The Pull it Down Reader (with James Tylor)

A$15.00

The second print run of The Pull it Down Reader has now sold out. Order your copy now and it will be posted out on 25 January, following production of the third print run.

Pull it Down invites kids to creatively challenge colonial monuments — to learn that the colonised landscape is not set in stone and to exercise their political agency.The Pull it Down Reader is a resource for grown-ups and teens who want to learn and unlearn about the powerful role of monuments in collective identity-making and storytelling.

James Tylor and Matt Chun contrast Aboriginal and colonial forms of commemoration. They explore the importance of decolonising colonial monuments, towards a better relationship between collective memory and landscape. 

This reader is perfect for caregivers having broader conversations with children and young people about the objects of colonialism and imperialism so frequently encountered in public space.

James Tylor is a multidisciplinary contemporary visual artist who writes about environment, culture and history. Matt Chun is an artist, writer and children’s book creator with an interest in the history and visual culture of anticolonial resistance. Together, James and Matt work as UnMonumental, a collaborative art project presenting lesser-known histories of Aboriginal Land.

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The second print run of The Pull it Down Reader has now sold out. Order your copy now and it will be posted out on 25 January, following production of the third print run.

Pull it Down invites kids to creatively challenge colonial monuments — to learn that the colonised landscape is not set in stone and to exercise their political agency.The Pull it Down Reader is a resource for grown-ups and teens who want to learn and unlearn about the powerful role of monuments in collective identity-making and storytelling.

James Tylor and Matt Chun contrast Aboriginal and colonial forms of commemoration. They explore the importance of decolonising colonial monuments, towards a better relationship between collective memory and landscape. 

This reader is perfect for caregivers having broader conversations with children and young people about the objects of colonialism and imperialism so frequently encountered in public space.

James Tylor is a multidisciplinary contemporary visual artist who writes about environment, culture and history. Matt Chun is an artist, writer and children’s book creator with an interest in the history and visual culture of anticolonial resistance. Together, James and Matt work as UnMonumental, a collaborative art project presenting lesser-known histories of Aboriginal Land.

The second print run of The Pull it Down Reader has now sold out. Order your copy now and it will be posted out on 25 January, following production of the third print run.

Pull it Down invites kids to creatively challenge colonial monuments — to learn that the colonised landscape is not set in stone and to exercise their political agency.The Pull it Down Reader is a resource for grown-ups and teens who want to learn and unlearn about the powerful role of monuments in collective identity-making and storytelling.

James Tylor and Matt Chun contrast Aboriginal and colonial forms of commemoration. They explore the importance of decolonising colonial monuments, towards a better relationship between collective memory and landscape. 

This reader is perfect for caregivers having broader conversations with children and young people about the objects of colonialism and imperialism so frequently encountered in public space.

James Tylor is a multidisciplinary contemporary visual artist who writes about environment, culture and history. Matt Chun is an artist, writer and children’s book creator with an interest in the history and visual culture of anticolonial resistance. Together, James and Matt work as UnMonumental, a collaborative art project presenting lesser-known histories of Aboriginal Land.