At PICA we recognise that we are situated within the unceded lands of the Whadjuk people of the Noongar Nation. We pay our respects and offer our gratitude to Elders past and present, and to those emerging leaders in the community. We acknowledge all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and the importance of their care and continued connection to culture, community and Country.

Always was, always will be.

Our foyer is open today 10am–5pm . Our exhibitions are always free.

Janet Carter

Janet Carter

Using a speculative fiction framework, she will undertake some alternate world building, by asking “What if we lived in a world where our kinship ties were untethered from gender and biology? What if we could choose our family and our roles within them? What would our social and cultural ties look like? What would be our responsibilities and obligations of care for one another?”

Beginning with the creation of her own ‘queer elder’ avatar, she will speculate on how we can build ties with each other in this imagined world that will make us stronger and more resourceful in the precarious IRL world we currently live in.

From late November, she will be opening the studio to the community, asking them to work collaboratively with her to imagine this world, through the creation of their own avatars, speculating on the ties that bind them.

 


ABOUT THE ARTIST

Janet Carter was born in 1966. She currently lives and works in Perth, Western Australia.
After completing a Bachelor of Visual Arts at Edith Cowan University in 2008, Carter finished Honours in Contemporary Arts in 2010 and is currently a Fine Arts PhD candidate at the University of Western Australia. Her practice embraces sculpture, installation, performance and new media works. She is primarily concerned with investigating contemporary conceptions around gender, sexuality, desire and embodied identity.

Janet has contributed to a number of group exhibitions, including Hatched, Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts (2008), and Queer City Lane Dwellers, Guildford Lane Gallery, Melbourne (Midsumma Festival, 2009). She had her first solo show (New Works) at Horus and Deloris Contemporary Art Space in 2010. She was nominated for the Qantas Encouragement of Emerging Australian Art Award, and was a finalist in the Churchie Emerging Art Award, last year, and is currently involved in RHINOCEROS, Fremantle Arts Centre’s inaugural ARI program. She was a Proximity Festival 2013 artist and was also one of the twelve artists/performers involved in the inaugural Proximity Festival in 2012.