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Kait James, Faboriginal 2024, acrylic yarn, cotton, digital printed cotton, mirror tiles, felt. 150 x 140 x 10 cm, Courtesy of the artist and Neon Parc. Photo: Christian Capurro.

Kait James: Red Flags

A Warrnambool Art Gallery exhibition, curated by Aaron Bradbrook and touring nationally with NETS Victoria.

Exhibition

Free Entry

Dates

Saturday 2nd August - Sunday 16th November 2025

Time

10.00am - 4.00pm

Venue

Ararat Gallery TAMA

Enquiries

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Kait James: Red Flags is Wadawurrung artist Kait James’ most ambitious solo exhibition to date. Since 2018, James has been carving out a unique visual language based in the reappropriation of racialised products. Colloquially identified as ‘Aboriginalia’, these mass-produced, commercial objects range from souvenir tea towels and pennant flags to children’s dolls and ceramic figurines. Primarily created from the 1950s through to the 1980s for consumption by non-Indigenous tourists, they depict culturally insensitive and racially stereotyped imagery, designs and motifs.

In a practice of subversion, James embroiders into and on top of these products, embedding language and imagery to forge new narratives linked to contemporary political campaigns and debates. Combining autobiography, incisive analysis and wry humour, James’ practice reveals a deep reverence for her culture alongside a glimpse into a shared Aboriginal-Australian experience.

Kait James: Red Flags is a Warrnambool Art Gallery exhibition, curated by Aaron Bradbrook and touring nationally with NETS Victoria.

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body, and the Visions of Australia program, and has received development assistance from NETS Victoria’s Exhibition Development Fund, supported by the Victorian Government through Creative Victoria.

Content warning: This exhibition includes strong language, addresses the ongoing impacts of settler colonialism on Australia’s First Nations people, and critiques current political views from the artist’s perspective.

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