Hyper-local, hyper-global and post-regional Perth
When thinking about art in Western Australia, two notions of centre and periphery persist: first, that Perth/Boorloo is the periphery to the “eastern states” (neither Sydney nor Melbourne specifically, but rather a vague faraway amalgamation); and second, that Perth is the natural artworld centre for the rest of WA. In both scenarios, a hierarchy of value emerges. One method for challenging these categorisations is to focus scholarly efforts on the local, as Verónica Tello proposes in her recent essay What We Inherited, and, specifically, to resist the temptation to form comparative histories that play into narratives of peripheries and centres. Another common strategy is to succumb to this very temptation for geographic comparison. One such example is the exhibition Love in Bright Landscapes, held at the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts in 2021. The show hinged on ‘Perth and Los Angeles as comparative case studies.’ Yet, beyond a token Ed Ruscha, the work of the Los Angeles artists (Martine Syms, Carmen Argote, and Sterling Wells) didn’t appear to display an identifiable Los Angeles-ness, nor did a respective Perth-ness prevail. If anything, the works betrayed the exhibition’s conceit. Was there not a more interesting premise available?