Two Canadian and two Indian photographers shortlisted for $50,000 Grange Prize
August 31, 2011 by All Art News
Filed under Photography
TORONTO, ON.- Four photographers — two each from Canada and India — have been shortlisted for The Grange Prize 2011, Canada’s largest cash prize for photography. The winner of the $50,000 prize is chosen by public vote, which opens today and continues through October 23 at www.thegrangeprize.com. The winner will be announced at a gala reception hosted by presenting partners Aeroplan and the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) on November 1.
The finalists for The Grange Prize 2011 are:
Gauri Gill, an Indian photographer born in 1970 and based in Delhi, India, whose work documents narratives of ordinary heroism within challenging environments and includes a decade-long study of people living in marginalized communities in Rajasthan. Gill’s photographs address the twinned Indian identity markers of class and community and document the artist’s often-intimate relationships with her subjects.
Elaine Stocki, a Canadian photographer born in 1979 in Winnipeg, who works with subjects from a range of social conditions to create compositions that explore issues of race, class and gender. Her images challenge the limits of documentary photography by utilizing its techniques and conventions to express constructed, fictive narratives.
Althea Thauberger, a Canadian photographer born in 1970 and based in Vancouver, who has garnered attention over the past decade for photographs, films and video that explore her engagements and collaborations with groups of people, most often distinct social enclaves, resulting in performances of identity and self-definition that are strikingly and powerfully documented by the artist.
Nandini Valli, an Indian photographer born in 1976 and based in Chennai, India, whose carefully constructed, cinematic images of her subjects, often costumed as mythologized heroes and gods and photographed in contemporary settings, have placed her at the forefront of the emerging performance-based photography movement in India.
The four finalists were selected by a nominating jury comprising AGO acting curator of Canadian art Michelle Jacques; Wayne Baerwaldt, the acting vice president of research and academic affairs at the Alberta College of Art + Design in Calgary; Gayatri Sinha, a Delhi-based art critic and curator; and Sunil Gupta, a photographer, writer and curator born in India and living in New Delhi and London, UK.
“The artists shortlisted for The Grange Prize this year share a fascination with the human subject and, in particular, concepts of personal identity, performativity and social politics,” says Jacques. “Rooted in the documentary history of photography but complicated by contemporary questions of image-making and constructed realities, this year’s shortlist addresses vital and current topics in photography while offering the public a richly diverse selection of photographic artists to learn about, engage with and support.”
Each of the four shortlisted artists receives an international residency: this year, the Canadian nominees will travel to India, and the Indian artists will visit Canada. In addition to the $50,000 awarded to the winner, the Prize awards the three remaining shortlisted artists $5,000 each toward the creation of new work— granting a total of $65,000 to photographic artists each year.
Multiple works by all four artists will be on view at the AGO in The Grange Prize 2011 Exhibition, opening today through November 27. The exhibition also features video interviews with the artists and a voting station for AGO visitors to vote for their choice in person.
All four shortlisted artists will be at the AGO on September 7 for The Grange Prize 2011 Launch Party, a free, late-night public party at the Gallery. The celebration will feature a cash bar in Walker Court, snacks, a DJ set by Jaime Sin, and video interviews and live advocates highlighting each of the artists. The party starts at 7 pm, and Walker Court and The Grange Prize 2011 Exhibition will stay open until 10 pm.
The Grange Prize, now in its fourth year, is the only major Canadian art prize whose winner is chosen by the public. In 2010, the partner country was the U.S., and Canadian artist Kristan Horton took the prize. Mexican photographer Marco Antonio Cruz won in 2009, and Winnipeg-based artist Sarah Anne Johnson won in 2008, when the partner country was China.
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