James Tylor: From an Untouched Landscape CLOSING

Friday, June 23, 2023
Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection

July 1, 2022 – June 23, 2023

Artist James Tylor highlights under-told and unseen histories of Aboriginal peoples. Knowing Australia has been known by many names to many peoples, Tylor takes an expansive approach to photographing the landscape by incorporating his Kaurna Miyurna knowledge into his practice using both old and new technologies. In Tylor’s hands, photography, once used to survey Aboriginal lands and peoples, becomes a way to indigenize landscapes.

From an Untouched Landscape is Tylor’s first solo exhibition in the United States and was curated by Marina Tyquiengco (Col ’11), the inaugural Ellyn McColgan Assistant Curator of Native American Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

James Tylor is an Australian multi-disciplinary contemporary visual artist, whose practice explores Australian environment, culture and social history. He works in mixed media, including photography, video, painting, drawing, sculpture, installation, sound, scents and food. He was born in Victoria, spent his childhood in New South Wales, and then moved to the Kimberley region in his adolescent years. After training and working as a carpenter in Australia and Denmark, he completed a Bachelors of Visual Arts and a Masters in Visual Arts and Design, both in Photography, at the South Australian School of Art, as well as an Honors in Fine Arts in Photography at the Tasmanian School of Art. He has researched Indigenous and European colonial history with a focus on South Australia. He is an experienced writer, designer, curator, historian, researcher, art gallery installation and museum collection conservator. James currently works as a professional visual artist in Canberra.

"(Removed) From an Untouched Landscape 6," 2018, Inkjet print on Hahnemuhle paper with hole removed to a black velvet void, 19.5 X 10.5 in (50 x 50 cm).