Skip to content
Art, Union

Art and Activism -View from the Docks The work of Sam Wallman

Australian National Maritime Museum 3 mins read

Melbourne-based Sam Wallman is both a wharf worker at a container terminal in Melbourne and award-winning writer, cartoonist and illustrator.

View from the Docks showcases his latest work in an exhibition at the Australian National Maritime Museum opening on December 4. It depicts how life on the docks has changed – and stayed the same – over the past decades.

His two careers developed in symbiosis. He had compulsively drawn since he was a child, but his first union-related drawings were created in his late teens, when he worked at a call centre.

His drawings resonated. People connected with them. He started to learn about the high-water marks of Australian unionism, such as the Green Bans and solidarity with Aboriginal people, women and gay rights movements. 

He has published two books internationally and his artworks have been exhibited widely, including at the Museum of Australian Democracy, the Chicago Labor Notes Conference, the Australian Museum and the National Gallery of Victoria.

Museum Director and Ceo Daryl Karp said ‘I first came across Sam Wallman as a political cartoonist. His work stood out for its sharp insights, wit and visual style. I’ve loved the opportunity to showcase this powerful new work alongside one of our significant collection objects, the Wharfies Mural

A person wearing a hard hatAI-generated content may be incorrect.The Wharfies Mural was created in the mid-20th century by a group of worker artists to document that era’s key industrial and political struggles, victories and aspirations. View from the Docks is a contemporary response to this, depicting a day on the wharf in drawings, against a backdrop of a huge decal of the dock and a giant crane. The powerful images are produced not on paper with ink or pastel, but on an iPad with a stylus pen.

‘The museum has given me a lot of opportunity for self-expression and I really appreciate that’, Wallman said. In the collaborative spirit of the Wharfies Mural, he told a meeting of the Maritime Union of Australia about the project, because he wanted to let everyone have their say.

‘I thought everybody would say ‘Who cares?’, but probably 20 people started calling out suggestions: ‘You’ve got to have Indigenous struggle and our relationship with that, you’ve got to have women on the wharf’- I’ve tried my best to put them all in.’

 

Peter Fray, Museum Assistant Director, Content and Storytelling said, ‘Australia relies on its ports for the vast majority of imports and exports. It was so in the 1950s, when the Wharfies Mural was made, and it is so now. Sam’s work leans backwards to the mural’s spirit of activism and forwards to his time of automation. It’s simply, powerful visual storytelling – Sam Wallman is the Matt Groening of the docks.’

Wallman’s next book, All Out: Pink Bans and Blue Collars, explores intersections of queer and working-class organising efforts. It centres on the Pink Bans, a time in the 1970s when construction workers refused to work on projects with links to organisations that persecuted queer people, ‘All Out is about that and what it’s like for me to be out and gay as a wharfie because I’m in the minority, that’s for sure. I want us to celebrate that we can change things.’

 

For images: Sam Wallman

For further information or for interview please contact:

Steve Riethoff              e: [email protected]                                     m: 0417 047 837

Media

More from this category

  • Art, Community
  • 27/02/2026
  • 15:50
City of Greater Dandenong

The Maze Returns: A Contemporary Revisiting of a Landmark Community Artwork

GreaterDandenong City Council is bringing a much‑loved community artwork back to life withThe Maze, a major exhibition celebrating creativity,cultureand connection across generations. First created…

  • Contains:
  • Art, Community
  • 27/02/2026
  • 15:28
City of Greater Dandenong

The Maze Returns: A Contemporary Revisiting of a Landmark Community Artwork

Fayend’Evieand JonTjhia. The Maze: Reimagined. back ↑ notes Greater DandenongCity Councilproudly presentsThe Maze,an iconic large‑scale papier‑mâché installation. First crafted in 1991under the guidanceof artistSuesyCircosta,…

  • Contains:
  • Art
  • 25/02/2026
  • 23:01
Creative Australia

Creative Australia Announces Title and First Details for Khaled Sabsabi’s Presentation at the 61st International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia

In a major historic first for an Australian artist, Khaled Sabsabi will simultaneously present artworks in the Australia Pavilion in the Giardini and in La Biennale di Venezia’s main exhibition, In Minor Keys. The work in the Australia Pavilion, conference of one’s self, explores spirituality, migration, and the vastness of shared humanity. La Biennale di Venezia will run from 9 May until 22 November 2026. Sydney, Australia - February 26, 2026 – Creative Australia has announced the first details ofKhaled Sabsabi’s presentation in the Australia Pavilion for the 61st International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia, curated by Michael…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.