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Postcard, The Anti-Suffrage Society As Dressmaker

Suffrage Atelier1909-1912

Museum of London

Museum of London
London, United Kingdom

The Anti-Suffrage Society As Dressmaker' The postcard was published by the Suffrage Atelier, as propaganda for the pro-women's suffrage campaign. The Anti-Suffrage Society was satirised in suffrage propaganda. Here the A.S.S. is depicted as dressmaker fitting a badly made and out of date dress.
The Suffrage Atelier was founded in London in February 1909 as 'An Arts and Crafts Society Working for the Enfranchisement of Women'. Its object was: 'to encourage Artists to forward the Women's Movement, and particularly the Enfranchisement of Women, by means of pictorial publications.'
The Atelier artists specialised in hand-made wooden block prints, stencilling and etchings and produced visually powerful posters and postcards to publicise the pro-suffrage campaign.
Laurence and Clemence Housman were co-founders of the Atelier, other members were Catherine Courtauld, Edith Craig and Isobel Pocock. The Atelier was associated with the militant Votes for Women campaign, in particular the Women's Freedom League. It also ran the Art Stall at the WSPU's fund-raising Women's Exhibition in 1909.

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