Alison Alder


Alison Alder is an artist working predominantly within screen-printing media, technology-based works and "constructed environments" to explore social issues in Australia, including Indigenous Australian communities, and other organisations. She co-founded the Megalo International Silkscreen Collective with a collective of activists including Colin Little, the founder of earthworks Poster Collective, in 1980.

Career and practices

Born in 1958, Alison Alder works within multiple disciplines for her works including screen-printing, animation and installations. Her works have been exhibited throughout Australia, The United States of America and Asia since 1982. Her work is in the possession of many public and private holdings throughout the world including the Cruthers Collection of Women's Art who hold 13 works. Alder is currently an Associate Professor at Australian National University in Canberra and the “Head of Printmedia and Drawing.” Alder received a Diploma of Arts from the Australian National University: School of Art and Design in Canberra in 1980. After graduating from ANU she completed a Graduate Diploma of Arts at Monash University, Victoria in 2002; she graduated from Monash University: Monash Art Design & Architecture, with a Masters of Fine Art in 2007.
Alder's works centre around “empowering communities through the visualisation of common social aims.” Her works focus on research of these communities which include institutions like the Museum of Australian Democracy and Indigenous communities. In a 1982 interview conducted by Anne Morris in Alder's book with Julia Church – “True Bird Grit” – Alder mentions that she created political posters because she is a printmaker, who could produce works that were inexpensive to make and circulate, they were more accessible to a wide population of people during that time than television was.

Works

Alder has been exhibiting works in group exhibitions since 1982 and has held 16 solo exhibitions. Alder's works are held in collections through-out the world including but not limited to the Cruthers Collection of Women's Art, the National Gallery of Australia and the New York Public Library Print Collection.
1991
1995
1997
1998
2000
2004
2007
2009
2010
2011/12
2013
2014
2015
2017
2018/19