-- Advertisement --

                           

-- Advertisement --

Canadian Art

Canadian Art Writing Prize Winner Announced!

Released July 22, 2010

We are delighted to announce that UK-based writer, curator and artist Pandora Syperek has won the 2010 Canadian Art Writing Prize. As winner, Syperek will receive $3,000 and will write a feature story for an upcoming issue of Canadian Art.

The Canadian Art Writing Prize is a national competition designed to encourage new writers on contemporary art. The jury—Canadian Art editor Richard Rhodes, Toronto critic Sarah Milroy and Calgary curator Wayne Baerwaldt, director of the Illingworth Kerr Gallery at the Alberta College of Art and Design—chose Syperek’s submission from a competitive field of 25 applicants.

“I heard about the Canadian Art Writing Prize as a subscriber to the magazine and through email bulletins and decided that I should apply,” says Syperek, who is currently undertaking a PhD in the history of art at University College London. “I hope that winning the prize will lead to more writing opportunities with relevant publications. It is a real honour to be recognized in this way and by a jury of such high calibre.”

Originally from Toronto, Syperek holds art history degrees from York University and Concordia University. Until recently, she coordinated the visual art residency program at the Banff Centre, and prior to that she worked in the curatorial department of the Walter Phillips Gallery, where she co-curated the exhibition “Radio Free Banff” with Naomi Potter. Previously, she worked as an educator at York University, a curatorial apprentice at the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec and a research assistant at Concordia University.

The two runners-up are Vancouver artist Deirdre McAdams and Montreal artist Vency Yun, who is researching her thesis exhibition in Marseille, France. Each runner-up will receive $1,000.

For more information about the Canadian Art Writing Prize, please visit canadianart.ca/writingprize.


 

FOUNDATION NEWS

More Foundation news

ONLINE

  • Will Munro: Ecstatic Legacies

    In 2010, at the age of 35, Toronto artist/DJ/promoter/activist Will Munro succumbed to brain cancer. Here, David Balzer reviews the first big survey of Munro’s work, which makes apparent how talented, prolific and perceptive this creator was.

  • Painting Canada: Artistry in the UK

    The Dulwich Picture Gallery’s recent Group of Seven show was one of the UK museum’s biggest hits ever, drawing 41,000 visitors. The attention was deserved, writes Sarah Milroy, as the exhibition offered new insights even to seasoned Canadian-art observers.

  • David Altmejd: In the Belly of the Beast

    The Occupy movement has galvanized the way we think about haves and have-nots. But where do artists fit in? As Joseph R. Wolin observes in this review of David Altmejd’s show at the Brant Foundation, context can be as powerful as content in determining the split.

  • A Stake in the Ground: When Language Wounds

    What happens to identity when our relationship to land and language is disrupted? This is a key question raised in “A Stake in the Ground,” an exhibition of works by 25 First Nations artists, curated by Nadia Myre, that’s currently at Montreal gallery Art Mûr.

  • Canadianartschool.ca: Tips for a Successful Winter Term

    Our education and careers site has just posted more stories and tips to help students achieve a great winter term. Highlights include a profile of internationally renowned fashion designer Jeremy Laing, a Q&A on grad schools and more.

More Online

- Advertisements -



- Advertisements -
Report a problem