Women reclaim the night!
Poster
ca. 1980 (made)
ca. 1980 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The Lenthall Road Workshop in Hackney was founded in 1975 by three women, Chia Moan, Viv Mullett and Jenny Smith. They took over an existing screen printing shop and turned it into a community printing workshop, focusing predominantly on engaging with local feminist, anti-racist and LGBTQ+ rights groups. Their ethos was 'once you start seeing yourself as a person who can do things then you're in a position to take control of your life'. Running various courses, in particular for women of colour and queer communities, their premises at 81 Lenthall Road was a valued creative hub which lasted for approximately 15 years. Their work and legacy was celebrated in a 2019 retrospective at the Hackney Museum entitled 'Women on Screens: Printmaking, Photography and Community Activism at Lenthall Road Workshop 1970s-1990s'.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Women reclaim the night! (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Wax resist stencil, printing, paper, plastic laminate |
Brief description | Poster, designed and printed by Sue Stiles at the Lenthall Road Workshop, London, 1982. |
Physical description | Landscape poster depicting an illustration of a variety of angry women with sweeping brooms, in primary colours, against a white background. The moon features in the background. |
Dimensions |
|
Marks and inscriptions | WOMEN RECLAIM THE NIGHT! /
Sweep men off the streets! |
Credit line | Given by the Greenwich Mural Workshop. |
Object history | Poster featured in the Greenwich Mural Workshop's 1986 exhibition 'Printing is Easy...?' |
Summary | The Lenthall Road Workshop in Hackney was founded in 1975 by three women, Chia Moan, Viv Mullett and Jenny Smith. They took over an existing screen printing shop and turned it into a community printing workshop, focusing predominantly on engaging with local feminist, anti-racist and LGBTQ+ rights groups. Their ethos was 'once you start seeing yourself as a person who can do things then you're in a position to take control of your life'. Running various courses, in particular for women of colour and queer communities, their premises at 81 Lenthall Road was a valued creative hub which lasted for approximately 15 years. Their work and legacy was celebrated in a 2019 retrospective at the Hackney Museum entitled 'Women on Screens: Printmaking, Photography and Community Activism at Lenthall Road Workshop 1970s-1990s'. |
Bibliographic reference | From the Greenwich Mural Workshop's 1986 exhibition 'Printing is Easy...?' |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.575-2013 |
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Record created | November 20, 2013 |
Record URL |
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