Mari Funaki award : and the WINNERS are …. – EXPO at Gal. Funaki (AU) – 13 Aout-13 Sept. 2014 -
The results of the Mari Funaki Award for Contemporary Jewellery are in:
the winner of the prize for an established artist is Kiko Gianocca with his series of 3 necklaces, ‘Veneer’.
The two emerging winners are Patricia Correia Domingues with her pendant from the ‘Duality’ series, and Sara Gackowska with her ‘Membrane’ brooch from the ‘Methamorophosis’ series.
The judges were also very impressed with the work of Inari Kiuru (emerging) and Jiro Kamata (established) and gave each a commendation. It’s been a wonderful night and congratulations to all!
The « Mari Funaki Award for Contemporary Jewellery » EXHIBITION runs until September 13.
Mari Funaki was a unique and passionate advocate for contemporary jewellery in Australia, both through her own remarkable practice and her establishment and directorship of Gallery Funaki.
This Award aims to celebrate Mari’s legacy by rewarding the skills and vision of jewellers both here and overseas and by providing a platform for outstanding new work to be shown here in Australia. A panel of three judges will award prizes in both established and emerging categories, with total prize money valued at AUD$11,000.
The judges are:
Warwick Freeman, an eminent New Zealand jeweller who has exhibited with Gallery Funaki since 1995. He is the recipient of the Francoise van den Bosch Prize (2002) and the Bayerischer Staatpreis ‘Modern Classic’ (2013).
Simon Cottrell, a prominent Australian jeweller and educator and currently acting head of the Gold and Silversmithing Workshop at ANU, Canberra. Cottrell has an extensive exhibition history and his work is held in numerous international collections.
Julie Ewington, a leading Australian art specialist with almost 40 years experience as an academic, writer and curator. Most recently Curatorial Manager at Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art, she has a particular interest in contemporary jewellery and has written extensively on the topic, most recently in the 2013 Lark publication, ‘Contemporary Jewelry in Perspective’. She was recognised this year with an Australia Council for the Arts Visual Arts Award.
The Award is generously supported by Vivienne and Leo Donati, Johannes Hartfuss and Fabian Jungbeck
And the winners are…
In the established category, the judges chose Kiko Gianocca’s Veneer necklaces.
There are two winners in the emerging category. The first is Patrícia Correia Domingues with her pendant from the Duality series.
The second emerging prize goes to Sara Gackowska for her Membrane brooch from the Methamorphosis series .
In the emerging category, the judges also gave a commendation to Inari Kiuru’s two brooches from the Evolution series (right), saying “this commendation recognises the conceptual adventurousness of her project, which takes her across diverse materials to explore the inter-connectedness of natural and urban systems.”
And a commendation in the established category went to Jiro Kamata, for his Spiegel necklace (right). The judges said “this classical graduated necklace is composed of camera lenses and mirrors that bring viewers into the very substance of the piece. But, note, everyone who sees themselves will do so from a different perspective. This, in combination with its impeccable making, comprises its simple elegance.”
We extend warm congratulations to all the winning artists and thank everyone involved in the exhibition, which received an overwhelmingly positive response on this, its opening night.
Veneer 1, 2 and 3 are deceptively straightforward titles, but we found that the pieces evoke many different associations and interpretations. They move and shift on the body, with their beautiful hinging adapting to the wearer. This is exceptional work.”
The second emerging prize goes to Sara Gackowska for her Membrane brooch from the Methamorphosis series .
Patrícia Correia Domingues with her pendant from the Duality series. (‘Duality’, 2014, pendant, artifical ivory,)Of this work, the judges said: “Patricia’s work Duality plays with oppositions between chance and deliberation – if you look at the piece, you’ll see that it seems highly structured – it’s a frame of artificial ivory, but she has embraced the possibilities of chance in fracturingthat form.”
Ela Bauer (PL/IL/NL) — Alexander Blank (DE) – Conversation Piece (SE) — Hermien Cassiers (BE) — Jane Dodd (NZ) – Patrícia Correia Domingues (PT/DE) — Benedikt Fischer (AT/DE) — Emi Fukuda (JP/DE) — Sara Gackowska (PL) — Kiko Gianocca (CH) — Marcos Guzman (AU) — Jo Hawley (GB/NZ/AU) — Therese Hilbert (CH/DE) — Lucie Houdková (CZ) — Linda Hughes (AU) — Kaori Juzu (JP/DK) — Jiro Kamata (JP/DE) — Inari Kiuru (FI/AU) – Jun Konishi (JP) — Lore Langendries (BE) — Carlier Makigawa (AU) — Gitte Nygaard (DK/NL) – Martin Papcun (CZ/DE) — Nelly van Oost (FR/BE) — Thanh-Truc Nguyen (DE) — Mette Saabye (DK) — Michihiro Sato (JP) — Helen Shirk (USA) — Blanche Tilden (AU) — Julia Walter (DE/NL) — Reinhold Ziegler (NO)
Gallery FUNAKI
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