Chicago Womens' Graphics Collective
by Estelle Carol
The Chicago Women's
Graphics Collective was first organized in 1970 to provide high quality
feminist posters for the growing women's liberation movement. The Collective
originally used silkscreen to create their large brilliantly colored
prints because it was inexpensive and in the early days, posters could
actually be produced in members' apartments.
As their distribution
grew, the Collective moved to a series of studios and began using offset
printing for their most popular posters. Graphics Collective posters
reflected the broad diversity of the women's movement. The Collective
produced posters on abortion, women's health, lesbianism, women's labor,
sisterhood, women's sports,women's spirituality, rape and other clearly
feminist issues, but also created posters on the United Farmworkers
struggle, African liberation, anti-war themes and highly personal visions
that defy easy categorization.
Graphics Collective
posters appeared in peoples' homes, women's liberation offices, coffee
shops, women's centers, women's health clinics, labor unions, and even
on the set of a popular TV sitcom. All work was done in teams of 2-4
women led by an artist-designer. The Collective wanted a new feminist
art that transcended the highly individualistic "Great Men of Art"
syndrome. Members would propose a poster idea and then recruit a team
to actually produce it. This method incorporated the vision of the individual
artist into the collective art process.
Thousands of posters
were distributed worldwide during the Collective's 13 year history
from 1970-1983. Today some of their best efforts are considered classics
of feminist poster art.
See also: Chicago Women's
Graphics Collective in the Gallery
section for more information.
Estelle Carol was a founder of the Chicago Women's Graphics
Collective and is the coordinator of the CWLU Herstory Project. She
currently owns a graphic design and illustration business. She invites
you to visit her labor cartoon website at www.cartoonwork.com
which she maintains with her partner Bob Simpson.
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