2024 Community Art Exhibition

2024 Community Art Exhibition. 27 - 15 June. Lakeside Joondalup.

The 2024 Community Art Exhibition is a beloved annual exhibition that has been running for the past 25 years. It features artwork by City of Joondalup residents and members of locally based art associations.

This year saw a record-breaking number of incredible artworks competing for a share of over $8,000 in prize money.

Take a virtual tour

Artists and special guests mingling at the VIP Night and Award Ceremony for the 2024 Community Art Exhibition at Lakeside Joondalup.
Pictured: Artists and special guests mingling at the VIP night and award ceremony for the 2024 Community Art Exhibition at Lakeside Joondalup. Photos by Soco Studios.

2024 Award winners

This year’s Community Art Exhibition was judged by a panel made up of three arts industry professionals: curator and arts manager Ashley Yihsin Chang, Ballardong Noongar artist Rohin Kickett, and scientist, artist and recipient of the City’s most recent Visual Arts Commission, Dr. Perdita Phillips.   

Most Outstanding Artwork ($4,000)

A painting by Katie Gordon of a vase on a window sill in shades of white and cream

Artist: Katie Gordon

Artwork title: Ghost(s)

Medium: Oil on incised plywood

Judges’ comments:A technically sophisticated work combining incised wood and oil paint in a very dynamic way. Its composition and restrained palette come together to create a moment of contemplation. Capturing an ordinary object, this work draws the audience in and reflects on loss, time and looking within.


Highly Commended ($1,500)

Three square paintings of mouths and teeth by Olivia Barnett

Artist: Olivia Barnett

Artwork title: Family Portrait

Medium: Oil on canvas

Judges’ comments: “Energetic and cheeky, this work’s boldness is matched with technical execution. The artist’s exploration of the “family portrait” has been handled in an unconventional way, both in its treatment and display, offering a different approach to exploring family lineage and connection.”


Celebrating Joondalup ($1,500)

An abstract photograph of the colourful public fence artwork at Edgewater train station, by Jaryd Brazier

Artist: Jaryd Brazier

Artwork title: Parting Ways  – Edgewater Train Station

Medium: Photography

Judges’ comments:This work is colourful yet stark and with a sharp sense of beauty. Whilst Joondalup is known for many of its natural areas, this work takes the viewer to a forgotten corner – an outside urban location caught within our never-ending summer.”


Student Award ($750)

A small teal-coloured glass dish with hollow bubbles, by Alexandra Browne

Artist: Alexandra Browne

Artwork title: Barnacles in the Blue

Medium: Glasswork

Judges’ comments: “The artist demonstrates a strong handle of the medium and translating the 3-D form of barnacles into a compelling 2-D surface. In a medium that is hard to control – glass work using the boiling technique – the artist’s decisions towards colour and composition refine and amplify its meaning.”


Popular Choice Award ($500)

Artist: Lynette Kinnear

Artwork title: Walking through Boranup Forest

Medium: Acrylic on canvas


Stay in the loop

Do you love discovering new art or want to get involved in the next Community Art Exhibition? Stay up to date on all the City’s Visual Arts programs and opportunities by subscribing to the monthly Arts in Focus eNewsletter.

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The top banner image features ‘Boranup Recovery’ by Roslyn Blackburn, winner of the Highly Commended Award at the 2023 Community Art Exhibition.

Invitation Art Prize

Image: ‘Creatures of the Crystal Caves‘ (detail) by Mandy White. Winner of the 2021 Invitation Art Prize.

The Invitation Art Prize is a major acquisitive award for West Australian professional artists with winning artworks acquired into the City’s contemporary art collection.

The program is on pause in 2024 while a review is being undertaken. Please visit this page again in October 2024 for updates or subscribe to the monthly Arts in Focus eNewsletter.

The 2023 Invitation Art Prize celebrated its 25-year milestone with a never-before-seen retrospective edition. Presented at Westfield Whitford City, it featured the winning artwork from each year of the award. Exploring diverse art forms and trends in Australian art practice, the 2023 Invitation Art Prize found connections across its 25-year history, proudly looking back at the evolution of this prestigious prize and contemporary art in WA.

Take a virtual tour of the exhibition

View the exhibition floor sheet

Inside Out Billboard Commission

Congratulations to Erin Coates, the winner of the Inside Out Billboard Commission, with her artwork Microeconomics (paradise spent). Using imagery from international coinage, including human figures, animals, plants and elements of landscape architecture, Coates recreated the centre panel of Hieronymus Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights, presenting a subversive take on nationalism, wealth and greed. Erin will be awarded $3,000 to create a new artwork that will be displayed outside the Joondalup Library in 2024. 

Winner of the Inside Out Billboard Commission, Erin Coates, in front of her winning artwork ‘Microeconomics (paradise spent)’. Photo: Becky Felstead – Soco Studios.

Popular Choice Award

Congratulations to Richie Kuhaupt who has been awarded $500 after receiving the most votes in the Popular Choice Award for his eye-catching sculpture, Woman in Red.

Winner of the Popular Choice Award, ‘Woman in Red’ by Richie Kuhaupt. Winner of the 2000 Invitation Art Prize. Photo: Christophe Canato.

Keep Up To Date

The Invitation Art Prize has impacted the careers of over 700 exhibiting artists in its history. It continues to support the agency of contemporary artists working across different practices, career stages and lived experiences. To be informed of upcoming artist callouts and information about future exhibitions, please subscribe to the City’s monthly Arts in Focus eNewsletter.

Acknowledgements

The City of Joondalup wishes to thank all the artists who contributed to the history of the Invitation Art Prize, as well as all those who have attended the exhibitions over the years.

Thank you to Westfield Whitford City, Exhibition Venue Partner for the Invitation Art Prize: 25 Year Retrospective.

