An open competition that supports emerging professional artists through the publication of their work on the back cover of Art & Australia, as well as the acquisition of their work to the Art & Australia collection. Artist entries are administered by the National Association for the Visual Arts Ltd (NAVA). For further information, visit the NAVA website:
www.visualarts.net.au/grantsprizes/ripe
The winners of the award are selected by Art & Australia in consultation with its Advisory Board members Max Delany, Victoria Lynn and Nick Waterlow.
Work by the selected emerging artists is on display at the Art & Australia Project Space, at 11 Cecil Street, Paddington, open by appointment.
Del Kathryn Barton was the inaugural artist selected for the ANZ Private Bank Emerging Artists Program; her work appeared on the back cover of the Spring 2004 issue (vol. 42, no. 1). Del Kathryn Barton currently lives and works in Sydney where she is represented by Kaliman Gallery. In Melbourne she is represented by Karen Woodbury Gallery.
Melbourne artist Nick Mangan was the second artist to be selected for the program. Mangan's sculptural work appeared on the back cover of the Summer 2004 issue (vol. 42, no. 2). Mangan is represented by Sutton Gallery, Melbourne.
Astra Howard was the third beneficiary of the award. Howard is a Sydney artist, currently completing PhD studies at the College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales. You can read about Astra Howard's work in the Autumn 2005 issue of Art & Australia (vol. 42, no. 3).
The fourth beneficiary of the program was Amanda Marburg. This Melbourne artist's distinctive paintings are the end-product of an extended process involving photography and model-making. You can read about Amanda Marburg's work in the Winter 2005 issue of Art & Australia (vol. 42, no. 4).
Our fifth artist was Selina Ou, a photographer based in Sydney, who has spent time living and working in China and Japan. You can read more about Ou's engagement with concepts of consumerism, identity and everyday life in the Spring 2005 issue of Art & Australia (vol. 43, no. 1).
Jonathan Jones is the sixth beneficiary of the ANZ Private Bank Emerging Artists Program. Jones is an installation artist based in Sydney, represented by Barry Keldoulis Gallery, Sydney. You can read about his light installations in the Summer 2005 issue of Art & Australia (vol. 43, no. 2).
Christian de Vietri was the seventh artist to be selected for the program. De Vietri is a Perth-based artist who works in sculpture, photography and digital media, and is represented by Goddard de Fiddes Gallery, Perth. You can read more about his remarkably quirky style in the Autumn 2006 issue of Art & Australia (vol. 43, no. 3).
Our 'number eight' was James Lynch. Lynch is a Melbourne-based video artist who produces intriguing, dreamlike animations. He is represented by Uplands Gallery, Melbourne, and Galerie Frank, Paris. You can read more about his work in the Winter 2006 issue of Art & Australia (vol. 43, no. 4).
The ninth artist to be selected in the program is Michelle Ussher. Based in Melbourne, Michelle works primarily in watercolour and gouache, and produces delicate, striking images about nature as it relates not only to the environment, but also to human behaviour. She is represented by Darren Knight Gallery in Sydney. You can read about her work in the Spring 2006 issue of Art & Australia (vol. 44, no. 1).
The tenth artist to be selected is Rob McHaffie, profiled in our Summer 2006 issue. A Melbourne-based painter, McHaffie's peculiar canvases are skilful depictions of static kitsch: where carefully selected yet seemingly random objects and figures are placed in intriguing juxtapositions. McHaffie is represented by Darren Knight Gallery in Sydney.
The first artist to be selected for the award in its new incarnation, as RIPE, the Art & Australia ANZ Private Bank Contemporary Art Award, is Louisa Dawson. Dawson creates large-scale public sculptures using everyday objects, skewing their functions in order to reawaken the viewer to the contradictions of contemporary society. Dawson's work is profiled in the March 2007 issue (vol. 44, no. 3).
The second artist to be selected for the RIPE award is Giles Ryder. Ryder's work consists of reflective 'mirrorchromes', rolled aluminium, auto lacquer and large neon assemblages.
Art & Australia's Spring 2007 issue (vol. 45, no. 1) features the RIPE winner Mark Hilton. Hilton's vast and exquisitely detailed lightboxes belie the Melbourne artists's fascination with the darkest recesses of contemporary experience.
Helen Johnson is the RIPE Award Winner for Art & Australia's Summer 2007 issue. The Melbourne artist employs the medium of wall and paper painting.Johnson is represented by Sutton Gallery, Melbourne.
Grant Stevens is the RIPE Award Winner for Art & Australia's Autumn 2008 issue. Since graduating from Brisbane's Queensland University of Technology in 2002, the predominantly video artist has referenced footage, sound and text from Hollywood's entertainment industries to circle his own territory: the personal rhythms and riffs of popular culture.
The RIPE Award Winner for Art & Australia's Winter 2008 issue is the Sydney-based artist Jamil Yamani. In 2007 he completed his Masters in Fine Art at COFA. Yamani explores the complexities of political and cultural identity through video and sculptural installations. His work looks at experiences of exile and migration, traversing zones of inclusion and exclusion.
Ash Keating is the RIPE Award Winner for Art & Australia's Spring 2008 issue. This Melbourne-based artist intercepts and manipulates discarded waste to highlight the ecological fallout of mass-production and global capitalism. His work conjures notions of sustainable living and environmental reclamation, with a practice that spans process-based projects, public art, performance, video and painting,
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