Workers’ Art Collective (“WAC”)

The Workers’ Art Collective is a group of leftist artists (illustrators, muralists, street artists, cartoonists, painters, graphic designers, and writers) based in Australia, creating art and writing for the workers’ movement. Vitally, the Workers’ Art Collective also consists of workers from various industries, such as warehousing, call centres, construction, disability support work, hospitality, and general labouring, who understand the importance of working-class organisation.

The Collective acknowledges that the unions in Australia have been greatly weakened by decades of neoliberal attacks. Union membership is at an all-time low, while workers are being heavily exploited. Wages aren’t growing relative to the cost of living, while profits continue to soar for the big end of town. Workers are working harder than ever and seeing little of the fruits of their labour. They are increasingly divided and fractured by a casualised, insecure work environment deliberately imposed by the bosses. And with this, working-class culture suffers.

The Workers’ Art Collective believes that a globally united working class is the most powerful force in society and the primary agent capable of “bringing capitalism to its knees.” They carry on a long tradition of artist craft that not only fights for social justice but also immerses itself within the organs of working-class power: the mighty trade unions.

City

Melbourne

Country

Australia

Region

Oceania

Year of Creation

2014

Featured Project

Mural & banner-making workshops
As a core part of The Workers’ Art Collective, their mural & banner-making workshops are a key aspect of their social organizing. Workers collaborate with artists to create banners and murals for marches, protests, and other public activism. Workshops are run in conjunction with workers and activists to support on-the-ground campaigns and actions.

Resources

Bell, Thomas. “‘Australia is on fire’: the political posters taking over bus shelters – in pictures.” The Guardian, 3 Feb. 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2020/feb/04/australia-is-on-fire-the-political-posters-taking-over-bus-shelters-in-pictures.

Roberts, Michael and Workers’ Art Collective. “How to organise a call centre.” Overland, 15 Nov. 2018, https://overland.org.au/2018/11/how-to-organise-a-call-centre/.

Signal. “Interview with Hollie Moly.” Justseeds, 21 Mar. 2022, https://justseeds.org/an-interview-with-hollie-moly/.

More Information

IMPORTANT: Profile pages for all collectives are in permanent development and have been built using information in the public domain. They will be updated progressively and in dialogue with the organizations by the end of 2024. New features and sections will be included in 2025, like featured videos, and additional featured projects. Please contact us if you discover errors. For more information on mapping criteria and to submit your organization’s information to be potentially included in the database, visit this page

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