
An exhibition opening on the 15 June, of prints by John Martin, paintings by Peter Wallfried and my sketches. Here is one of a duck on the Murrumbidgee River at Hay, New South Wales.



An exhibition opening on the 15 June, of prints by John Martin, paintings by Peter Wallfried and my sketches. Here is one of a duck on the Murrumbidgee River at Hay, New South Wales.



The Essentials Education series of text and workbooks are published by the Adelaide Tuition Centre. Many have cartoon illustrations, to help underline study points and remind students that learning is fun. These are from the first full colour edition of the Modern History Workbook.






Cartoon illustrations from The People’s Policy for Children’s Well-being. The result of a process created and run by democracy co, in South Australia.

“The People’s Policy for Children’s Well-being is a world first for democracy, with everyday community members coming together in a ‘People’s Panel’ to hear evidence, deliberate and develop robust public policy on ‘what needs to happen to avoid the need for children to be removed from their families'”.




Independence Educational Publishers UK produce Issues, a series of cross-curricular resource books for 14 -18 year olds. Each book (there are currently 70 in print) has a number of cartoon illustrations by three (Australian!) cartoonists – Don Hatcher, Angelo Madrid and me. These are a few of my cartoons from the latest books covering health, eating disorders, housing, child abuse and money issues.




Can you get all of world history in one statue?! Does leave out the good bits though…





Illustrations from the Quality of Life Report, the work of community leaders of the Aboriginal human services sector in South Australia, presented to the Nuclear Fuel Cycle Citizens’ Jury 2, late last month.
To quote from the report: ‘The government wants us to have a conversation about nuclear. As Aboriginal community leaders and NGO service providers we say “No” to this proposal… We want the government to understand that we want a different conversation; one that focuses on unfinished business, including our experience of Maralinga; on the sickness that it created in our people and in the land; and the pain and loss that it caused. Our people need to have a future’.
The citizens’ jury was run by DemocracyCo, and more information about citizens’ juries and other research alternatives can be found at new Democracy.




Pages from the children’s book Our Home. See the book’s Facebook page here. Contact author Sue Coad for copies – $20 inc P&P in Australia (email: suecoad@adam.com.au)
