Western Australia’s capital has a wealth of public art, both street art and sculptures commissioned by the city council. Here’s a taster.
Three weeks in Australia
Back in 2019, we booked a holiday to Australia. We planned to go back to Melbourne (where we lived from 2003 to 2005), then take a week to travel to Sydney (where my brother lives) seeing parts of Victoria and New South Wales we hadn’t had the chance to see. I was working and our first child was born while we were there, so we were rather busy. But we had saved and planned for this big trip and were looking forward to the adventure.
Then 2020 happened.
So in September 2024 we booked to go again and hoped there wouldn’t be another global pandemic to crimp our plans. This time, we had a wedding to go to and we were going to celebrate older child graduating, younger child finishing GCSEs, Mrs S getting her first accountancy qualification and me reaching 20 years with the same company.
One of those things didn’t happen – I fell about 6 months short of 20 years at my job. However, we had paid for the flights and accommodation, so we went anyway, with a mind to reducing the number of extravagances we might otherwise have been able to do. And we had a blast.
Sydney and Melbourne
The focus of the trip was my brother’s wedding in Sydney, then a few days to revisit Melbourne, where we lived for two and a half years. Finally, we decided to go to Perth for a long weekend at the end of the holiday, mostly because we hadn’t been there and so many Australians haven’t made the trip either.
Perth
We didn’t know what to expect in Perth. We knew it was remote (thousands of miles from the next place of comparable size) but not a lot else. One of the feelings we got was that it was quite self-sufficient. A lot of locally produced food and drink, which makes sense when Adelaide is two days train ride away.
Taking advice from Australians about what to do, one suggestion that came up was a visit to Rottnest Island. It seemed odd that we should travel so far (four hours by plane from Melbourne) only to spend a day away from the city. So we settled on looking around Perth and spending a chunk of one day in Fremantle, the suburb of Perth that is on the Indian Ocean at the mouth of the Swan River.
We arrived on Friday afternoon, got some food in and watched the footy that was taking place a few kilometres from our apartment1. A Ramen dinner, an early-ish night – we were two hours ahead of Perth time – and up and about on Saturday morning. So our first full day in Perth, what do we do? We go on an art trail, of course!
Perth Art Trail
This was a free, self-guided trail that we found online (link). The city of Perth has a public art strategy dating back to 2009 with over 100 works distributed around the CBD and suburbs around the centre of the city.
Our hotel was close to Elizabeth Quay, where the trail officially started, but we decided that we had better get some breakfast in us before starting. It took us a while to find a place that was serving food at 11 am, but we settled on having brunch in the bar of the Ibis hotel on Murray St. This was fortunate because we were able to kick off the trail on Wolf Lane.
Wolf Lane
There are other streets in Perth with a lot of art, but this is the one that was highlighted in the tour guide. Most of the buildings in this back street have some art on them, a lot from a 2012-2016 effort to brighten the inner city. The move to have fresh street art was revived in 2024 and we were lucky enough to see two new additions. Well, one addition and one revival.

The titular ‘wolf’ or Inside Your Head, There’s a Heart, was altered by the artist (Steve Buckles) in 2024 to a slightly brighter image, but in the same style. The original can be found on some websites, such as this Facebook post. There is also a blog that discusses the original commission of street art in 2014.2
An untitled piece caught Mrs S’s imagination. By Dan Bianco, it was only painted in January 2025. She loved the way the painting was incorporating and would be incorporated by the living plants that were being trained on the wire trellises. It would be nice to be able to keep abreast of the changes in this work.

Two of my favourites were on the same building. Untitled by Spanish artist Hyuro (tumbling women) and Seahorse by Alexis Díaz .

The seahorse – which I thought was a dragon at first – was the work of Puerto Rican artist Alexis Díaz.

I lost count of how many murals there were on Wolf Lane, but there’s a selection below. Also an old advert for Solyptol Soap – I do like old adverts, they don’t muck around.

Beyond Wolf Lane
From there we were directed to Telethon Gardens, where a striking collection of wrought iron figures seemed to stand guard on the lawn.

