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词条 Helen Lempriere National Sculpture Award
释义

  1. Withholding of the award in 2009

      The 2010 scholarships    Exhibition  

  2. Complete list of winners

  3. References

  4. External links

The Helen Lempriere National Sculpture Award at Werribee Park was Australia's most financially rewarding prize for sculpture, instituted in 2000, and providing a total of A$145,000 in prizes to award recipients each year.[1] The last award was made in 2008. In 2009, the trustees of the Helen Lempriere Bequest announced that the Helen Lempriere National Sculpture Award would not be made, and the award is now defunct.

Withholding of the award in 2009

In 2009, the award was withheld when a new selection process for finalists (a change from application to invitation) resulted in what The Age newspaper called 'a disaster',[2] when an insufficient number of entries of good standard led to the withholding of the exhibition and award for that year. The trustees of the Helen Lempriere Bequest, Perpetual Private Wealth, announced in December 2009 that the award would no longer be made. Rather than being organised under its own auspices at Werribee Park, the award would instead be absorbed into the Sydney-based Sculpture by the Sea award.

The 2010 scholarships

On 23 December 2009, David Knowles of Perpetual Private Wealth announced that the new manager of the Lempriere award would be the Sculpture by the Sea organisation,[3] and that in 2010, the award would comprise three A$30,000 scholarships for sculptors.

Exhibition

Until the award's restructuring in 2009, an exhibition of the finalists was held each year in the grounds of Werribee Park, Werribee, Victoria, Australia. The award was acquisitive, and winners were brought into the collection displayed along the Sculpture Walk at Werribee Park. The local government authority, Wyndham City Council, would also purchase works for deployment as sculptural installations in the municipality.[4] The future of the collection at Werribee Park remains unresolved; Perpetual Private Wealth has announced a separate review.[5]

Complete list of winners

2016

Jennifer Turpin (NSW), operation crayweed

Geoffrey Bartlett (VIC), embrace

Hanna Hoyne (ACT), cosmic trumpet & embrace 2

Norton Flavell (WA), just another

2015

Orest Keywan (NSW), and the ship sails on (with apologies to f.f.)

Dale Miles (NSW), parallel thinking space

Samantha Small (ACT), stalemate Mk II

Elaine Clocherty, gamma gamma – storm

Jock Clutterbuck, oceania cartouche

Koichi Ishino, wind stone – the threshold of consciousness

Lucy Humphrey, horizon

Francesca Matagara, a to b

Paul Selwood, the museum

2012

Lou Lambert, red herring

Philip Spelman, tête à tête

Tom de Munk-Kermeer, luchtkasteel

2011

Alessandra Rossi, comfort zone

James Rogers, hokusai’s child

Marcus Tatton, the ruin

David Horton, jarrett in london

Matthew Harding, centripetal

Michael Le Grand, anaconda

  • 2001 (Inaugural prize) - Karen Ward, Hut
  • 2002 - Nigel Helyer, Meta Diva
  • 2003 - Gary Wilson, Untitled
  • 2004 - Richard Goodwin, Prosthetic Apartment B
  • 2005 - William Eicholtz, The Comrade's Reward
  • 2006 - Alexander Knox, Death of a White Good
  • 2007 - Julia Davis, Meniscii
  • 2008 - Bob Jenyns, Pont de l'archeveche
  • 2009 - Award withheld[6]

References

1. ^Helen Lempriere Sculpture Awards - Welcome
2. ^The Age - Victoria loses sculpture prize
3. ^2009 Changes to Award (pdf)
4. ^Wyndham City Council - Public art
5. ^2009 Changes to Award (pdf)
6. ^Helen Lempriere Sculpture Awards

External links

  • Helen Lempriere National Sculpture Award website
{{Australianartawards}}

5 : Australian art awards|Sculpture awards|2000 establishments in Australia|Awards disestablished in 2009|American sculpture awards

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