Frances Burke was Australia's most influential and celebrated textile
designer of the 20th century. From the late 1930s to 1970, her designs
achieved a prominence unparalleled in Australia before or since.
Displaying imagery and colours from native flora, marine objects,
Indigenous artefacts and designs of pure abstraction, Burke's innovative
fabrics remain fresh and appealing, distinctive and evocative of
Australia. In New Design, her fabric showroom and interior design
consultancy, Burke presented modern furniture by emerging local
designers of the postwar period. Drawing on regular visits to the US,
UK, Europe, Japan and Taiwan she became an authoritative advocate for
modern design.Burke also collaborated with leading architects and
interior designers, including Robin Boyd, her fabrics making arresting
contributions to influential modern buildings. In this long-awaited,
richly illustrated work, Nanette Carter and Robyn Oswald-Jacobs have
located and unpacked the different components of a body of work never
presented as art or intended simply for display, but which contributed
so much to the felt experience of Australian life in the middle decades
of the twentieth century.