Located in the heart of Perth, ECU City Campus is an 11-story vertical campus that opened in 2026, named after Edith Cowan — the first woman elected to an Australian parliament and the only woman to lend her name to an Australian university. Built on land where the Whadjuk Noongar people have long gathered to learn and convene, the campus brings together disciplines rarely housed under one roof: the renowned Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), screen and media, business, law, cyber security, and Kurongkurl Katitjin, ECU's Centre for Indigenous Australian Education and Research. At the heart of the campus — where some 10,000 students and staff pass through each day — sits a media façade composed of more than 2,800 custom LED tiles, alongside a four-story foyer canvas, one of the largest indoor LED screens in Australia. The foyer moves fluidly between everyday thoroughfare and stage, hosting performances, festivals, and university events.
On this expansive canvas, LED.ART presents Feast of the World — a piece in which greetings rise into light, one language at a time, drawn from across the globe. It translates the campus's founding ethos of "breaking boundaries" into a visual language of welcome. Students, staff, and passersby in the city each encounter a greeting written in their own mother tongue. In this moment, the public LED canvas becomes more than a display — it becomes a medium through which a space declares what it values, and to whom it opens its doors.
PERTH, AUSTRALIAN l 2026
LICENSED ARTWORKS Click on the image,you will be taken to the content page.
EDITH COWAN UNIVERSITY CITY CAMPUS
Located in the heart of Perth, ECU City Campus is an 11-story vertical campus that opened in 2026, named after Edith Cowan — the first woman elected to an Australian parliament and the only woman to lend her name to an Australian university. Built on land where the Whadjuk Noongar people have long gathered to learn and convene, the campus brings together disciplines rarely housed under one roof: the renowned Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), screen and media, business, law, cyber security, and Kurongkurl Katitjin, ECU's Centre for Indigenous Australian Education and Research. At the heart of the campus — where some 10,000 students and staff pass through each day — sits a media façade composed of more than 2,800 custom LED tiles, alongside a four-story foyer canvas, one of the largest indoor LED screens in Australia. The foyer moves fluidly between everyday thoroughfare and stage, hosting performances, festivals, and university events.
On this expansive canvas, LED.ART presents Feast of the World — a piece in which greetings rise into light, one language at a time, drawn from across the globe. It translates the campus's founding ethos of "breaking boundaries" into a visual language of welcome. Students, staff, and passersby in the city each encounter a greeting written in their own mother tongue. In this moment, the public LED canvas becomes more than a display — it becomes a medium through which a space declares what it values, and to whom it opens its doors.
PERTH, AUSTRALIAN l 2026
LICENSED ARTWORKS Click on the image,you will be taken to the content page.