Thursday, 6 December 2018

Blacktown City Council - Media Release - Koori Elders Group Wins Te 2018 Blacktown City Art Prize

Description: Description: Blacktown City Council
 6 December 2018

Bankstown Koori Elders Group take out the $15,000 first

 prize at the 2018 Blacktown City Art Prize for Tribal Pride, a

190 cm sculptural work made from clay, wood and sand.

“The pride we get when we see it all come together as one 

work of art is encouraging; the enjoyment we get as a mob is 

very uplifting,” said the Elders, who also won the Aboriginal 

Artist Prize in 2016. “For us to gather together to create art is 

wonderful and inspirational.”


Blacktown City Mayor Stephen Bali MP, said it was a

pleasure to award the Koori Elders Group with the 2018 

Blacktown City Art Prize.


“Blacktown City Council believes that art and culture has a 

central role to play in the development of our city,” said

 Mayor Bali.


“Now in its 23rd year, Blacktown City Art Prize is a major 

cultural event in Western Sydney.


“For the second year running we received over 600 entries

 from local artists and from across Australia. Tribal Pride by

 the Koori Elders Group was a standout.”


The judging panel, Tony Albert, Emily McDaniel and Dominik

Mersch, faced the difficult task of selecting the winning 

works.


“The final works reflect the cultural diversity of Western

Sydney by sharing localised stories and reflections of the 

place and community; they remind us that the artist is a 

storyteller first and foremost,” said the judges.


“Although Tribal Pride is a contemporary ceramic work, it 

acknowledges traditional cultural practices such as carving, 

evident through delicate and precise line work.”


Highly Commended were Jane Theau for #MeToo, and

 Mohsen Meysami, Green, Blue, Yellow, Red.


Fozia Zahid of Blacktown was awarded the Local Artist Prize 

for Country Out of the Man, a painting that captures a quiet 

moment in Western Sydney.


“It evokes a sense of place and community that can only be 

expressed by someone who holds a personal connection to 

this place,” said the judges.


Highly commended was Belinda Sims of Lalor Park 

for Saudade: Portrait of Janet and Leo Kelly at Home, 2018

described by the judges as “a loving and endearing portrait 

of two significant community members that have contributed

 greatly to the thriving artistic community of Blacktown.”


First prize in the Aboriginal Artist category was Venessa

 Possum for Damana (Hand).


The judges commended the intimacy in the artist’s

representation and the assemblage of the piece which is “a

thought-provoking and conceptual work that challenges

perceptions of contemporary Aboriginal art practice.”


Highly Commended was Blak Douglas for Workers (for the

 Dole) Club.


The Blacktown City Art Prize is proudly supported by Ford 

Land Company, WestLink M7, Blacktown Workers’ Club and

181201_Indigenous_001.jpgBlacktown City Council’s Environmental Services.


Blacktown Arts
Blacktown Arts is a recognised leader in 

the development of contemporary arts in 

Australia. We support artistic innovation and offer exciting,

 new experiences for audiences
181201_winners_001.jpg
 through an award-winning curated

 program of exhibitions, performances,

workshops, residencies and events. We

 are committed to making dynamic, 

culturally diverse work that reflects 

Blacktown, its history and its communities. We place 

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists and communities 

at the heart of our program to develop new work drawing on 

issues of local and global significance. This is how we make 

art.
181201_Local_002.jpgThe Leo Kelly Blacktown Arts Centre is

 open 10 am – 5 pm Tuesday to Saturday

 (closed public holidays).

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