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.

Sonia Leber & David Chesworth

Sonia Leber & David Chesworth

Sonia Leber and David Chesworth will create a psychogeography of voice and space at PICA, using sound, vibration and metallic constructions.
Human voices will resonate throughout the space: babbling and uttering absurdities. Detached from their originating sources, the voices are launched like missiles, careering around and acting directly on the materials of the space.
This is an encounter with the voice as an object in itself, where it has become detached from the unseen soundmakers. It is as if the voices have an excess of energy, an unfettered ‘self-enjoying’ jouissance, which can be uncanny and unnerving, but also thrilling and liberating.
The elusive entity of the trickster is evoked. Here it is imagined as a noisy, mischievous interloper, an agent-provocateur, able to change and move about without restraint. The trickster’s voice twists and turns: hatching, splitting and multiplying, delighting in its own excess, making mock, creating damage and disorder.
This installation features the voices of Deborah Kayser and Jerzy Kozlowski, supported by the Royal Melbourne Philharmonic Choir.
In his book A Voice and Nothing More, the philosopher Mladen Dolar notes a recurrent metaphysical concern from Plato to Saint Augustine, that lawlessness results when the voice deviates from the safe haven of the word. According to Dolar, it was often feared that the voice ‘should not stray away from words which endow it with sense; as soon as it departs from its textual anchorage, the voice becomes senseless and threatening – all the more because of its seductive and intoxicating powers…Up to a point, [the voice] is sublime and elevates the spirit; beyond a certain limit, however, it brings about decay…the voice is both the subtlest and the most perfidious form of flesh.’