Exhibitions on Screen: Colours of Djilba.

Exhibitions on Screen: Colours of Djilba.

Djilba is the fifth season in the Nyoongar calendar. This is the season of growth as the weather begins to warm up. Djilba is a time to look for the yellow and cream flowers starting to bloom en masse. As the season progresses and temperatures continue to rise, we’ll...
Exhibitions on Screen | 2024 Perth Poetry Festival

Exhibitions on Screen | 2024 Perth Poetry Festival

In celebration of the 2024 Perth Poetry Festival, WA Peots Inc. presents new works from the city’s poets with daily slow TV screenings on the City of Perth Urban Screens.  This year, over 200 local works are displayed throughout the month of August. The 20th...
Exhibitions on Screen |  The Lester Prize for Portraiture 2024

Exhibitions on Screen |  The Lester Prize for Portraiture 2024

The Lester Prize is one of Australia’s most prestigious awards for portraiture. It celebrates the talents of artists and engages the community.  This screening premieres the finalists for this year’s Lester Prize, chosen from nearly 1,000 entries vying for the...
GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Colours of Makuru

GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Colours of Makuru

Makuru Slow TV: Celebrating the Season of Fertility in Perth’s Urban Heart. The Noongar season of Makuru, represented by the colour dark blue, symbolises the rain and chilly weather characteristic of this period. During Makuru, the South West experiences its coldest...
GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Ikuntji Artists

GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Ikuntji Artists

A lot of stories are still being recounted of long journeys of people from various language groups, who travelled from rockholes and waterholes to caves and mountains finally arriving at Haasts Bluff. The locals, Luritja people of Haasts Bluff, were already here. Thus...
GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Tjarlirli and Kaltukatjara Art

GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Tjarlirli and Kaltukatjara Art

Tjarlirli Art Centre represents artists from Tjukurla in the Ngannyatjarra lands of Western Australia, while Kaltukatjara Art Centre is based in Docker River, Northern Territory. Both art centers have strong ties to the Papunya Tula movement, as families relocated...