Volunteering at Women’s Art Register

During my year abroad studying in Melbourne, I was able to spend 4 months (June 2019-September 2019) volunteering at the Women's Art Register: a living archive established in 1975 of women's art practice in Australia.

The Women's Art Register is an organization that seeks to document and promote the artistic work of women in Australia, both throughout history and in the present moment. I stumbled on the organization while visiting the Richmond Public Library, where a portion of the archive is available to the public. I decided to spend one day a week volunteering in the archive, as I felt I had ample free time and had some archival experience from my job at the AMS.

I helped the head of WAR, Caroline Phillips with some basic sorting and updating. I took on a personal project of disassembling the folders labeled "Aboriginal Artists", and moving records into folders with the artist's names, as was standard practice for non-Aboriginal artists in the archive. I also participated in their Wikipedia Edit-a-thon.

This experience was very fulfilling, and taught me so much about the continued under-representation of women in the art historical archive, and how this affects non-white women at a magnified scale. I was able to meet Australian women and artists coming from different generations and perspectives, and absorb so much wisdom about the intersection of feminism and art.

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