POWERHOUSE COLLECTION

'Poster Art in Australia' exhibition poster by Reg Mombassa for Mambo Graphics

'Poster Art in Australia' exhibition poster by Reg Mombassa for Mambo Graphics

Object No. 2008/10/26-1

Established in 1984 by Dare Jennings and Andrew Rich, the Mambo label began as a backyard business screenprinting T-shirts for a small niche market in surfwear. The mix of surf culture, art and music influences resonated with Australian youth who loved the notoriety and controversy the designs characteristic of Mambo aroused in conservative middleclass Australia. The designs were vibrant, humorous, irreverent and of questionable taste but had broad appeal with youth both in Australia and overseas. The disintegration of accepted motifs and conventions, the portrayal of anti-realist and anti-rational popular iconography combined with imagery typifying Australian suburbia dominate Mambo designs. The posters reveal that beneath the humour and amusing parodies, lies incisive insight, sympathy and expression of serious social concern. In parodying society's sacred cows, artwork created for Mambo in visual and linguistic form, challenges existing social mores while simultaneously providing a public forum for talented graphic artists to exhibit their work. This is an important collection of posters and is significant for the contribution Mambo Graphics has made to Australian popular culture. Artists represented in the collection include Chris O'Doherty (alias Reg Mombassa), David McKay, Gerry Wedd, Maria Kozic, Jeff Raglus, Jim Mitchell, Paul McNeil, Richard Allen, Seenu, Rockin Jelly Bean and Marcelle Lunam.

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Summary

Object Statement

Poster (1 of 2), exhibition, 'Poster Art in Australia', designed by Reg Mombassa for Mambo Graphics Pty Ltd / National Gallery of Australia, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia / Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia, 1994

Physical Description

Poster (1 of 2), exhibition, 'Poster Art in Australia', designed by Reg Mombassa for Mambo Graphics Pty Ltd / National Gallery of Australia, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia / Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia, 1994 Poster advertising the 'Poster Art in Australia' exhibition. Image depicts a dog holding on to the leg of a typical Mambo male who is holding a banner that reads 'NGA' and a speech bubble 'Mambo needs posters!' and includes the text 'The streets as art galleries - walls sometimes speak / poster art in Australia / National Gallery of Australia 5th Nov 1993-6th Feb. 1994 / adventure! Political content! / artistic merit! / social comment!'.

DIMENSIONS

Height

930 mm

Width

675 mm

PRODUCTION

Notes

The poster was designed by Reg Mombassa for Mambo Graphics and the National Gallery of Australia in 1994. This poster is styled on a series of posters produced by the National Gallery of Australia for an exhibition on poster art in Australia held in 1994. Mambo was established in 1984 by Dare Jennings and Andrew Rich as a backyard business screenprinting T-shirts. Artists are commissioned to produce designs that are duplicated on Mambo products. It became a large commercial clothing and textile manufacturer with an annual turnover of more than $10 million. Mambo products are sold in Japan, America, Europe and New Zealand. As well as furniture and clothes, Mambo designs and graphics are mass produced on surfboards, surfbags, posters, CD covers and in ads. In 2000 Jennings and co-founder Andrew Rich sold the company to Gazal corporation, a Sydney based clothing manufacturer which had manufactured and distributed Mambo clothes since 1990. This left Jennings and his artists more time to be creative and let others worry about the business and its risks. Artists represented in this collection include Reg Mombassa, David McKay, Gerry Wedd, Maria Kozic, Jim Mitchell, Paul McNeil, Seenu, Richard Allan, Marcelle Lunam and Jeff Raglus. Their work expresses the obligatory irreverence one has come to expect from Mambo graphic design. Reg Mombassa, alias artist, writer and musician, Chris O'Doherty (b. 1951) began his association with Mambo Graphics in 1987. Reg created a number of Mambo characters that have become iconic symbols of Australian irreverence like his 'Australian Jesus'. Born in New Zealand, Reg first came to prominence in Australia as a founding member of Australian rock band 'Mental As Anything'. Referred to as a 'modern day Renaissance Man' Reg's list of professional credits is impressive. Artwork by Reg is included in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra, The Art Gallery of NSW and the Powerhouse Museum. He has held several successful one-man exhibits and designed the 'Heroes' segment of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games Closing Ceremony and the poster for the 2000 Paralympics Arts Festival as well as the 'Loud Shirts' (Hawaiian shirts) worn by the Australian Olympic team at the 2000 Summer Olympic Games in Sydney.

SOURCE

Acquisition Date

22 January 2008

Copyright for the above image is held by the Powerhouse and may be subject to third-party copyright restrictions. Please submit an Image Licensing Enquiry for information regarding reproduction, copyright and fees. Text is released under Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivative licence.

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