Blake Prize | |
---|---|
Date | 1951 |
Country | Australia |
Hosted by |
|
Reward(s) | A$35,000 |
Highlights | |
Most awards | Eric Smith (six times) |
Inaugural winner | Justin O'Brien (1951) |
Website | Blake Prize |
The Blake Prize, formerly the Blake Prize for Religious Art, [1] is an Australian art prize awarded for art that explores spirituality. Since the inaugural prize in 1951, the prize was awarded annually from 1951 to 2015, and since 2016 has been awarded biennially. [2] [3]
As of 2021 [update] , the non-acquisitive prize, awarded since 2016 by the Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre (CPAC), is worth A$35,000. In addition, CPAC awards the Blake Emerging Artist Prize, an acquisitive prize of A$6,000 (formerly the John Coburn Emerging Artist Award [4] ), and the Blake Established Artist Residency, which includes a residency and solo exhibition hosted by CPAC. [2]
The prize was established in Sydney in 1949 as an incentive to raise the standard of religious art [5] and to find suitable work to decorate churches. [6] It was founded by Jewish businessman Richard Morley, [4] the Reverend Michael Scott SJ, a headmaster of Campion Hall, Point Piper, and subsequently rector of Aquinas College (a Catholic residential college for university students in North Adelaide [7] ), and lawyer M. Tenison. The Blake Prize is named after the artist and poet, William Blake. The inaugural Blake Prize was awarded by the Blake Society in 1951 to Justin O'Brien. [5]
The Blake exhibitions have been a regular travelling exhibition around Australia, visiting various major cities and provincial galleries.[ citation needed ]
The award of the Blake Prize to Charles Bannon in 1954 for his Judas Iscariot was one of the most controversial in its history; this opened controversy over what constituted religious art and over "abstract expressionism" which threatened to overwhelm the exhibition.[ citation needed ]
In 2000, the prize shifted its focus from strictly religious art to an exploration of spirituality, and some of the entries proved controversial. In 2007, former prime minister John Howard and former Catholic archbishop of Sydney George Pell expressed disapproval of art works showing the Virgin Mary in a burqa, and a hologram of Christ morphing with Osama bin Laden. In 2008, The Australian's art critic Christopher Allen resigned from the judging panel over an entry by Adam Cullen showing the crucifixion of Christ. [6]
The prize was known as the Blake Prize for Religious Art until its 56th edition in 2007, and was based at the National Art School in Darlinghurst at this time. [1] For its 57th edition in 2008, it was rebranded the Blake Prize, subtitled "Exploring the spiritual and religious in art". [8]
In 2008 the Blake Society, in collaboration with the New South Wales Writers' Centre (now Writing NSW), established the Blake Poetry Prize [6] to link art and literature and to give Australian poets new possibilities to explore the nature of spirituality in the 21st century.[ citation needed ]
In 2011, Australian art historian, educator and exhibition curator Rosemary Crumlin authored a book documenting 60 years of the Blake Prize. [9]
In 2012, the National Art School was replaced as exhibition partner by the National Trust's S. H. Ervin Gallery in Observatory Park, in Sydney's city centre, for the 61st edition of the awards. [10] [11]
In 2014 there were new commercial sponsors, and the venue partner became UNSW College of Fine Arts (now UNSW School of Art & Design). [12]
The prize was administered by the Blake Society up till and including 2015. After the 63rd edition of the prize in January, chair Rod Pattenden said that it would not be able to continue owing to lack of sponsorship, [13] suggesting that the prize was seen as "too open-minded" by religious organisations and "too religious" by secular people. [6] In July, the Casula Powerhouse Art Centre (CPAC) and Liverpool City Council announced that they would be funding and managing the prize, with the exhibition and awards moving to Casula in Western Sydney. They promised that A$25,000 would be available in perpetuity. [13]
In 2016 CPAC took over the prize for the 64th Blake Prize, and it became a biennial award. [14] It now focuses on the broader spiritual arts rather than religious art. [15] The Casula Powerhouse took over the Blake Poetry Prize in the same year. [16]
From 2009 [17] until 2014, the Blake Prize for Human Justice, worth A$5,000, was sponsored by the Maritime Union of Australia. [18] The winners were:
As of 2021 [update] , there are three prizes awarded by Casula Powerhouse: [2]
