Event POSTPONED | Pecha Kucha: Visions for the Future

POSTPONED | Pecha Kucha: Visions for the Future

Presentations and Speculative Dialogues

  • Location:
    Ground Floor Gallery
  • Event Cost:
    Free

Due to unforeseen circumstances we have had to postpone this event. We will share details of the new event date on our socials, website, and in our newsletter once it’s confirmed.

Thank you for understanding and we look forward to seeing you soon.

Institute of Modern Art

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We invite you to join us for a series of public forums addressing the contributions the Institute for Modern Art has made to Queensland’s art ecology; reconnecting the institution with previous generations and generating speculation about visions for the future. 

For the final instalment of our fiftieth anniversary forum series, we’re pressing fast forward to speculate upon possible future states of the IMA. 

Imagine fifty years’ time, after the ice caps have melted or First Nations sovereignty recognised. What will the current issues and art be? What form will the institution take? Delegates of the future make their pitch—pecha kucha style.

Blaklash, Wreckers Artspace’s Sarah Poulgrain and Llewellyn Millhouse, Dirk Yates and Tara Heffernan will each take the floor, MC’d by Christina Cho. Presentations have been developed in consultation with story-thinking expert Dr Joanne Anderton, University of Queensland’s WhatIF Lab.

This is a free, seated event. All welcome. Please RSVP to confirm your attendance.

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2025 marks fifty years since the Institute for Modern Art first opened its doors in Brisbane. For five decades, we’ve presented the latest contemporary art; connecting the local, national, and international, the established and the emergent; offering a hub for the art life in Brisbane. We have navigated the chops, changes, and paradigm shifts that have marked the art of our times. To celebrate our fiftieth anniversary, we are presenting three public forums. The first two excavate our past; the third imagines our future. Each will be followed by a performance. 

The Institute of Modern Art acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land upon which the IMA now stands, the Jagera, Yuggera, Yugarapul, and Turrbal people. We offer our respect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the first artists of this country. In the spirit of allyship, the IMA will continue to work with First Nations people to celebrate, support, and present their immense past, present, and future contribution to artistic practice and cultural expression.

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