Sunday, February 12, 2012
Me on ABC TV
Residency at DVAA
Talitha Kennedy - Tricky Terrain
Visual artist Talitha Kennedy sets up residence at DVAA using the gallery as an active research space into human relationships with nature. This solo exhibition includes recent drawing, sculpture and works in progress with four weekly public events to discuss how contemporary art addresses environmental concerns.
Teasing out the contest between human culture and wild nature, Talitha Kennedy tests the aesthetics of fecundity on constructed objects. Her meticulous approach takes form in hand-stitched leather soft-sculptures, the use of animal skin brings into question the necessary death of things in order to create the new.
Events: Sun Feb 5 Happy Yess Markets 2-6pm, Thurs Feb 9, 16 & 23 5.30-8.30pm
Sunday, November 20, 2011
(an actually selling show)
Backyard Wild
Nomad Art, Parap
18 November - 10 December 2011
Prints, photographs and sculpture by: Talitha Kennedy, Siying Zhou, Anna Reynolds, Winsome Jobling, Merran Sierakowski, Basil Hall.Darwin suburbs are a unique environment where the indoor and out-door blend together. Houses, backyards and parks host a continuing cycle of growth, decay and fusion, a place where wildlife thrives as a continuum of nature. Plant roots, creepers, seedpods, birds, reptiles, insects, organisms and people collaborate and compete for backyard equilibrium.
http://www.nomadart.com.au
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| Talitha Kennedy, Palm Sprouts, leather, thread and lead, 2011. |
Hello world...
NT recipient of the 2011 Qantas Foundation Encouragement of Australian Contemporary Art Award!!
Thank you to Steve Eland Director at 24HR ART for nominating me and then amazingly selected by Elizabeth Ann Macgregor from the Museum of Contemporary Art, Edmund Capon, Director of the Art Gallery of NSW, Kon Gouriotis and Frank Panucci representing the Australia Council for the Arts, Alan Dodge former Director of the Art Gallery of Western Australia, and art collector Pat Corrigan.
Felt very glam for one night at the award presentation at Artspace, Sydney amongst the other very strong artists:
Brown Council – a collective of four artists (NSW), Adam Viekkanen (ACT), Hiromi Tango (Qld), Anthony Johnson (Tas), Sue Kneebone (SA), Thea Costantino (WA), Ash Keating (Vic) and me - somehow looming large on the far right.
Collaborative show at 24HR Art
IMPENDING ENCOUNTER
Anne Ooms. Talitha Kennedy. Catriona Stanton.
Unseen forces reveal themselves when cataclysmic events transform our world. Recent seismic activity sparks the creative encounter between three artists as their works converge in a shared space. As collaborators, they test the extent to which disparate elements can 'work': in relation or remaining discrete; holding together or falling apart.
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| Impending Encounter installation shot. Photo Fiona Morrison |
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| Impending Encounter installation shot. Photo Fiona Morrison |
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| Impending Encounter installation shot from above |
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| Impending Encounter installation shot: detail Catriona Stanton, Frou-frou, 2011. Plastic sheet & timber. approx 3m height. Photo Fiona Morrison |
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| Impending Encounter installation shot: detail Catriona Stanton, Frou-frou 2 & 3, 2011. Plastic sheet, scourers & timber. approx 3m height. Photo Fiona Morrison |
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| Detail: Catriona Stanton |
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| Detail: Catriona Stanton |
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| Anne Ooms drawing on to gallery walls working from projected images from journal |
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| Anne Ooms, (must find out title), 2011. Charcoal. |
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| Anne Ooms, (must find out title), 2011. Charcoal. |
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| Impending Encounter installation shot. Photo Talitha Kennedy |
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| Detail: Suspended Sky tethered to the gallery wall with noose knots |
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| Talitha Kennedy, Impending Encounter: Suspended Sky, 2011. Leather, thread, rope. Dimensions variable -approx 6metres wide |
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| Detail: the canopy and the umbilical connector draping to the floor |
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| Detail: the enclosure underneath Suspended Sky |
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| Untethering Suspended Sky |
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| Suspended Sky all packed up |
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Group show in Darwin
Territory time invites twelve artists from diverse cultural backgrounds to reflect on the impact Territory culture and the landscape have on their individual art practices. Incorporating a wide range of artforms and techniques, the exhibition will investigate the physical and emotional connections that grow over time between people and place. Exhibition curated by Siying Zhou, artists include Rebecca Arbon, Simon Cooper, Talitha Kennedy, Adrienne Kneebone, Catherine McAvoy, Amina McConvell, Sarah Pirrie, Tobias Richardson, Suzette Wearne, Hayley West, Carole Wilson & Siying Zhou.
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| Talitha Kennedy, Shadows' Embrace1 & Shadows' Hide, 2011. Leather. Installation shot by Fiona Morrison |
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| Detail: Shadows' Hide. Photo Fiona Morrison |
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| Detail: Shadows' Embrace 1. Photo Fiona Morrison |
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| Detail: Shadows' Embrace. Photo Fiona Morrison |
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| Talitha Kennedy, Shadows' Embrace1 & Shadows' Hide, 2011. Leather. Installation shot by Fiona Morrison |
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Masters Show: A homemaker's guide to the Wilderness

