Skip to main content
Image Not Available for A memory drawing of a typical "Joker" - one in every gang
A memory drawing of a typical "Joker" - one in every gang
Image Not Available for A memory drawing of a typical "Joker" - one in every gang

A memory drawing of a typical "Joker" - one in every gang

Artist (Australian, born 1929)
Date1956-1957
Object number00017826
NameLinocut
MediumLino block print on paper
DimensionsOverall: 215 x 139 mm, 0.008 kg
ClassificationsArt
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionPrint by Clem Millward titled 'A memory drawing of a typical "Joker" - one in every gang'. The image depicts a man's head, smoking a cigarette, in profile. The print number '11/35' appears lower left corner of sheet and is taken from "Old Waterfront Faces. A limited edition of eleven lino block prints made in the Waterside Workers' Federation rooms by Clem Millward 1956-1957."HistoryOld Waterfront Faces. A limited edition of eleven lino block prints made in the Waterside Workers' Federation rooms by Clem Millward 1956-1957. These prints show characterisations of waterside workers in the mid 1950s. They were produced by Clem Millward, a professionally trained artist who worked on Sydney's waterfront from 1956 to 1962. During the 1950s, painting, printmaking and film production were pursued by some waterside workers through the Waterside Workers' Federation. Clem Millward painted and produced prints in the Waterside Workers' Federation's rooms in Sydney. He worked with other waterside workers on projects such as the union's mural (Now in the NMC). This portfolio of eleven prints were produced in the Waterside Workers' Federation rooms in 1956-57 are based on drawings done around the waterfront. Clem Millward carried a pocket-sized pad and pencil while at work, making unobserved sketches on the job during 'smokos' and rain periods, on the Erskine Street tram and in hamburger cafes around the waterfront. On days when Clem was on "appearance money" or night shifts he used the daylight hours to redraw the sketches on linoleum, cut the blocks and print them on an old screwdown letter press in the studio above the union rooms. He never knew the names of these men. On Harry Stein's instigation Clem collated the prints into 35 sets to sell them in conjunction with the Waterside Workers' exhibition 'Artists and Rebels on the Waterfront' which opened on 3 July 1992 at the Sydney Branch of the Waterside Workers' Federation. Significance'These faces from "The Hungry Mile" belong to survivors of that generation which experienced the horrors of Gallipoli and Flanders; and could not talk about them; which endured the hardships and humiliations of the 1930s and could not forget them'.

Clem Millward, June 1992