Mural Arts Program


Image: Artists Sam Bloor
(L) and Trevor Bly (R) at work making “
Heathridge”, 2022 at Admiral Park, as part of the City of Joondalup’s Mural Arts program. Photo: Shot by Thom. 

City of Joondalup Mural Programs

The City’s Mural Arts Program features a range of mural styles that reflect the diversity of the local community, region and identity of Joondalup. It also provides community access to high-quality mural arts for place-making, education and appreciation purposes. 

 The City commissions murals through two program streams: 

  • Artist-driven mural programs, whereby an artist is commissioned to install a mural in reference to the location and the surrounding community. This is through a curated shortlisting process or a public expression of interest. 
  • Community-driven murals engaging the community through programs such as the City’s Schools Connections Program in the design and installation of the mural. 

The City has over 20 active murals across City buildings, community centres and public outdoor locations. Previous commissioned artists include Amok Island, Horatio T. Birdbath, Hayley Welsh, Jon Ismailovski, Sara Winfield, Mike Bramford, Emma Margetts, Elizabeth Maruffo, David Ledger, Trevor Bly and Fraser Greg, Anya Brock, Andrew Fraser, Peter Ryan, Kyle Hughes Odgers, Jeremy Lane, Kerise Delcoure, Esty Nagy, Jack Bromell, Darren Hutchens and Trevor Bly and Sam Bloor. 


Featured Murals

Community Sporting Facility, Admiral Park, Heathridge
“Heathridge”, 2022, Trevor Bly & Sam Bloor (pictured) 


Photo: Christophe Canato 

This mural investigates the suburban narrative and how the mechanics of suburbia create places rather than spaces. As a resident of Joondalup, living in Craigie, Trevor Bly explores the links between place-making and the activation of urban buildings and how this impacts our understanding of the suburbs, identity and home. 

Bly and fellow artist, Sam Bloor, have depicted local observations of suburban life, observed by the artists during weekend visits to the oval, and how it is activated with families watching local community sports. The artists have incorporated three design features into this work: the use of suburban iconography (the chair), place-making through text (Heathridge) and a sports drill element (the bullseye game). These three features highlight the Heathridge neighbourhood and how leisure and sport is valued in this community. 


Falklands Park, Kinross
“Edges”, 2021, by Darren Hutchens 2021 (pictured) 


A response to the idea of “the edge” and surrounding landscapes, flora and fauna, this mural was inspired by a collaboration with kids from The Edge Youth Centre. The mural explores the edges around us, the places we inhabit and the boundaries we place on the natural world. The distant horizon, the sun and sky, waves breaking on the shoreline, rocky outcrops, sand dunes and the coastal highway form the composition of the mural. Contours of the land and surrounding lake systems are overlapped with stylised depictions of endemic bird and plant species such as Balga, Banksia, Zamia, Grevillea and Kangaroo Paw. 


Central Park Toilet Block, Joondalup
“Rhythm of the Lake”, 2021, by Jack Bromell (pictured) 


This mural is a striking homage to the beauty of the natural environment within the City of Joondalup. The artist’s choice of royal blue as the dominant colour of the work represents both water and sky. Over this vibrant background appears illustrations of various leaves and flowers from native local plant species, including Eucalyptus recipients, Melaleuca preissiana and Eucalyptus todtiana. Native bird species also feature, including Eastern Great Egrets and the White-faced Heron, two prominent, native water birds, and two Tree Martin Swallows, one perched and one in flight. 


POPP Tables 

Neil Hawkins Park, Joondalup
“Flight of the Black Cockatoo”, 2020, by Karise Delcoure 

Picnic Cove, Edgewater
“Carnaby’s Wa-ee-lah Song”, 2020, by Karise Delcoure 

Geneff Park, Sorrento
“Rain Bird”, 2020, by Karise Delcoure (pictured) 


These murals feature birds and plants native to Western Australia whilst also celebrating the landscape, energy, and movement in each of these very active community spaces. The birds are captured in a movement of flight to reflect the movement and energy of the ping pong games. Repeated patterns, reflecting shapes from the local landscapes and weather patterns, are also incorporated into each of the mural designs. 

The ‘hero’ of each mural is the Carnaby’s Black Cockatoo, which is an endangered, protected and much-loved bird in Western Australia. The artist’s inclusion of the Carnaby’s Black Cockatoo is particularly relevant in the wake of Australia’s devastating bushfires in early 2020. The bushfires at Yanchep during this time destroyed the nesting and feeding grounds of a large colony, putting the species at further risk. The series also features banksias which are a source of food for the Carnaby’s Black Cockatoos. 


Marmion Anglican Aquatic Centre (MAAC) Car Park, Sorrento
“Marine Life of Marmion Marine Park”, 2016, by Amok Island (pictured) 


This mural depicts a selection of iconic marine fauna found in the Marmion Marine Park area from invertebrates, crustaceans and molluscs, fish and marine mammals. The artist conducted extensive research, including spending time in Marmion Marine Park photographing marine creatures and drew inspiration from vintage scientific identification charts in the creation of the design. 


Eddystone Underpass, Heathridge
“Untitled”, 2013 by Jon Ismailovski (pictured) 

Ismailovski’s 40-metre-long mural combines fish and fowl, flora and fauna, in monochromatic tone as though Hieronymus Bosch was designing a set for the Wiggles on black and white TV. A hybrid mix of creatures all co-habit in the strange world of Ismailovski’s mural, which addresses the hierarchy of humans and animals, and playfully undermines the control that humans have in this world.  

To receive information about the Mural Arts Program and future callouts, sign up for the Arts in focus eNewsletter. 

For further information please email visualarts@joondalup.wa.gov.au or call 9400 4000.