There are 37 Free events in Perth Inner City
37 results
On the eve of ANZAC Day 2024, RSLWA will be holding an inclusive Sunset Service to remember and reflect on the brave men and women who have made so many sacrifices.
Come and commemorate those long ago servicemen and women at a memorial built to their memory.
On ANZAC Day 2024, thousands of Western Australians will gather at sunrise to remember those who lost their lives in conflict.
Journey on to Langley Park to relax with family and friends after the ANZAC Day March.
On ANZAC Day 2024, the Government House Gardens will host a barbeque breakfast.
With more than 62,000 veterans in Western Australia, the ANZAC Day March is a chance to recognise our service people as they march alongside their mates in a show of camaraderie and commemoration.
Mark your calendars and lace up your sneakers, because National Walk Safely to School Day is coming up and you won’t want to miss it.
Say hello to Garden & Gourmet, Perth’s newest market experience! A culinary and botanical experience, featuring an impressive line-up of local food vendors, gardening gurus and plant enthusiasts.
As the Perth Cultural Centre (PCC) redevelopment commences in 2024, PICA will temporarily relocate its foyer from James Street to the western façade and its Performance Space.
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.
Falling Towards Another (A Score for the Void) by Gadigal (Sydney)-based artist Diana Baker Smith is the second Judy Wheeler Commission, PICA’s annual series of site-specific works.
This exhibition celebrates over fifty years of designing and making jewellery by Western Australian born Dorothy Erickson as part of Perth Design Week 2024.
Yandilup is an outdoor mural painting commissioned for PICA’s new entrance by artist J.D. Penangke.
Explore WA’s rough and tumble relationship with beer.
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.
Over the course of their multi-week PICA residency, the School of Critical Arts (SCA) will hold free courses and lectures in art, philosophy, culture and theory.
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.
Discover Stem by Stem a large-scale interactive art installation by ENESS, as a part of Subi Blooms 2024.
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.
Mixed-media glass artist Yhonnie Scarce shines her light on the darkest shadows of Australia's past.
Daisy Sanders’ residency at PICA comes eight years after A Resting Mess began.
Make Monday your favourite day of the week with these free 30 minute meditation sessions guided by Buddhist nun Kelsang Tara.
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.
Indulge in the AGWA collections and spark your imagination.
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.
As part of their Quick Response residency at PICA, The And Theatre will develop their performance Dead End.
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.
The work of Shelley Lasica reveals a sustained exploration of dance, movement and the varying contexts in which they can occur.