James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck – Warpulayinthi

09.11.2022—
26.11.2022

Warpulayinthi is a site specific artwork in collaboration with Rebecca Selleck that responds to the 2022 Adelaide Biennial at the Art Gallery of South Australia, themed by the curator Sebastian Goldspink as Free/State.”

— James Tylor

James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Warpulayinthi installation
2022
installation view of Mai kuru (Foodsafe) and Warpulayinthi #4 at 2022 Adelaide Biennial, Art Gallery of South Australia
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Warpulayinthi installation
2022
installation view of Parnguta, ngunata kuru (Potato and Onion Bin), Warpulayinthi #3, and Wiltaitpurlati (Butter Churn) at 2022 Adelaide Biennial, Art Gallery of South Australia
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Mai kuru (Foodsafe)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, bronze fly screen, animal fat
148 x 38 x 100cm
with bronze cast from hanging cockatoo, cockateel laying, pile with parrot, cockatoo, magpie and native pigeons
James Tylor |
Warpulayinthi #2
2022
photograph in Blue Gum frame
60 x 80cm
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Parnguta, ngunata kuru (Potato and Onion Bin)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, animal fat
87.5 x 40 x 37.5cm
with bronze cast from native geranium, chocolate lily, onion orchid, milkmaid and bulbine lily x2
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Tarralyi, Tikatikati (Table and Bench Seats)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, animal fat
Table 81cm x 76 x 120cm, Seat 1, 42 x 38 x 120cm Seat 2, 42 x 38 x 120cm
with bronze cast from mullet, cockles, oysteres, karkala, samphire, ngangki (set), saltbush (set), warrigal greens (set)
James Tylor |
Warpulayinthi #1
2022
photograph in Blue Gum frame
60 x 80cm

South Australia prides itself on being a ‘free state’ where no convicts were settled or used for labour. However, it was a colony built on the slave labour of local Indigenous peoples, including the Kaurna people where the Art Gallery of South Australia sits. ”

James Tylor |
Warpulayinthi #5
2022
photograph in Blue Gum frame
60 x 80cm

Like many First Nations people, my family lineage is marked by this domestic slavery. Our work highlights the use of Aboriginal domestic servitude on European colonist farms during the colonial period in South Australia, and the destruction of intricately managed ecosystems for the damaging monocultural farming practices that are still in use today. ”

— James Tylor

The installation is a colonial kitchen with edible flora and fauna from the Kaurna Nation cast in polished bronze, referencing the forced removal of culture, land, and physical liberty. ”

James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Parnguta, ngunata kuru (Potato and Onion Bin)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, animal fat
87.5 x 40 x 37.5cm
with bronze cast from native geranium, chocolate lily, onion orchid, milkmaid, bulbine lily x2, bulbine lily root x2, onion orchid bulbs x27
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Murdumurdu kuru (Flour Bin/Dough Trough)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, animal fat
79 x 76 x 38cm
with bronze cast from golden wattle seeds and pods (set) and black wattle seeds and pods (set)
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Tarralyi, Tikatikati (Table and Bench Seats)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, animal fat
Table 81cm x 76 x 120cm, Seat 1, 42 x 38 x 120cm Seat 2, 42 x 38 x 120cm
with bronze cast from kangaroo joey
Rebecca Selleck |
Tarralyi, Tikatikati (Table and Bench Seats)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, animal fat
Table 81cm x 76 x 120cm, Seat 1, 42 x 38 x 120cm Seat 2, 42 x 38 x 120cm
with bronze cast from quandong seed (set)
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Parnguta, ngunata kuru (Potato and Onion Bin)
2022
Blue Gum timber, cast bronze, animal fat
87.5 x 40 x 37.5cm
with bronze cast from bulbine lily root x2, chocolate lily and onion orchid bulbs x27

The furniture is carved into with Kaurna motifs from the Kuri ceremony, representing the absent Kaurna bodies in the space and the continuation of culture through two and a half centuries of oppression. ”

James Tylor |
Warpulayinthi #3
2022
photograph in Blue Gum frame
60 x 80cm

The Kaurna landscape images accompanying the furniture are overlayed with the same design, as a reassertion of the Kaurna Nation onto stolen lands. The installation is an important reminder of our past and its masked histories, as well as the strength of First Nation’s peoples and cultures.”

James Tylor |
Warpulayinthi #4
2022
photograph in Blue Gum frame
60 x 80cm
James Tylor & Rebecca Selleck |
Wiltaitpurlati (Butter Churn)
2022
Blue Gum timber, brass, cast bronze, animal fat
140 x 32 x 32cm
with bronze cast from chocolate lily
Get the latest updates & news direct to your inbox…