Entries open for Fieldays No.8 Wire National Art Award
Judge announced and entries open for Fieldays No.8
Wire National Art Award
12 January 2018
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Entries are now open for the Fieldays No.8 Wire National Art Award, with revised entry criteria to encourage more artists to take on the unique challenge the award offers.
The annual award, managed by Waikato Museum and partnered by Farmlands Co-operative, invokes the classic Kiwi DIY attitude in the creation of sculptural artworks made from predominantly No.8 wire along with other agricultural products.
The winner receives $7,000, with prizes of $1,000 and $500 for the second and third placegetters, respectively.
The award culminates in a month-long exhibition at Hamilton’s ArtsPost Galleries & Shop, and selected finalists will also be invited to have their work displayed at Fieldays, which celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2018.
This year’s judge is gallery director and art writer Andrew Clifford. Mr Clifford is the inaugural director of Te Uru Waitakere Contemporary Gallery in Titirangi, Auckland, and was previously curator at the University of Auckland’s Gus Fisher Gallery. He has been a judge for the Wallace Art Awards, a juror for the Walters Prize, and a selector for the Arts Foundation Awards.
New Zealand National Fieldays Society president Peter Carr says they are delighted to have Andrew Clifford judging the No.8 Wire National Art Award as part of the 50th Fieldays event.
“Andrew’s excellent work as the initiating director at Te Uru Waitakere Contemporary Gallery is well respected and his appointment is fitting in the Society’s very special anniversary year,” says Mr Carr. “We very much look forward to both the overall entries and the announcement of the award winners.”
In previous years, the entry criteria have called for the artworks to feature a minimum 50 per cent No.8 wire. Reflecting the way the future of farming is changing, the awards will now allow artists to use a wider range of agricultural products, with the dominant visual and structural feature of the artwork to be No.8 wire or wire of a similar gauge.
Waikato Museum
Director Cherie Meecham says the removal of the 50 per cent
No.8 wire condition expands what artists are now able to
create with the iconic farm product.
“The variety and
intricacy of what can be created through the manipulation of
No.8 wire never ceases to amaze me,” she says. “Waikato
Museum and ArtsPost are excited to be part of Fieldays’
milestone celebration.”
2018 competition
details
First prize:
$7,000
Second prize:
$1,000
Third prize:
$500
President’s choice: $100
ArtsPost voucher
People’s choice:
$100
Entries close: 1pm, Friday
13 April 2018
Finalists notified: Week
of 16 April 2018
Winners announced/Award
ceremony: Thursday 10 May
2018
Exhibition: Friday 11 May 2018 to
Monday 11 June 2018
Venue: ArtsPost
Galleries & Shop, 120 Victoria Street, Hamilton. Open
daily 10am – 5pm.
To read the competition criteria and
access the entry form, go to waikatomuseum.co.nz/no8wire.