- Hoisted
- Trace Biennial III
- Open Morph
- Disruptive Devices
- Welcome Sports
- Welcome Residential
- Richard Bell Venice Biennale
- Another Internet
- Wild Things
- Trace Biennial II
- APDL Live Exhibition
- Sustainability Queensland
- arcke
- NSW Transport Website
- CRPT (G20)
- Kupka’s Piano
- Write Your Story
- Write the World magazine
- Act Justly
- Human Rights Arts & Film Festival
- Trace Biennial I
- White Light
- Typolitic
- Food Connect
- Design Futures
- Apologies to Buddah
- Apologies to Marx
- Apologies to Pericles
- The Endless Angry Summer
- The Wilston Group
- Lines in the Sand
- CRC for Water Sensitive Cities
- Fluidata
- Anniversary Invite
- Automatic Poem Interface
- Petitek
- The Presence of Absence
- Memefest 2011
- Amnesty Homelands
- E2designlab
- Steam
- Human Rights Defender
- New Anthems IV
- New Anthems III
- New Anthems II
- New Anthems I
- CRC Arts & Entertainment Futures
- Vumi
- Boundless Plains to Share
- Street Front
- Admissions
- Siren Wall
- Fundamental Sounds
- It's Not a Crisis, It's a Creed
- Kurilpa Country
- Unsettled
- Unsettled Remixed
- SLQ murals
- Gall & Medek Architects
- Amnesty ‘Unfair Shores’
- Amphetamine Awareness
- FAWB
- Memefest
- Fusions
- Work Terror
- No Vacancy
Work Terror
Work Terror is a campaign poster condemning Australia’s new industrial relations and anti-terrorism legislation using the then Government’s own propaganda. The sections torn from official advertisements combine to read:
Workplace terrorism, that's how we will continue to grow and prosper. John Howard, Prime Minister of Australia