Fleurieu Art Prize
The Fleurieu Art Prize is a non-acquisitive award open to Australian visual artists aged 18 years and older. The prize encompasses any two- or three-dimensional artwork submissions that follow an annual thematic concept and includes a monetary gift and significant exposure for the artists and their works. Exhibitions for the prize are held in various South Australian locations, including McLaren Vale and Goolwa. The exhibitions are open to the public at places including Stump Hill Gallery, the Fleurieu Visitors Information Centre, the Fleurieu Art House and Hardy's Tintara Sculpture Park.
Origins and history
The Fleurieu Art Prize was established in 1998 in South Australia. Named after the Fleurieu Peninsula, the first exhibitions were held in the venues surrounding this area. Over the years, the Prize has undergone multiple name changes and today is known as the Fleurieu Biennale Art Prize. Founders of the Prize include artist David Dridan, vigneron Greg Trott, and businessman Tony Parkinson. Upon its founding, the Prize was funded and supported by major local wineries and other local South Australian businesses.Between 1998 and 2018, the Prize was awarded ten times. In 2016, Tony Albert was awarded $65,000 for his wall installation The Hand You're Dealt, making the Fleurieu Art Prize the richest landscape prize in the world for that year. Similarly, in 2016 the Prize was awarded in conjunction with the community-run festival exhibition, the Fleurieu Food + Wine Art Prize. The FF + WAP award requirements stipulated "any paintings with a food and wine theme" were eligible for a non-acquisitive prize of $10,000 Australian dollars and consequent exposure during the community exhibit made in concurrence with the Fleurieu Art Prize exhibition. At the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art in Adelaide, along with the Fleurieu Art Prize winner Tony Albert, Fran Callen received the Fleurieu Food + Wine Art Prize for her painting Tabletop 1. In 2018 the award was given to two artists, James Tylor and Laura Willis, for their painting Hidden Landscapes: Kangaroo Island. These artists received a monetary prize of $25,000 for their collaborative work.
Significance
The Fleurieu Art Prize has grown in prestige and cultural value over the years since its founding, bringing significant financial value to the local McLaren Vale area and South Australia as a whole. The Fleurieu Art Prize garners widespread attention from aspiring Australian visual artists, generating traffic towards the exhibitions and community-run festivals held in the McLaren Vale region. This popularity reaps economic and cultural benefits for both artists and the community; the artists can showcase their work to a large audience of their peers and a panel of critics, enabling further exposure around their artistry and helping to build a positive reputation for their careers, attracting further inflow of clients. Similarly, the winning artists are awarded non-acquisitive financial prizes, and time to exhibit their work in local galleries. The Prize incentivises local news and social media coverage, promoting tourism for South Australia, enabling visitors and participants to directly contribute to local businesses. Similarly, official pamphlets, brochures, flyers and newsletters associated with the Prize promote small and major businesses, creating more income for the local economy.However, the Prize also holds cultural value in that the central themes imposed on the artworks invite an appreciation of Australian lifestyle, landscapes, and customs. Hence, appropriate to its growth in participation and viewership, the Prize has become an inextricable thread in the fabric of the South Australian community, with business owners and artists alike relying on the award for their incomes, their careers, and to be reminded of their Australian patriotism.
Previous winners
List of winners
Winners for the Fleurieu Art Prize include:- 1998 – Robert Hannaford
- 2000 – Elisabeth Cummings
- 2002 – Joe Furlonger
- 2004 – Ian Grant
- 2006 – Ken Whisson
- 2008 – Tim Burns
- 2011 – Julie Harris
- 2013 – Fiona Lowry
- 2016 – Tony Albert
- 2018 –