Delving into PICA’s 35-year archive, Mia Palmer-Verevis (Hatched Curatorial Associate, 2025-26) presents a selection of program ephemera from a critical year in PICA’s evolution – 1989. Polishing off a decade of ambition and collectivising, 1989 was PICA’s first complete year of ambitious and diverse programming – a year additionally significant due to the appointment of PICA’s inaugural director, Noel Sheridan.
Currently situated on Goologoolup, a system of fresh lakes and wetlands across Northbridge, PICA emerged out of the Fremantle-based art collective Praxis, eventually finding a home in the Old Perth Boys School, situated in the heart of the then-developing Perth Cultural Centre. Propelled by an unwavering vision for a new contemporary art institute – inspired by concurrent activity in the US and UK – the early conceptions of PICA set out to transform contemporary art in Western Australia. PICA’s formation throughout the mid-1980s, documented through numerous concept proposals and rationales, was tethered to three central ambitions. Namely, an emphasis on concept and process, a commitment to cross-cultural programming, and to serve as a counterpoint to conservative and mainstream ideologies.
The material in this exhibition reveals a period of creative and critical mobilisation within Western Australia’s arts landscape, driven by a collective investment in global contemporary movements and experimental practice, alongside the motivation to introduce an exchange of cultural dialogues to the geographical isolation of Perth. These founding values remain engrained in the culture of PICA today and many of the programs initiated during this period endure as critical parts of PICA’s unique contribution to the arts.
Visit PICA during the City of Perth’s Boorloo Heritage Festival, join a tour and learn more about the exhibitions, residencies, and performances that established PICA’s identity as a site of innovation and experimentation.
Boorloo Heritage Festival Tours
Take a fascinating journey through the cultural and built heritage of Boorloo by exploring Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts (PICA) and it’s iconic building – a pivotal place of education and art in Western Australia. Join us for behind-the-scenes tours of the building during Lotterywest Boorloo Heritage Festival and a curated selection of archival materials relating to its cultural legacy.
First opened in 1897 as the Government School (later known as the Perth Boys’ School), the building has seen multiple transformations: from a technical college to the home of the artist-run initiative Praxis before PICA was established in 1989.
Tours: 12pm, 1pm & 2pm
PICA galleries and exhibition spaces are accessible for wheelchairs and people with limited mobility. The behind-the-scenes heritage tours commence in accessible spaces of the building before concluding by walking down a stairwell. Please advise us of any accessibility requirements so that the tour can be modified to accommodate your needs.
CULTURAL SENSITIVITY WARNING
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that the archival display may contain names and images of deceased persons.