The Noorgar are the traditional guardians of the land where Perth now stands. These figures represent the Noorgar leaders who represented Aboriginal communities at Perth’s commemoration of Federation in 1900. There is also an ecological significance to the work, the latticework representing the layers of social, environmental and cultural heritage of the area.
From there we walked towards Perth train station. This is where the Indian Pacific train terminates; this is a bucket list item for us, though we will wait until we can afford (a) to come over again, (b) to travel in a private cabin and (c) have done some other things on the bucket list3.
Anyway, back to the art trail.
Opposite the train station was Grow Your Own, an abstract by James Angus. Inspired by the growth of organic farming, this is sometimes referred to as ‘the cactus ‘ by locals.

Right by this artwork was the White Dwarf bookshop. Feeling the need to have a rest we got some water from the shop next door and spent a pleasant half hour or more in the bookshop. The owner was friendly; he said he was familiar with Forbidden Planet in London and we recommended he go to the branch in Liverpool – he was surprised that there is more than one. We didn’t buy anything, mainly because we didn’t want to have to carry books with us on the rest of the walk, but we promised to come back.4
St George’s Cathedral
After walking through the shopping district we arrived at the precinct of St George’s Anglican Cathedral. Built using local jarrah wood, Rottnest limestone and bricks from local sources it was consecrated in 1888 and is one of the oldest buildings in Perth.
To the southwest of the cathedral was the most confusing piece we saw on the trail. Ascalon looked like a broken sail5, but it is intended to portray St George slaying the dragon and seeks “to evoke a sense of righteous power and victory over a force of darkness and oppression”6; Ascalon is the name of his lance (or sword), which I didn’t know.

Further down towards the river is the precinct by the Council House. This is a rather plain 60s building, enlivened by a collection of kangaroo sculptures called ‘The Mob’ and the Boonji Spaceman.


The Boonji Spaceman was installed in May 2025, on the site of a popular artwork dubbed ‘The Kebab’7 (removed in 2021) which was built in 1971 to celebrate Perth’s population reaching 1 million. The new installation was not without controversy.
The final work on the trail, but not the last piece we saw, was in the entrance of the Federal Court of Australia. A very 1970s piece, I have spent rather more time than I care to think about trying to find the name and artist of this piece. If you know, tell me.

The beginning and the end
After a walk along the prom by the Swan River we ended up at Elizabeth Quay, where the trail is supposed to start. There are two artworks here – First Contact and Spanda.
First Contact , the work of Noongar artist Laurel Nannup, stands on the banks of the Swan River. It’s 5 metres tall and cast in aluminium and represents the shared legacy of the Stolen Generation, of which group Nannup is a member. The piece lights up at night, as we discovered later that day when we had a very nice dinner at The Island on Elizabeth Quay. More information on the building of this piece is available here.

Spanda was the result of a competition to create a signature artwork for Elizabeth Quay, won by Christian de Vietri (who also co-created Ascalon).

The whole walk took us a couple of hours. There was a great deal to ponder, looking at all the different styles of art and the media used by artists to celebrate their culture, make a statement, commemorate an event, or just to amuse the viewer. As with any art collection, not everything speaks to everyone. There is also a lot of art we missed8, so a return trip may be necessary.
- The Dockers were well beaten by reigning champions and 2025 finalists, Brisbane Lions. ↩︎
- Including the line “leaving a cold wet 17 degrees in Melbourne”. That’s 17 Celcius. ↩︎
- Which includes a Nile cruise, May blossom in Japan, Hawaii, and a longer return trip to Malta ↩︎
- We did, on the Monday, and spent about $70 there. We needed books for the return flight. ↩︎
- Or a pole-dancing ghost. ↩︎
- According to the WA Public Art Inventory ↩︎
- Official name: The Ore Obelisk. ↩︎
- Including the Bon Scott memorial statue in Fremantle. We were about 100 metres from it at one point, but I didn’t know it existed until we got back to the UK. ↩︎

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