Installation shot

Left to right: Shadows' Embrace 1& 2, Shadows' Hide

Installation shot: The Intimates

Installation shot: The Intimates

Installation shot: The Intimates: Soft Rocks

The Intimates: Soft Rock #1, 2010. Leather, thread & stuffing. 40x30cm

The Intimates: Mound Akimbo, 2011. Leather, thread & stuffing. 48x20cm

The Intimates: Mother-in-law's Tongue, 2010. Leather, thread & stuffing. 50x30cm

The Intimates: Mangrove Mud Pod, 2010. Leather, thread & stuffing. 30x30cm

The Intimates: Mangrove Mud Branch, 2011. Leather, thread & stuffing. 35x30cm

The Intimates: Encrustations, 2011. Leather, thread & stuffing. approx height 20cm

The Intimates: Banyan, 2011. Leather, thread & stuffing. 35x35cm

Shadows' Embrace #1, 2011. Leather. 230x170cm

Shadows' Embrace #1, 2011. Leather. 200x170cm

Shadows' Embrace #2, 2011. Leather. 270x220cm

Shadows' Hide, 2011. Leather & timber. approx height 90cm

Shadows' Hide, 2011. Leather & timber. approx height 90cm
Whole Hole, 2011. Leather & timber. approx height 90cmSunday, May 8, 2011
Masters Show: A homemaker's guide to the Wilderness


Phew. I made it! I handed in my exegesis last week of April. After many all-nighters in the studio, wrestling with Word formatting and nasty online thesauruses, I can now see that 85page tome as a work of beauty and fulfillment. Now wracking brain and body to make installation tables and hanging devices. So much for the work being autonomous, all the props deserve a thesis of their own. But I am so looking forward to having the things out in the big wide white cube, so if in Darwin please come and see.
ABSTRACT:
This research project investigates the concept of human intimacy with the natural environment. I consider my personal experience as an archetype of the chronic contemporary condition, that of an urban dweller looking out from the modern comforts of the domestic and global culture to reconcile my existence within nature.
My move from Melbourne to living amidst the prevailing wildlife of tropical Darwin has honed my fascination for organic processes. This however is a socially critical perspective, reflecting the cultural implications of perceiving the natural world.
In the context of this research, I relate my artistic approach to a ‘homemaker’- one defined by the security of the familiar - trying to find their way in the ‘Wilderness’. This is a perceived primordial space beyond civilisation where the forces of nature threaten harshness and danger as much as they are the source of fecund wild beauty and truth. The title is a reference to my concern with an anthropocentric approach to the natural environment as much as a metaphor for the exploratory practice-led methodology.
My studio investigations function as a process of representation, from pseudo-scientific fieldwork to sculpture as experiential simulations of wonder for the natural form. The resulting body of work primarily uses black leather, hand stitched into soft sculptures. This visual language retains the vocabulary of the domestic and cultivated - the crafted form, soft toys and furnishings - whereas the materiality of leather takes on a bestial quality suggesting the body and evocative of skin. The physical form of the sculptures are modeled on nature observations - such as plant structures, termite mounds and mangrove root systems, but signify universal life forms of organic growth and decay. The rendering of natural form as something familiar and resembling one’s own body makes for a sensation of simulated intimacy.
In considering how my work is read by a viewer, I draw on the Phenomenological notion of the ‘lived body’, in particular Merleau-Ponty’s concept of ‘flesh’, where the flesh of the body is how we know the flesh of the world.



























