Former Australian of the Year Grace Tame illustrated a cover for a magazine to raise awareness about the country's domestic violence epidemic.
However, the artwork for InStyle Australia's July edition took several attempts to finalise due to its inclusion of the number of women allegedly killed by gendered violence this year.
In an Instagram post on Tuesday, the InStyle page explained the statistic 'quickly became inaccurate' whenever the cover art neared completion.
'Each time, the number of Australian women killed in 2024 in an epidemic of gendered violence rose,' it said.
'Today, it stands at 49 women in 190 days. Tomorrow, that number could be different.'
Thousands of Australians around the country in April joined a national rally demanding the Federal Government do more to protect women from gender-based violence.
The huge demonstration followed months of horrific attacks against women - including those of Samantha Murphy and the possible targeting of women during the Westfield Bondi Junction massacre.
Reflecting on the rally, InStyle wrote: 'We marched and pushed our government to take urgent action on gendered violence.
'Prime Minister Anthony Albanese declared it a national crisis and pledged nearly $1billion in practical measures to stop the scourge.
'And then, silence.'
Artwork created by Grace Tame for the July cover of InStyle Australia (pictured) featured a domestic violence death toll which had to be edited several times to keep up with the growing number of alleged victims
Ms Tame (pictured), known for being a former Australian of the Year and activist, reflected on her own experience with domestic violence and called for the government to invest in better solutions
Ms Tame shared her own statement regarding the creation of the cover, which featured hands holding a heart with the 2024 death toll of alleged domestic violence pinned on it.
'Part of the problem is that unless we have seen it up close, we readily ignore violence because it's too confronting,' she wrote.
'That the death toll has increased by 6 since I started this project on 13 June, speaks volumes.'
Ms Tame also shared her own experiences with domestic violence and called out people who consider it a 'social problem affecting certain individuals or groups'.
'Incidents rarely happen in a vacuum, they typically form part of a wider pattern of abuse, enabled by a culture of normalised violence,' she said.
'We've been conned by the pernicious illusion that we can heal primarily through prevention education and discussion.
'...Idealistic notions of respectful relationships miss the main point, although they are important.
'...We need a holistic suite of solutions that engage every industry and demographic.
'This is a crisis of public health.'
The July cover drew supportive comments from dozens of readers who applauded InStyle for keeping the domestic violence awareness at the forefront.
'Powerful and deeply moving. It is simply inexcusable that the citizens are keeping this epidemic front and centre, and not the government who have broken their promise. Yet again. Grace is extraordinary with her artwork,' one wrote.
'Incredible artwork. Important topic. Hard not to feel hopeless in the face of it all,' another said.
Another wrote: '49 is 49 too many - how I wish we could stop that figure immediately.'
Another commented: 'Amazing work. Having survived intimate partner and family violence I'm relieved to see this finally receive attention.'
InStyle also reflected on how government action to help survivors of gendered violence had seemingly lulled since the news cycle moved past April's rally.
The cover comes months after thousands of Australians marched in a nation-wide rally and demanded further action to protect women against gendered violence
'Ten weeks since those national rallies, eighteen more lives have been tragically lost; four women killed in 48 hours over the first weekend in June; three women murdered in three days last week, their wrongful deaths buried deep in newspapers and feeds,' it said.
'A fatal stabbing yesterday; an alleged domestic homicide on Saturday.
'...Violence against women isn’t a flash-in-the-pan crisis, it’s an epidemic.'
The 49 alleged victims of gender-based violence
Janice Walker, 68
Nerol Doble, 65
Keira Marshall, 29
Alana Martin, 30
Bonnie Lee Anderson, 39
Vyleen White, 70
Donna Baraket, 60
Samira Kamaleddine, 81
Rebecca Young, 42
Min (Sue) Cho, 41
Natasha Nibizi, 29
Samantha Murphy, 51
Unnamed woman, 26
Unnamed woman, 42
Wendy Lee George, 60
Joanne Perry, 53
Chaithanya (Swetha) Madhagani, 35
Unnamed woman, 66
Hannah McGuire, 23
Dawn Singleton, 25
Jade Young, 47
Pikria Darchia, 55
Yixuan Cheng, 27
Lesley Stillman, 67
Molly Ticehurst, 28
Emma Bates, 49
Erica Hay, 30
Joan Mary Drane, 78
Lily Galbraith, 24
Gretl Petelczyc, 18
Jennifer (Jenny) Petelczyc, 59
Tash Raven, 43
Unnamed woman, 36
Wanda Dorothy Uhle, 78
Lois Witt, 77
Evette Verney, 61
Annette Kiss, 53
Unnamed woman, 51
Unnamed woman, 40
Source: The RED HEART Campaign