Ordinal | Year | Winner(s) | Name of work(s) | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1951 | Justin O'Brien | The Virgin Enthroned | [5] | |||
2 | 1952 | Frank Hinder | Flight into Egypt | ||||
3 | 1953 | Michael Kmit | The Evangelist John Mark | ||||
4 | 1954 | Charles Bannon | Judas Iscariot | ||||
5 | 1955 | Donald Friend | St John and Scenes from the Apocalypse | ||||
6 | 1956 | Eric Smith | The Scourged Christ | ||||
7 | 1957 | Elwyn Lynn | Betrayal | ||||
8 | 1958 | Eric Smith | The Moment Christ Died | ||||
9 | 1959 | Eric Smith | Christ is Risen | ||||
10 | 1960 | John Coburn | Triptych of the Passion | ||||
11 | 1961 | Stanislaus Rapotec | Meditating on Good Friday | [5] | |||
12 | 1962 | Eric Smith | Eucharistic Landscape | ||||
13 | 1963 | Leonard French | Ancient Fragments | ||||
14 | 1964 | Michael Kitching | Last Supper-Premonition | [26] | |||
15 | 1965 | Asher Bilu | I Form Light and Create Darkness-Isaiah 45:7 | ||||
16 | 1966 | Rodney Milgate | Ascension | ||||
17 | 1967 | Desiderius Orban | Hosanna | ||||
18 | 1968 | Roger Kemp | The Cross | ||||
19 | 1969 | Eric Smith | The Assassin's Creed | ||||
20 | 1970 | Roger Kemp | Denial | ||||
Eric Smith | Christ's Flesh: Living, Suffering and Resurrected | ||||||
21 | 1971 | Desiderius Orban | Transition to Christianity | ||||
22 | 1972 | Joseph Szabo | Black Friday | ||||
23 | 1973 | Keith Looby | Your Motel Calvary Still Life Flowers | ||||
24 | 1974 | Stuart Maxwell | Christ at Emmaus | ||||
Ken Whisson | Tobias and the Angel | ||||||
25 | 1975 | Rodney Milgate | Thoughts on Holy Thursday | ||||
26 | 1976 | David Voigt | Blue Requiem | ||||
27 | 1977 | John Coburn | Hozanna | ||||
Rodney Milgate | Tree | ||||||
28 | 1978 | Noel Tunks | The First Friday Retreat | ||||
29 | 1979 | Roadside Altar Piece Comas | |||||
30 | 1980 | Leonard French | Instruments for a Drama Meditation | ||||
31 | 1981 | David Voigt | Meditation | ||||
32 | 1982 | Mary Anne Coutts | In Mockery of Christ | ||||
Suzie Marston | Sunday School Work Books | ||||||
33 | 1983 | The Offering | |||||
34 | 1984 | Mary Hall | The Spirit of God hovered brooding over the face of the waters | ||||
35 | 1985 | John Gould | Votives to Passion | ||||
36 | 1986 | Roger Akinin | The Day of Atonement, Scapegoat and Apostate | ||||
37 | 1987 | Ian Grant | The Monks Cloak | ||||
Alan Oldfield | A High and perpetual shewing of Christ's mother according to Julian of Norwich | ||||||
38 | 1988 | Lise Floistad | This sign is a hidden treasure which desires to be known | ||||
39 | 1989 | Warren Breninger | Hail Mary | ||||
40 | 1990 | Gillian Mann | The Chest | ||||
41 | 1991 | Alan Oldfield | Raft III | ||||
Rosemary Valadon | Before the Fall | ||||||
42 | 1992 | George Gittoes | Ancient Prayer | ||||
43 | 1993 | John Davis | Some Thoughts on a Miracle | ||||
44 | 1994 | Hilarie Mais | Veiling Silence | ||||
45 | 1995 | George Gittoes | The Preacher – Kibeho Massacre Series, Rwanda | ||||
46 | 1996 | Rachel Ellis | Woman at Jesus' feet | ||||
47 | 1997 | Thomas Spence | Christmas Day 1914 (God's Truce) | ||||
48 | 1998 | John Adair | One Dark Night (from St John of the Cross Poem Dark Night of the Soul) | ||||
− | 1999 | not awarded | |||||
49 | 2000 | Frances Belle Parker | The Journey | ||||
50 | 2001 | Lachlan Warner | Vitrine of lightweight (Sunyata), disposable (annica) Buddhas, in a range of festive colours, postures and mudras | ||||
51 | 2002 | Hilton McCormick | The Harvest | ||||
52 | 2003 | Shoufay Derz | Linking Back (Part 1) | ||||
53 | 2004 | AñA Wojak | Pieta (Dafur) | ||||
54 | 2005 | James Powditch | God is in the Details (Intelligent Design) | ||||
Louise Rippert | Dance | ||||||
55 | 2006 | Euan Macleod | Untitled Landscape with Figure | ||||
56 | 2007 | Shirley Purdie | Stations of the Cross | ||||
57 | 2008 | David Tucker | A Local Girl Comes Home | ||||
58 | 2009 | Angelica Mesiti | Rapture (silent anthem) | [27] | |||
59 | 2010 | Leonard Brown | If you put your ear close, you’ll hear it breathing | [28] | |||
60 | 2011 | Khaled Sabsabi | Naqshbandi Greenacre Engagement | [5] (3 channel video) | |||
61 | 2012 | Fabian Astore | The Threshold | [29] | |||
Eveline Kotai | Writing on air | ||||||
62 | 2013 | Trevor Nickolls | Metamorphosis | [30] | |||
63 | 2014 | Richard Lewer | Worse Luck I'm Still Here | [31] | |||
Changed to biennial award [32] | |||||||
64 | 2016 | Yardena Kurulkar | Kenosis 2015 | [33] | |||
65 | 2018 | Tina Havelock Stevens | Giant Rock | [34] | |||
66 | 2020 (2021) | Leyla Stevens | Kidung, a 3-channel video work | Awarded 13 February 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic [35] [36] | |||
67 | 2022 |
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