Aratoi People’s Choice Award & Emerging Artist Award
Aratoi People’s Choice Award & Emerging Artist Award at the Museum’s 10th Wairarapa Art Review
Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History, in Masterton, held a closing ceremony for its 10th Wairarapa Art Review today. The selected exhibition, held every two years since 1999, is open to all artists living in the Wairarapa region. For the 2017 Review, 86 entries were received, and 57 works selected; the selector for the Review was art critic, writer and curator Mark Amery. The Wairarapa Art Review is organised by the Friends of Aratoi, a 450-strong membership organisation that supports the Museum.
Almost 1,000 votes were received
for the People’s Choice Award – 967 to be exact – with
each of the 57 exhibiting artists receiving at least one
vote. This represents almost 100% more votes than the
previous Review. The People’s Choice Award of $500 was
awarded to Masterton veterinarian-painter Elke Blommers for
her portrait of a Black Labrador, a painting titled
‘Angus’. “I love to paint black animals, but I used no
black paint – just blue, brown, pink, yellow and white.”
The Masterton-based artist received about 10 per cent of the
vote. The Award is sponsored by Friends of Aratoi member
Frank Minehan, who also volunteers at the Museum. Minehan
said as he presented the award to Elke Blommers, “Thank
you, artists for your creativity… for sticking your neck
out to show your work.”
The Emerging Artist Award was presented to Masterton-based photographer Anna Rutherford for ‘Harvey and Murphy’. Her prize, a one-week residency, is sponsored by New Zealand Pacific Studio, the international artists’ residency centre in Mount Bruce, Wairarapa.
THE SIX PRIZEWINNERS are as follows:
ELKE
BLOMMERS
PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARD,
sponsored by Frank Minehan
Elke
is a veterinarian and painter, with a Doctorate Degree in
Veterinary Medicine from Ultrecht University, and with
several years of experience painting many animals – with a
particular fondness for the dog. As a vet, she does some
large animal work but mainly attends to pets and their
owners. Elke lives in Masterton where she serves as
Secretary/Treasurer of the Masterton Art
Club.
ANNA
RUTHERFORD
NEW ZEALAND PACIFIC STUDIO
EMERGING ARTIST AWARD, sponsored by NZ Pacific
Studio
Anna Rutherford is a
Masterton-based family and lifestyle photographer who
specializes in working with families with young children.
She uses natural light and familiar surroundings for her
images. Her photography documentary project ‘Masterton &
Me’ – in which the artist takes to the streets to both
meet her subjects and to exhibit – is currently on display
near the Wairarapa Building Society (WBS) on Queen & Park
Streets, Masterton. The project premiered at the Block
Party 2017 in collaboration with Urban Dream Brokerage, and
it will also show at Aratoi in 2018. Anna has a degree in
photography from Unitec Institute of Technology.
SAM
LUDDEN
ROSEWOOD PREMIER AWARD, sponsored by David &
Lynette Dew, Rosewood Funeral
Home
Trained in ceramics and fine
arts in Whanganui under the tuition of Ross Mitchell-Anyon,
Sam Ludden works in a number of media. He has traveled
widely and has worked as a potter in China, Czech Republic,
England, France, and Thailand. His recent work reflects his
interest in his Wairarapa birthplace; its cultures and
landscapes, its threatened flora and fauna, and its huge
wider potential in the arts. He has created a wide range of
eels and other ceramic sculptures, and works from his home
studio, Dirty Fingers Pottery, in Masterton. He will have a
solo show at Aratoi in 2018.
SAM
DUCKOR-JONES
THE WHOLE NINE YARDS HIGHLY
COMMENDED AWARD, sponsored by The Whole Nine
Yards
Sam Duckor-Jones tells stories
through his art, whether it be puppetry, poetry, drawing,
music, or clay. Duckor-Jones has exhibited across New
Zealand and is represented by Bowen Galleries in Wellington,
the city of his birth. In 2017, he received his Master’s
Degree in Creative Writing from Victoria University, and was
awarded the Scots College Artist Residency, supported by
Chris Parkin. He works from his home studio in
Featherston.
STEPHEN
LAWRIE
JANE HYDER PORTRAIT AWARD,
sponsored by Jane Hyder
A painter
and sculptor, Stephen Lawrie trained at the Elam School of
Fine Arts in the 1970s and has been living between New
Zealand (Flat Point) and Alaska since 1976. For more than
40 years, he worked as an artist and commercial fisherman.
"Some years, the painting was better than the fishing and
other years the fishing," says Lawrie. He is now a full-time
artist, with painting exhibitions and sculpture commissions
both in USA and New Zealand.
AUDREY HALL
NEW
ZEALAND PACIFIC STUDIO EMERGING ARTIST AWARD, sponsored
by NZ Pacific Studio
Audrey Hall is
a ceramics artist who has been delighting the Wairarapa
community with her hand-shaped sculptures over the past
decade. Some of her work is inspired by books she has read,
such as Alice in Wonderland, Les Miserables
and Wind in the Willows. Hall uses the ceramics
studio facilities at King Street Artworks. (Note: Audrey
Hall is unable to accept the one-week residency
prize.)
The six
prize-winning works will be exhibited at Ventana Creative
Collective in Martinborough, from 23 February to 11 March
2018. Everyone is invited to the opening event on Friday 23
February at 6:30pm. Ventana Director Auriga Martin commented
that she is “looking forward to showcasing the winning
pieces from the Review. It’s great to connect with our
local art network and co-host an event with
Aratoi.”
–ENDS–