LUXEMBURG ART PRIZE " 12 FINALISTS"

LUXEMBURG ART PRIZE " 12 FINALISTS"

Γράφει η Μαίρη Κονταρούδη - Μπαζιώνη, Οικονομολόγος Επικοινωνιολόγος.

Στις 30/9/2020 η επιτροπή της πινακοθήκης Grand Duchy of Luxembourg ανακοίνωσε την επιλογή 12 καλλιτεχνών απο τους 423 που υπέβαλαν τις προτάσεις τους και την 1/1/2021 θα απονεμηθεί στον νικητή το βραβείο των 50.000 ευρώ. 
Στην συνέχεια του άρθρου ακολουθούν οι φωτογραφείες των επιλεγμένων καλλιτεχνών το έργο τους και λίγα λόγια για αυτούς.

Monika Bulaj portrait 1

Monika Bulaj

54, Italy and Poland. Photography.

2nd entry
Self-taught
“My work concerns minorities in danger, nomads, and pilgrims. I look for places that serve as bridges located at cultural and spiritual borders, at the crossroads of forgetting minorities, relating the weakest beliefs and traditions, their fragile resistance, as well as their openness to dialogue.”

“The boat. Sierra Leone”, 2020. Hahnemühle print. Variable dimension

Ann Carrington portrait

Ann Carrington

58, United Kingdon. Sculpture.

Master’s from Royal College of Art, London
“My sculptures tell stories with everyday objects; using a variety of found objects is a fundamental element of my work. My metallic flower bouquets form a modern-day memento mori.”

“Snowball in Delft,” 2020. This work was created from welded and brazed spoons and from metal cutlery. 73 x 58 x 58 cm (29 x 23 x 23 in.)

Sara Genn portrait

Sara Gen 

48, Canada (British Columbia) & USA (California). Painting

BFA, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
“According to the principles of the Japanese aesthetic wabi-sabi, objects and experiences increase in beauty when they evoke a feeling of spiritual desire. These paintings also strive to offer a space for visual pleasure with objects that occupy the space in a way that blurs the signifiers of genre, art, and monuments.”

“The moon woke me up fifteen times,” 2020. Acrylic on canvas in the artist’s frames. 155 x 485 cm (61.5 x 191 in.)

Dieudonné Gottfried Zola portrait

Dieudonné Gottfried Zola

23, Congo (Kinshasa). Painting

Student
“My work focuses on highlighting visible minorities, otherness, and the body and its relationship with space. The representation of the body in this duality that encompasses it; between vulnerability and vehemence.”

 

“Florian,” 2020 – Oil on canvas – 89 x 146 cm (35 x 57 in.)

Mayumi Inoue portrait

 麻由美 井上 (Mayumi Inoue)

 32, Japan. Mixed media techniques

Graduate in fashion design, Faculty of Arts, Joshibi University of art and design
“As part of my approach, the hair lost by cancer patients during their treatment is collected, then woven into works of art to give it a second life. The memories of each are woven into the hair which becomes proof of existence, symbols of life.”

“Thread of Life – Guy #3,” 2019 – Hair weaving – 25 x 25 cm (10 x 10 in.)

Daniela Romanesi portrait

Daniela Romanesi

 44, Brazil. Photography.

2nd entry
Self-taught
“I express myself though nature macro photography. This technique represents one of my personality traits: curiosity. After taking this photo, I felt delivered from anxieties that were provoked by my husband’s heart attack, which he has now recovered from.”

 

“Arterial IX”, 2016 – Print photography on paper – 90 x 60 cm (35 x 24 in.)

Lionel Sabatté portrait

Lionel Sabatté

44, France. Mixed media techniques

Graduate of the National School of Fine Arts in Paris
“The realm of the living as well as the transformation of material due to the passage of time are at the heart of my work. I cultivate material that carries within it the trace of a living thing: dust, ash, coal, dead skin, tree stumps…These elements are combined with unexpected material and works are thus created.”

 

“Red fortune and sub cutaneous,” 2019 – Oil on canvas. 130 x 130 cm (51 x 51 in.)

Julian Semiao portrait

Julian Semiao

23, France. Painting.
2nd entry
Master’s in fine arts from the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne
“Having been influenced by the raw strength of are and by the vitality of neo-expressionism and free figuration, I draw my sources of inspiration into spontaneous and engaged pop art. I’m showing my vision of a contemporary society that is constantly in motion.”

“Exile,” 2019 – Acrylic on canvas. 190 x 165 cm

Tim Smith portrait

Tim Smith

41, Canada (Manitoba). Photography
Graduate in Photojournalism – Western Academy of Photography – Victoria, BC, Canada
“I built relationships of trust with the Hutterite communities of western Canada over the course of the last ten years. Their culture continues to be preserved thanks to their deliberate separation from the dominant society and their system of financial self-reliance. They represent perhaps the most successful attempt at community life in modern history. The selected work is the portrait of Justin after his second day of slaughtering thousands of laying hens. The work is hard, and most of the able members of the colony must participate.”

“Portrait of Justin Hofer,” 2015. Digital photography. Variable dimension.

Marc David Spengler portrait

Marc David Spengler

24, Germany. Painting
Studies in communication design from the National Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart
“I focus on illustrations and abstract compositions. My creative approach includes creating abstract worlds via the spontaneous painting process. Each of my images is created without drawing pencil on paper, because the first sketch is generally the best and must therefore become the final image. This approach has made me both a creator and an observer.”

“Untitled,” 2020 – Acrylic on paper. 25 x 26 cm (10 x 10 in.)

Aiste Stancikaite portrait

Aiste Stancikaite

32, Lithuania. Drawing
Vilnius Academy of Fine Arts, Lithuania
“At the origin of each drawing, I decompose the image into its most basic forms in order to progressively reconstruct layers of details over the work in its entirety. By using only one color, I can escape from the traditions of realism and direct myself towards a more unconventional style of contemporary drawing with surrealist undertones.”

“Her eyes were emerald green,” 2020. Colored pencil drawing on paper. 59 x 42 cm (23 x 16.5 in.)

Anibal Vallejo portrait

Anibal Vallejo

22, Colombia. Painting
Graduate of Visual Arts, Antioquia University, Medellin, Colombia and graduate in Costume Creation, Colombian College of Design, Medellin, Colombia.
“I am interested first and foremost in the fundamentals of painting: color, shape, composition, movement, and area. In the selected work, the hand-embroidered drawing exorcizes my creative process that lasts for hours, for days, almost like a mantra that completes the pictorial language by giving the painting a third dimension.”

“Sin Título, #537” (Untitled, #537), 2018. Acrylic and hand embroidery on canvas. 200 x 150 cm (79 x 59 in.)