There are 32 art exhibition in Perth Cultural Centre
32 results
Set your alarm clock for a meditative sunrise listening session with *Matt Rösner*.
What is The Lester Prize? It is not one point-of-view, one tone nor one hue.
During her residency exchange at PICA, Azimah Fada will research the similarities in cultural musical instruments in Australia and Indonesia to examine the connection between music and storytelling.
This exhibition celebrates over fifty years of designing and making jewellery by Western Australian born Dorothy Erickson as part of Perth Design Week 2024.
FORECAST is a place for feeling, inviting audiences of all ages and abilities to contemplate trees as family and weather as borderless, amid increasing environmental crisis and divisive times.
Anna Park’s first museum exhibition outside the United States presents a new body of her signature large-scale black and white drawings that feverishly capture the spirit of contemporary life.
While on residency in Marseille, photographer Lucille Martin develops her project *Phantom Histories*, which examines cross-cultural practices that link Marseille, the African diaspora and Australia.
Mark Haslam’s practice is a kaleidoscopic blend of technical production, direction and design, and focuses on exploring human constructs in genre-busting, media-infused contemporary performance.
Meeyakba Shane Pickett: Six Seasons features a series of acclaimed works interpreting the Nyoongar six seasons and the landscape of the south-west of Western Australia.
Sid Pattni’s residency at Khoj in New Delhi, India, will focus on historical research into Indian miniature painting, concentrating on the impact of colonial rule on artistic patronage in India.
WA's talented young artists are celebrated in this yearly showcase, gauging the pulse of young people who will influence, empower and shape the world we live in.
Throughout history, the Moon has entranced artists, poets, scientists, writers, and musicians the world over.
Daisy Sanders’ residency at PICA comes eight years after A Resting Mess began.
During his residency in Taipei, Tom Blake is developing a series of works on opacity, repetition, fragmentation, digital disintegration and the capacity for chaos within moments of stillness.
WA Museum's monthly LGBTQIA+ focused choir.
Sarah Nelson’s Quick Response residency will support her continued development of *Into the Fog*, a performance integrating unconventional masks, puppetry, illusion and interactive design.
Prepare to immerse yourself in the fascinating world of reptile and amphibian anatomy in this double workshop!
During her residency in Makassar, Indonesia, Ilona McGuire will explore identities and connections across the seas that pre-date the colonisation of Australia.
Bella Lubcke’s residency at PICA will explore the history of found materials with relationships to PICA and the Perth Cultural Centre, taking into account the shapes and elements of the PICA building.
Enjoy an afternoon of activities and performances that promote Mexican culture and heritage
The work of Shelley Lasica reveals a sustained exploration of dance, movement and the varying contexts in which they can occur.
Josten will develop a concert-length, solo performance for alto saxophone and three-channel surround sound that uses a unique microtonal language developed by the artist.
JC’s practice embraces sculpture, installation, performance and new media works to investigate contemporary conceptions of gender, sexuality, desire and embodied identity.
Hatched: National Graduate Show 2024 presents a dynamic selection of emerging artists recently graduated from art schools across Australia.
Learn industry techniques in this four-day bat taxidermy workshop.
In 2024, PICA partners with Arts House (Melbourne) and Campbelltown Arts Centre (Sydney) to participate in the BLEED Biennial, a festival that looks at the issues between the digital and the real.
Jack Ball works primarily in photography, employing collage, embellishment and performance to create riotous installations of visual excess.
L’ombre de ton ombre (The shadow of your shadow) presents new and recent photographic, textile and machine learning works that employ the artist’s relationship with his partner as an index of time.
Aotearoa New Zealand-based artist Shannon Te Ao is celebrated for his sensitive and poetic exploration of themes of love, language and indigeneity.
Reclaim the Void was born from Ngalia elders in Leonora, Western Australia, expressing their pain and grief at ‘those gaping mining holes left all over our country’.