James Perkins creates his art in collaboration with nature, literally burying artworks in the landscape, where the elements — and maybe even a pack of coyotes — alter the outcome of each …
You must be a member to read this story.
Join our family of readers for as little as $5 per month and support local, unbiased journalism.
Current print subscribers can create a free account by clicking here
Otherwise, follow the link below to join.
To Our Valued Readers –
Visitors to our website will be limited to five stories per month unless they opt to subscribe. The five stories do not include our exclusive content written by our journalists.
For $6.99, less than 20 cents a day, digital subscribers will receive unlimited access to YourValley.net, including exclusive content from our newsroom and access to our Daily Independent e-edition.
Our commitment to balanced, fair reporting and local coverage provides insight and perspective not found anywhere else.
Your financial commitment will help to preserve the kind of honest journalism produced by our reporters and editors. We trust you agree that independent journalism is an essential component of our democracy. Please click here to subscribe.
Need to set up your free e-Newspaper all-access account? click here.
Non-subscribers
Click here to see your options for becoming a subscriber.
Register to comment
Click here create a free account for posting comments.
Note that free accounts do not include access to premium content on this site.
I am anchor
EXHIBITION
New York artist exhibition at SMoCA
(Courtesy James Perkins)
“James Perkins | Burying Painting” will open Sept. 20 at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art. Images, left to right: “See You Out There,” post-totem performance installation on Fire Island, 2021, and “Tamarisk,” from the “Burying Painting” series, 2017; silk, sun, sand, wind, wood, water; 90 by 35 by 3.75 inches.
Posted
The Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art will be bringing the New York-based artist James Perkins’ “post-totem” works indoors for Perkins’ first museum exhibition from Sept. 20 to Feb. 15, 2026.
“James Perkins | Burying Painting” highlights the artist’s approach to nature as a collaborator in his process-based land art: minimalist sculptures made from silk, wood and stone and partially buried outside, where they are exposed to everything from hurricane winds, rain and sea salt to soil, sun and, yes, wildlife.
Perkins leaves the textile-wrapped structures semi-exposed in the ground for months or years, using the landscape as his painting palette. Once the outdoor duration is finished, the works are “harvested” from the land and re-stretched onto frames to create painting-like “post-totem” works with shifting color fields and varied textures.
Perkins said the term “post-totem” refers to his philosophy on totemic structures that denote one’s “tribe,” from how someone dresses to how they speak. The structures reference symbolic objects that express individual and collective identity.
His philosophy challenges human-nature relationships by symbolically neutralizing systems that disconnect us from the natural world and each other. The Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art exhibition will feature floor and wall works shaped by two distinct environments: a beach on Fire Island, New York, near Perkins’ primary studio and the Sonoran Desert at Scottsdale’s Cattle Track Arts Compound.