What Tillers’ paintings describe are the intricacies of our embodied relationship to landscape – our imbrication as part of its complex fabric, and the vital, soul-sustaining power of this living context that is fundamentally at stake now.

—Clare Fuery-Jones

Exhibition Dates: 26 November – 18 December 2021

It all began with the shock of a fire in 2019 which destroyed Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris. Could this have been a portent of the coming apocalypse?

The devastating fires in Eastern Australia followed soon after, only to be eclipsed by a plague which is still with us. How to navigate the end times? Tormented as we are by a deluge of strident and chaotic opinion.

Where are today’s philosophers? Keeping vigil? Keeping us sane? Giving us wise counsel? Revelation? As Friedrich Nietzsche once wrote about his honourable and now underrated calling: “WE, WHOSE TASK IS PRECISELY TO BE AWAKE”. 

—Imants Tillers, 11 November 2021

In As Soon as Tomorrow Imants Tillers continues his explorations of landscape, which has been a major tenet of his work for over two decades. Yet, currently, at the close of 2021, the urgency and existential anxiety associated with this landscape context has reached fever pitch as we continue to experience the realities of climate crisis, pandemic, and social rupture. In works like Terra Nullius, As Soon as Tomorrow and Prayer for Rain, Tillers uses quotations from poetic and literary sources to variously mourn, give thanks, and insist upon the significance of the landscape which surrounds us and bears us: our collective histories, that is, and our present that toys nauseatingly with disaster. 

Embedded as part of Tillers’ images, text invites an alternative sort of engagement, emphasising how our cognitive and intellectual understanding of landscape is intractably related to its materiality and our tactile, sensory means of interacting with it. Tillers’ synthesis of text and visual form manifests this dual way that landscape matters to us: as something both physical and metaphysical, which constitutes the material context in which we exist and the immaterial context in which we find, store, and make meaning. In looking at Tillers’ landscape paintings our sense of what landscape is, and how we are, or exist, in terms of landscape, is re-oriented, deepened and expanded. Understanding and feeling landscape in this nuanced way goes far beyond the stark threat posed by its frightening ill-health consistently voiced in headlines. The latter are hard scientific facts; what Tillers’ paintings describe are the intricacies of our embodied relationship to landscape – our imbrication as part of its complex fabric, and the vital, soul-sustaining power of this living context that is fundamentally at stake now

—Clare Fuery-Jones, Phd Candidate Melbourne University

Imants Tillers is an internationally renowned postmodern artist whose practice includes conceptual paintings, installations, sculptures, prints and drawings. His signature works are comprised of many small painted canvas boards, which create impressive large format works when arranged together.

Tillers’ paintings touch on philosophical, historical, and personal themes, often incorporating images from the work of other artists and reflections on his Latvian ethnicity. His parents – Imants and Dzidra – left Latvia at the end of World War II, spending several years as refugees in a Displaced Persons camp in Germany. Tillers was born in Sydney in 1950, soon after the arrival of his parents in their new home country. He was the first of four children and spoke only Latvian until he went to school.

Tillers has exhibited his work throughout the world since 1975, and a crucial turning point was showing in New York in the 1980s. “One of my career highlights was when I held regular exhibitions in New York. I stayed with Christo and Jeanne-Claude in 1979, then later met people like Vija Celmins (who has remained a close friend), and atists such as Julian Schnabel, Sherrie Levine, Mike Bidlo and Philip Taaffe visited my exhibitions. It was like connecting to a larger art world other than just the Australian art world.” Recently, another significant moment in Tillers’ career was an extensive solo exhibition Celojums uz Nekurieni [Journey to Nowhere] held at the Latvian National Museum of Art in Riga in 2018. To coincide with this exhibition, film director Antra Cilinska made a feature-length documentary about Tillers’ life and work, titled Iemesti passaule [Thrown into the World].

Tillers has received many prestigious international and Australian awards, including the Osaka Triennale Prize (Gold in 1993, Bronze in 1996, and Silver in 2001), the inaugural Beijing Biennale Award for Excellence in 2003, and the Wynne Prize for Landscape Painting in 2012 and 2013. In 2005 he was awarded a Doctor of Letters (Honoris Causa) by the University of New South Wales, Sydney.

Today, Tillers lives and works in the Snowy Mountains in south-eastern New South Wales. He and his wife Jennifer Slatyer were drawn to the region because of its four distinct seasons, similar to those in Europe: “We quite consciously planted a birch grove 20 years ago, as is Latvian tradition, and now they are large trees. We pretend we are in Europe, while in fact we are in Cooma!”

