Join us digitally for our tour program, Local Views at PAMM, where select local artists will speak about their creative process and artistic practice. This month, artist Cornelius Tulloch will lead the tour, sharing his work which transcends the barriers of photography, fine art, and architecture.
Tulloch focuses on how creative mediums can be combined to tell powerful stories. Whether it be through photography or painting, cinematic moments and spatial complexity are depicted in his work. Lighting and color become characters in his work. Being raised in Miami and gaining inspiration from his Jamaican and African American heritage, his work expresses how bodies exist between cultures, borders, and habits, to create spatial impact.
About Cornelius Tulloch Cornelius Tulloch is a Miami-based interdisciplinary artist and designer. He graduated from Cornell University’s School of Architecture as the recipient of the Charles Goodwin Sands Memorial Award for the top Thesis of his graduating class. With work transcending the barriers of photography, fine art, and architecture, Tulloch focuses on how creative mediums can be combined to tell powerful stories. Whether it be through photography or painting, cinematic moments and spatial complexity are depicted in his work. Lighting and color become characters in his work. His unique storytelling through his work has been shown in fairs and museums like the Kennedy Center, Washington D.C.; Pulse Art Fair, Miami, FL; and the Museo Nazionale Delle Arti Del XXI Secolo, Rome, Italy. From being recognized as a 2016 Presidential Scholar in the Arts and a 2022 Artist in Residence in the Everglades Fellow (AIRIE ), to having his work added to the permanent collection of the Studio Museum in Harlem, much of his success has come from the important discussions his work has created—which often are inspired by his cultural background. Being raised in Miami and gaining inspiration from his Jamaican and African American heritage, his work expresses how bodies exist between cultures, borders, and habits, to create spatial impact.