Summary
Wall hanging, Aboriginal-style design, circa 1960s. Designed by John Rodriquez, an influential Australian textile designer from the 1950s to 1970s. Screen printed by hand.
Physical Description
Orange/burnt orange/white.
Significance
See Narrative 'John Rodriquez Textile Collection'.
The significance of this object lies, in part, in its use of Aboriginal imagery. The use of Australian motifs, including Aboriginal imagery, flora and fauna, became fashionable during the 1940s and 1950s. These motifs expressed a growing sense of Australian identity while the nation was experiencing the social upheavals of war and mass migration. Many immigrant artists also began to adopt these motifs as they settled into their new country. Aboriginal imagery expressed complex attitudes to Australia's first inhabitants: as culturally interesting, representing connection to place and landscape, yet signifying a distant, pre-civilised time, in contrast to modern Australia. The fact that much of the Aboriginal imagery was appropriated without permission or compensation was far from the thoughts of most commercial artists of the time.
More Information
-
Collection Names
-
Collecting Areas
-
Acquisition Information
Donation from Ms Patricia Rodriquez, 24 Jan 2006
-
Artist
-
Place & Date Made
-
Inscriptions
Text: Rodriquez/designed and handprinted in australia.
-
Classification
-
Category
-
Discipline
-
Type of item
-
Overall Dimensions
360 mm (Width), 820 mm (Height)
-
References
Photocopies of old issues of Home Beautiful which display John's fabric designs have been offered by the donor. Newspaper cuttings showing clothes made from Rodriquez-designed fabrics.
-
Keywords
Aboriginal Art, Fabric Designs, Handcrafts, Screen Printing, Textile Manufacturing, Textiles, Innovation & Design