James Tylor – News
DRAWING WALL #26: JAMES TYLOR
26 February – 24 May 2017
Shepparton Art Museum, VIC
(Erased Scenes) From an Untouched Landscape highlights the contemporary absence of Australian Aboriginal culture within the Australian landscape and how this phenomenon is a direct result of the impact of European colonisation.
JAMES TYLOR in COUNTERCURRENTS
3 March – 14 April 2017
SAMSTAG Museum, SA
Presented as part of the Adelaide Festival of Arts, Countercurrents probes the unique and complex relationship between planetary effects, humanity and the oceans for our region.
JAMES TYLOR in NEW MATTER: RECENT FORMS OF PHOTOGRAPHY
10 September 2016 – February 2017
Art Gallery of New South Wales
This exhibition features recent work by Australian and international photographers who expand the limits of photographic representation, experimenting with the abstraction of form.
JAMES TYLOR in RESOLUTION: NEW INDIGENOUS PHOTOMEDIA
An NGA travelling exhibition
16 September – 4 December 2016
Tweed Regional Gallery, NSW
This exhibition creates an experience of photomedia and Indigeneity that is physical, embodied and thought-provoking.
JAMES TYLOR in EUROPEAN MONTH OF PHOTOGRAPHY BERLIN
1 – 31 October 2016
Berlin, Germany
The European Month of Photography Berlin is the largest German festival for photography. Since 2004, it has been taking place every two years in Berlin, presenting a wide range of exhibitions and events on historic and contemporary photography.
JAMES TYLOR in TARRAWARRA BIENNIAL 2016: ENDLESS CIRCULATION
19 August – 6 November 2016
TarraWarra Museum of Art, VIC
This exhibition brings together a range of works that explore continuity by bringing their past and future into the same frame.
JAMES TYLOR in DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN
18 August – 12 November 2016-10-12
Artbank Gallery, NSW
Darkness on the Edge of Townpresents works by a diverse range of Aboriginal artists that unapologetically challenge ideas around identity and power through a postcolonial perspective.
JAMES TYLOR in OVER THE FENCE
6 August – 30 October 2016
UQ Art Museum, QLD
Over the fence features the work of 18 Indigenous artists engaged in the field of photography. Indigenous art is often political, and these artists address various contentious issues, including identity, representation, racism, religious influence and the exploitation of land. The artworks in Over the fence are drawn from the private collection of art patron and philanthropist Patrick Corrigan AM, a long-time supporter of contemporary Australian art.
JAMES TYLOR finalist BOWNESS PHOTOGRAPHY PRIZE
1 September – 16 October 2016
Monash Gallery of Art, VIC
STILLS is delighted to congratulate James Tylor who is a finalist in the Bowness Photography Prize.
RECENT ACQUISITION
Stills is delighted to announce the recent acquisition of James Tylor’s Aotearoa, my Hawaiki #1, #5, #7, #9, #10, (all) 2015 by the National Gallery of Australia.
JAMES TYLOR finalist FLEURIEU ART PRIZE
3 June – 29 July 2016
STILLS is delighted to congratulate James Tylor who is a finalist in the prestigious Fleurieu Art Prize. This is the richest landscape art prize in the world, valued at $65,000.
‘AOTEAROA MY HAWAIKI’
5 February – 24 March 2016
Centre for Contemporary Photography, VIC
This series represents Tylor’s ideological connection to Aotearoa through his New Zealand Māori ancestry; although it also highlights disconnection from the physical place or landscape of New Zealand having grown up in Australia.
JAMES TYLOR in 'THE ALCHEMISTS: REDISCOVERING PHOTOGRAPHY IN THE AGE OF THE JPEG'
31 October – 6 December 2015
Australian Centre for Photography, NSW
At a time when digital images are rapidly created and consumed, this project considers the resurgent interest in experimental darkroom processes within contemporary photography with particular consideration of an Australian perspective within a broader Asia-Pacific context. The exhibition features Tylor's most recent works from the series Terra Botanca II.
JAMES TYLOR in 'PENUMBRAL TALES'
18 July – 20 September 2015
Flinders University City Gallery, SA
This exhibition combines the work of contemporary South Australian photographers with archival imagery to explore the idea of the 'periphery' - the realm of the outsider, fringe dweller and the marginalised.