Imants Tillers has been represented by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery since 2007. As soon as tomorrow will be Tillers' seventh solo exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney.

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Imants Tillers Terra nullius, 2020; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 288 canvasboards, nos. 110633–110920; 302 x 850 cm; more info; enquire
Terra nullius, 2020
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 288 canvasboards, nos. 110633–110920
302 x 850 cm
Imants Tillers Factum 1, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111750–111781; 202 x 141.5 cm; more info; enquire
Factum 1, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111750–111781
202 x 141.5 cm
Imants Tillers Factum 2, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111782–111813; 202 x 141.5 cm; more info; enquire
Factum 2, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111782–111813
202 x 141.5 cm
Imants Tillers Prayer for rain, 2020; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 54 canvas boards, nos. 107776–107829; 227 x 212.5 cm; more info; enquire
Prayer for rain, 2020
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 54 canvas boards, nos. 107776–107829
227 x 212.5 cm
Imants Tillers As soon as tomorrow, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111856–111887; 202 x 141.5 cm; more info; enquire
As soon as tomorrow, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111856–111887
202 x 141.5 cm
Imants Tillers Contagion, 1989-2021; gouache, oilstick, synthetic polymer paint on 84 canvasboards, nos.112798–112881; 228.5 x 353.5 cm; more info; enquire
Contagion, 1989-2021
gouache, oilstick, synthetic polymer paint on 84 canvasboards, nos.112798–112881
228.5 x 353.5 cm
Imants Tillers Apocalypse, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 24 canvasboards, nos. 112653–112676; 151.5 x 141.5 cm; more info; enquire
Apocalypse, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 24 canvasboards, nos. 112653–112676
151.5 x 141.5 cm
Imants Tillers Infinitely beautiful, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 25 canvasboards, nos. 109591–109615; 125.5 x 177 cm; more info; enquire
Infinitely beautiful, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 25 canvasboards, nos. 109591–109615
125.5 x 177 cm
Imants Tillers Nature Speaks: HJ, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 16 canvasboards, nos. 112574–112589; 101 x 141.5 cm; more info; enquire
Nature Speaks: HJ, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 16 canvasboards, nos. 112574–112589
101 x 141.5 cm
Imants Tillers Shrouded in doubt, 2020; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111043–111074; 202 x 141.5 cm; more info; enquire
Shrouded in doubt, 2020
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 32 canvasboards, nos. 111043–111074
202 x 141.5 cm
Imants Tillers Contagion, 2020; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 6 canvasboards, nos. 110480–110485; 75.5 x 70.5 cm; more info; enquire
Contagion, 2020
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 6 canvasboards, nos. 110480–110485
75.5 x 70.5 cm
Imants Tillers Letter of gratitude, 2020; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 6 canvasboards, nos. 110474–110479; 75.5 x 70.5 cm; more info; enquire
Letter of gratitude, 2020
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 6 canvasboards, nos. 110474–110479
75.5 x 70.5 cm
Imants Tillers Pollen, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 25 canvasboards, nos. 112717–112741; 126.5 x 177 cm; more info; enquire
Pollen, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 25 canvasboards, nos. 112717–112741
126.5 x 177 cm
Imants Tillers Melancolia, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 18 canvasboards, nos. 111901–111918; 227 x 70.5 cm; more info; enquire
Melancolia, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 18 canvasboards, nos. 111901–111918
227 x 70.5 cm
Imants Tillers Keeping vigil, 2021; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 30 canvasboards, nos. 112882–112911; 151.5 x 177 cm; more info; enquire
Keeping vigil, 2021
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 30 canvasboards, nos. 112882–112911
151.5 x 177 cm
Imants Tillers Nature Speaks: GU, 2019; synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 16 canvasboards, nos. 107856–107871; 101 x 141.5 cm; more info; enquire
Nature Speaks: GU, 2019
synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 16 canvasboards, nos. 107856–107871
101 x 141.5 cm
Imants Tillers If I close my eyes, 2021; 189 Polaroids 1980–1982, nos. 112966–113161; 74.9 x 240.3 cm (overall); 10.7 x 8.9 cm (each); more info; enquire
If I close my eyes, 2021
189 Polaroids 1980–1982, nos. 112966–113161
74.9 x 240.3 cm (overall); 10.7 x 8.9 cm (each)