Los Angeles Times

Powerful then, now

- By Liesl Bradner calendar@latimes.com

“Don’t Let Racism Divide Us.” “So Long as Women Are Not Free, the People Are Not Free.” And, simply, “Protest.” Poster slogans from the women’s marches in January? Actually, they’re slogans from a women’s art collective in the 1970s and ’80s.

In 1974, three activists founded See Red Women’s Workshop, a feminist silkscreen poster collective in London. An ad in a radical feminist magazine called for female artists to come together and create posters that confronted media stereotype­s.

“See Red Women’s Workshop: Feminist Posters 1974-1990” from Four Corners Books is a just-released book of protest artwork featuring 115 images — creative designs and styles that were silk-screened, stenciled, painted and more. (Margaret Thatcher appears often as a symbol of oppression.) Former members of the See Red workshop detail the collective’s history from its start to its closure, in 1990.

“We were all involved in different kinds of women’s liberation movements and felt very passionate,” artist and film professor Anne Robinson, who joined the collective in the early ’80s, said. She noted posters used in a 1968 student uprising in Paris were an inspiratio­n, as was the 19-year nuclear weapons protest at the Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp in England.

Planned long before last year’s Brexit vote and U.S. presidenti­al election, the book is nonetheles­s timely with healthcare, reproducti­ve rights and equal pay at the forefront of the discussion.

“Our intentions were to empower anyone involved in campaignin­g against sexism and reproducti­ve rights,” said Robinson, who was pleasantly surprised to see an updated version of one of the collective’s posters in a recent women’s march in London.

 ??  ?? “DON’T LET RACISM DIVIDE US,” a poster from 1978.
“DON’T LET RACISM DIVIDE US,” a poster from 1978.
 ?? Images from See Red Women's Workshop ?? “PROTEST,” 1973, is among the posters in the new book.
Images from See Red Women's Workshop “PROTEST,” 1973, is among the posters in the new book.
 ??  ?? “GIRLS ARE POWERFUL,” 1979, makes the case for no limits.
“GIRLS ARE POWERFUL,” 1979, makes the case for no limits.
 ??  ?? “WOMEN THROW OFF OUR DOUBLE BURDEN,” 1975.
“WOMEN THROW OFF OUR DOUBLE BURDEN,” 1975.

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