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Kait James

Souvenirs

Geelong Gallery
Saturday 16 JanuarySunday 25 April

As a proud Wadawurrung woman, Kait James’s work poses questions relating to identity, perception, and our knowledge of Australia’s Indigenous communities. Using the craft technique of punch needling, she embroiders found materials now considered kitsch through their outdated representations of Indigenous people and culture. The works in Souvenirs are based on Aboriginal calendar tea towels from the 1970s and ’80s that generalise and stereotype her culture: she subverts these representations with the addition of familiar pop-cultural references, and imagery relating to indigenous issues relevant to the tea towel’s calendar year, as well as to the present day.

Through the use of humour and vibrant colours, James addresses the way colonial culture has dominated Australia’s history, how Australia and the world perceives our First Nations’ people and her personal reflections on her Indigenous heritage.

Location

Geelong Gallery
Little Malop Street Geelong 3220

Date

Saturday 16 JanuarySunday 25 April

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All exhibition content on this website has been sourced from the exhibiting gallery’s website or provided by other art enthusiasts. We do not own or seek to own any of this material. If you are concerned about any misuse of your content, please let us know here.

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Kait James

Souvenirs

Geelong Gallery
Saturday 16 JanuarySunday 25 April

As a proud Wadawurrung woman, Kait James’s work poses questions relating to identity, perception, and our knowledge of Australia’s Indigenous communities. Using the craft technique of punch needling, she embroiders found materials now considered kitsch through their outdated representations of Indigenous people and culture. The works in Souvenirs are based on Aboriginal calendar tea towels from the 1970s and ’80s that generalise and stereotype her culture: she subverts these representations with the addition of familiar pop-cultural references, and imagery relating to indigenous issues relevant to the tea towel’s calendar year, as well as to the present day.

Through the use of humour and vibrant colours, James addresses the way colonial culture has dominated Australia’s history, how Australia and the world perceives our First Nations’ people and her personal reflections on her Indigenous heritage.

Location

Geelong Gallery
Little Malop Street Geelong 3220

Date

Saturday 16 JanuarySunday 25 April

Save to Calendar

All exhibition content on this website has been sourced from the exhibiting gallery’s website or provided by other art enthusiasts. We do not own or seek to own any of this material. If you are concerned about any misuse of your content, please let us know here.

Suggest a change

Suggest an edit or change to this exhibition

Exhibition information

Personal information