clubhouse, London
Janet Sang, Exchange Control, screenprint, 56 x 76cm - Image courtesy of the artist
Kit Boyd, Postcards from the Future, relief ink and stencil, 50 x 60cm - Image courtesy of the artist
Diane McLellan, Driving Home, lithograph, 8 x 11cm - Image courtesy of the artist
Lindsey Moran, Renewal, photopolymer etching, 30 x 21cm - Image courtesy of the artist
Ecologies of Change, installation view, ROSL Clubhouse, London
Joanna Cohn, Light on Earth, Takuhon print, 150 x 674cm
James Tylor, From an Untouched Landscape, archival pigment print, 30 x 40cm - Image courtesy of the artist
Ecologies of Change, installation view, ROSL Clubhouse, London
Marian Crawford, A Blizzard of Signs, relief with letterpress, 40 x 26cm - Image courtesy of the artist
Ecologies of Change, installation view, ROSL Clubhouse, London
The Printmakers Council UK is an artist-run, non-profit organisation which aims to promote the use of both traditional and innovative printmaking techniques. In recent years, the Printmakers Council has organised exhibitions in London at the Bankside Gallery, Barbican Library, The National Theatre, The Mall Galleries and the Natural History Museum, and throughout the UK. Internationally, there have been exhibitions in Paris and exchanges with Landau, Germany and the Printmakers of Western Australia.
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Ecologies of Change is a part of the UK/Australia Season 2021/22 programme.
About UK/Australia Season
The UK/Australia Season is a major new cultural exchange between Australia and the United Kingdom (UK) celebrating the diverse and innovative artist communities and cultural sectors of each nation. The Season is a joint initiative by the British Council and the Australian Government’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
The artistic programme ranges across theatre, film, visual arts, dance, design, creative technology, architecture, music, literature, museums, broadcast, public engagement, and features numerous exciting cross-arts commissions. There will be a number of world, UK and Australian premieres. The nationwide programme will span city, regional and rural areas across Australia and the UK.