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    From the blog

    Highlights of Behind the Lines 2021

    6 minute read

    Thu 9 Dec 2021 by

    In addition to some talented familiar faces, led by our Political Cartoonist of the Year, Glen Le Lievre, Behind the Lines is introducing several first-time contributors into the mix who reflect our dynamic democracy. Curator Holly Williams presents her highlights from this year's exhibition. 

    Glen Le Lievre  - Political Cartoonist of the Year

    Glen Le Lievre, Full House, The Australian 21 September 2021

    Glen Le Lievre is a master of crafting with light to infuse atmosphere and drama — you can almost hear the night crickets chirping in his cartoon ‘Full House’, of the different states entering stay at home orders, or with ‘The Long Goodbye’ where he has created a sunlit Indian airport scene.

    Our Political Cartoonist of the Year judges made special mention of his ability to discuss an issue without the need for words. He creates whole worlds in his drawings and GIFs and somehow managed to inject commentary on a political situation with the capacity to evoke personal emotional resonances – a rare skill.

    Jim Pavlidis - The PM of No Responsibility

    Jim Pavlidis, The PM of No Responsibility, The Sydney Morning Herald/The Age, 23 August 2021

    From time-to-time political leaders cast out a throwaway line only to have it stick to them like flies at a picnic. Since the Prime Minister first uttered the line, ‘I don’t hold a hose, mate’, on 2GB in December 2019, political cartoonists have not let him forget it.

    Jon Kudelka - Burying Disbelief

    Jon Kudelka, Burying Disbelief, The Australian, 24 April 2021

    Jon Kudelka has managed the impossible – to create a funny cartoon about climate change where the pollies are part of the solution.

    Matt Golding - Inheritance

    Matt Golding, Inheritance,The Sydney Morning Herald/The Age, 17 May 2021

    This is a cartoon that refuses to leave my mind. Its rendering is so simple, but there is something in the way Matt Golding has cast the Prime Minister and Treasurer walking out the frame, and away from the next generation that embodies the alarm many younger people feel about their future.

    Its message is strong and perhaps needs to be – there is an urgent, unanswered question posed here. The dismissive body language also reminds me of the way politicians with years of working life ahead of them retire from the Parliament and take up high paid consultancy jobs in the private sector.

    Meg O'Shea - Phonecall with Aunty

    Meg O’Shea, Phonecall with Aunty, Self-published, 2 August 2021

    Meg O’Shea is one of the new artists in Behind the Lines. Her work, first published on Instagram, highlights political cartooning’s new voices and ways of reaching audiences. This cartoon conveys, through a personal lens, some of the politicised undercurrents in the pandemic’s response.

    The Delta outbreak began in the wealthiest electorate in Australia, former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull’s seat of Wentworth, and went on to take root in some of Sydney’s most culturally diverse and economically challenged suburbs where the so-called ‘two tier’ response captured in O’Shea’s cartoon played out.

    Judy Kuo - Lockdown Mood 6

    Judy Kuo, Lockdown Mood 6, Self-published, 13 August 2021

    This quiet image of a life in lockdown by Melbourne-based Judy Kuo, a first time Behind the Lines exhibitor, reminds us that lockdowns have become inherently political. As our social fabric is increasingly tested by the pandemic and our mental health suffers from the drawn-out stay-at-home orders, Kuo’s illustration is deeply relatable.

    This work also reminds me of other aspects of the pandemic – the desire to wake up and realise it was all a dream, the impact on multicultural communities and the unexpected migration to from the cities.

    Simon Letch - Track Record 

    Simon Letch, Track Record, The Sydney Morning Herald/The Age, 10 September 2021

    Who knew in 2019 that such a daggy bit of tech - the QR code – would end up being one of the primary tools to fight a deadly virus. Letch’s take on the zeitgeist is unparalleled in this cartoon and his self-deprecating humour (check out the code for his signature) is refreshing.

    Behind the Lines 2021 opens 14th December. 

    6 minute read

    Thu 9 Dec 2021 by

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