Finalists For National Contemporary Art Award
Judge Announces Finalists For National Contemporary Art Award
30 June 2016
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Judge Misal Adnan Yildiz has selected 34 entries as finalists for this year’s National Contemporary Art Award managed by Waikato Museum.
Finalists were selected through a blind judging process where Yildiz reviewed artists’ statements, images and optional video works online without seeing the identity of the artist.
Waikato Museum Director Cherie Meecham says the National Contemporary Art Award had an excellent response this year.
“We’re excited about the calibre of this year’s entrants and I would like to thank all those who entered; it’s a tough competition and your support is invaluable to the success of the National Contemporary Art Award.”
The finalists for the 2016 National Contemporary Art Award are:
1. Push Me Pull
You - Cachemaille and Bowmast, Motueka
2. The
Formation of Jupiter - Yoon Tae Kim, Auckland
3.
Radiance and Colour - Oliver King, Warkworth
4.
Watchers (George Bolt Memorial Drive) - Brendon
Sellar, Auckland
5. To a willing person, injury is not
done - Douglas Stichbury, USA
6. LITEWEIGHT (The
Holy Trinity Of Muscle or Last Minute Tips For 11th Hour
Abs) - Gary Mackay, Auckland
7. Good Kisser -
Sorawit Songsataya, Auckland
8. The Essence of Art
- Part 1 - Tony Nicholls, Hamilton
9. A Brighter
Future - Tiger Murdoch, Auckland
10. Envelope
- Matt Arbuckle, Auckland
11. Sacred Valley
-Mark Bolland, Dunedin
12. Random - Susan Mabin,
Hastings
13. Phablet 3.0 - Charlotte Imogen
Benoit, Auckland
14. Departures - D Milton Browne,
Dunedin
15. Drugs on Toast - Justin Spiers,
Dunedin
16. Nest Number Four - Justin Spiers,
Dunedin
17. An Informal Evening - Daegan Wells,
Christchurch
18. A Booth with Ocean Views (Self
Portrait) - Christopher Ulutupu, Wellington
19.
Fountain is a Copy? - Ella Sutherland and Matthew
Galloway, Dunedin
20. Monochronic - Clara Wells,
Hamilton
21. Moon Deed Set in Concrete - Wendelien
Bakker, Auckland
22.Paramount - Alex Miln,
Tauranga
23. Rosa Drive-In - Alex Miln,
Tauranga
24. The Oil Fields - John G Johnston,
Auckland
25. The Briefcase - Jason McCormick,
Nelson
26. Maquette for a Monument to Global
Capitalism and the Free World - Matt Ellwood,
Auckland
27. Floor Work I - Rohan Hartley Mills,
Oratia
28. It Could Not Possibly Happen Here, Could
It? - Peter McLaren, Dunedin
29. Four Colours
Only - Peter McLaren, Dunedin
30. Blind:HI-FI
- Jonathan Organ and Jessica Pearless, Auckland
31.
Liberte - Paul Handley, Melbourne
32. The Order
of Things - Mike Ting, Wellington
33. Pillar of
Cloud - Brit Bunkley, Whanganui
34.
Pārekereke – Seedbed - Elliot Collins,
Auckland
The winner and merit award winners of the National Contemporary Art Award will be announced on Friday 2 September at Waikato Museum. The exhibition will open from Saturday 3 September until Sunday 4 December 2016.
The winner of the 2016 National Contemporary Art Award will receive $20,000 from the major sponsors, Chow Hill and Tompkins Wake. Three merit awards of $1000 each will be awarded from the Friends of Waikato Museum, Random Art Group and David’s Emporium.
Judge’s
statement
“One of the most significant voices
of our time, gender and queer theorist/author Jack or Judith
(whichever you choose) Halberstam proposes to ‘think
counterintuitively and act accordingly’ as one of the five
tenets of her/his “Gaga Feminism”- framed as a timely
form of feminism for post-capitalism. She/he argues that
‘[a] lot of what we learn as common sense actually makes
no sense, especially as change does happen in complex
societies such as the ones we inhabit’.
“During the process of evaluating the applications for the National Contemporary Art Award, I have been intuitively following this advice; and approaching the images, texts and links with a curiosity around their actual forms, presentation skills and ideas for installations. One can never experience a painting through an online layout or an installation via images; so my only tool was my paracuratorial practice.
“Today, from Orlando to Istanbul gender politics are still relevant. The questions around immigration, integration and refugees are urgent. ‘The end of neoliberalism’ is not just a title for an article printed by Monocle magazine; it is a reality that surrounds us. We are seeing the end of things and the new beginnings every day, every moment, every second, more and more...
“So what is the social impact of the artist on this global-glocal-local transformation? How can art contribute to the question of living together? What is empiricism and what is experimenting in art context? What is risk and failure today? How do artists approach material, space and context? Through several different strategies of developing attempts to “read” these images in these applications, I have found myself ending up with the same list of applications. They have all started to look back at me and repeat the same advice: Think counterintuitively and act accordingly. I am proud that the exhibition of finalists for the 2016 National Contemporary Art Award is based on questions we can share with the rest of the world.” – Misal Adnan Yildiz
ENDS