Sentences with phrase «biennial prize»

A "biennial prize" is a reward or award that is given every two years. Full definition
This newly launched biennial prize, administered by the Munch Museum, is awarded to a visual artist of any nationality who is at the start of his or her career, no more than 40 years old, and who has proven to be exceptionally talented during the preceding five years.
This biennial prize awards US$ 50,000 to an author for their 3rd to 5th published work of fiction.
The biennial prize began in 2005, dedicated to UK - based female artists who have not yet had a solo survey exhibition.
She sat on several museum boards in the USA and in 2000 she set up the Bucksbaum Award with her family — a biennial prize that grants the winner $ 100,000 and the chance to exhibit at the Whitney Museum of American Art.
This biennial prize is rapidly becoming an important feature of the British art world's calendar: previous winners include John Akomfrah, Theaster Gates and Teresa Margolles.
The # 30,000 biennial prize, inaugurated in 2016, honours a UK - based artist who has significantly contributed to the development of contemporary sculpture; its first winner was Macclesfield - born sculptor Helen Marten.
Collectors join forces to launch new art prize Collectors Glenn and Amanda Fuhrman have partnered with Suzanne Deal Booth and Contemporary Austin museum to establish a biennial prize for artists worth $ 800,000, reports the New York Times.
The biennial prize for art and music, promoted by the Fondazione Merz, provides its winners with the opportunity to produce solo exhibitions and music initiatives at Merz exhibition venues in Turin and Switzerland.
The biennial prize, which was launched in 2000, celebrates mid-career artists whose work is judged to be «appreciably influencing the development of contemporary art in Europe» and comes with $ 50,000 (# 40,000) in prize money.
Now in its tenth year, Artes Mundi — whose first winner, in 2004, was Xu Bing — is a biennial prize with a conscience (and a # 40,000 pot, making it the UK's biggest art award), intended to celebrate artists worldwide who reflect the human condition and lived experience.
The DAM exhibition originated at the Neuberger Museum where Schutz was awarded the Roy R. Neuberger Exhibition Prize, a biennial prize given every two years to an artist for an early career survey and monographic catalogue.
The biennial prize, originally conceived by the late Lassnig before her death in 2014, will partner with a different institution for each edition to will host and curate a solo show by the winner.
A tiny church in Northumberland has beaten Antony Gormley and Canterbury Cathedral for this year's Art in a Religious Context award The biennial prize run by the charity Art & Christian Enquiry worth # 4,000, with # 1,500 each going to the artists and # 1,000 to the church.
The biennial prize, hosted by Liverpool's Walker Art Gallery, was set up by the eponymous Littlewoods tycoon in 1957.
Organised by the Victoria and Albert Museum in partnership with Art Jameel, the # 25,000 biennial prize is intended to raise awareness of new work.
The New York — based artist was nominated for the biennial prize by Shirin Neshat and is the award's third recipient.
The biennial prize is funded by a generous gift to the museum by arts professional and museum trustee Suzanne Deal Booth and administered by The Contemporary.
Established in 2004 (yet now suspended), the biennial prize also has been awarded to Jim Sanborn and Kendall Buster, both of whom are also in «K@20.»
The Gilchrist - Fisher Award is a biennial prize established in 1987 and open to all artists under the age of thirty whose work deals with the broad theme of Landscape.
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