A. J. Taylor's paintings reveal themselves slowly. To see one must be prepared to look - and willingly join the artist in his appraisal of the world through paint. His scenes, often purposefully mundane, are not so much about location as the processes of seeing. Like the impressionist artists that have inspired him, Taylor's aesthetic goal is to test our visual limits, making us complicit in the visual dynamic between experience and form. At the margins, his images often resist resolution, reminding us that, to make sense of our surrounds, we must constantly frame and reframe our view. From a distance, the pictures offer glimpses of recognition and suggest familiar contexts. Up close, however, they fragment into abstracted codes, where painterly blips and dashes both camouflage and signal the precarious nature of vision.
Read MoreTaylor lives and works in the hinterland of Queensland's Sunshine Coast. Since 2002, he has been a regular exhibitor in solo and group exhibitions in Brisbane and Sydney, and has been represented at the Melbourne Art Fair. In 2004 he was a finalist in the John Glover Art Prize for landscape. His work is represented in Australia's Artbank collection; the BHP Billiton, Macquarie Bank and Wesley Hospital Art Foundation corporate collections; and in private collections throughout Australia and internationally.