If you mention "Making A Mark" at the admission desk you can get Free Entry for Two (normal admission is £4, Concessions £3)
Below are the prizes, followed by the events - and then details of this year's 'how to enter' if you are interested in entering next year and past blog posts about this exhibition.
Unfortunately I was unable to attend yesterday's Private View due to problems with my feet (the sort that stop you being able to wear shoes!) and I'll be doing a blog post reviewing the exhibition generally just as soon as my feet stop being a problem and I can walk again!
Prizewinners
The prizewinners are listed below together with the prize they won, what it was for and a brief bio.
Winner of The Ondaatje Prize for Portraiture
Prize: £10,000 + Gold Medal - awarded for the most distinguished portrait in the Society’s annual exhibition
Winner: James Hague for Mette
Mette by James Hague |
Background to the Award
- awarded annually for the most distinguished portrait of the year
- launched in 1995
- sponsored by Sir Christopher Ondaatje CBE OC and the Ondaatje Foundation
- see past winners
- National Diploma in Art and Design (1987-1988),
- ollowed by BA Hons Fine Art - University of Northumbria at Newcastle (1989-1993) and
- an MA Painting - Royal College of Art. London (2004-2006).
His portrait of Sir Michael Caine, that he was commissioned to paint by the National Portrait Gallery as part of that prize is now in the NPG's permanent collection and regularly on display.
You can see his approach to painting portraits in a speeded up timelapse video produced for the BP Portrait Award: Next Generation Summer School in 2014.
Winner of The £2,000 Prince of Wales’s Award
Prize: £2,000 and framed certificate for a portrait in any recognised drawing medium
Winner: Anna Pinkster for Em and Bruno
Em and Bruno by Anna Pinkster |
“In this charcoal portrait of Em and her beloved cat Bruno I have endeavoured to capture a quiet, reflective moment in time as Bruno neared the end of his life.”In 1994, Anna Pinkster was awarded a first class BA degree in Fine Art by the West Surrey College of Art and Design. Since then she has exhibited largely in London , Bath and Somserset. She has been elected a member of the Bath Society of Artists
Winner of The £3,000 de Laszlo Foundation Award
Prize: £3,000 plus a Silver Medal for the most outstanding portrait by an artist aged 35 years or under
Winner: Emma Hopkins RP
Doreen Wallace by Emma Hopkins RP |
Emma Hopkins RP was born in Brighton in 1989. She completed a degree at University of the Arts London, where she was trained in the special art of Prosthetics for Performance. In the past she has also been awarded the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Award and the Bulldog Bursary. She is obsessed with the human form and anatomy amd there are echoes of Jenny Saville and Aleah Chapin in her approach to painting - which involves a lot more than achieving a likeness.
I only paint nude portraits as my work seeks to portray both mind and body in the most honest way possible. The portraits capture the memory of that person at that time, and they are works of art not objects of flattery.I love the fact she was traced in all the pregnancy stretch marks on Doreen's abdomen.
Winner of The £1,000 Smallwood Architects Prize
Prize: £1,000 for a portrait in which architectural or interior features play an important part
Winner: Michael Taylor RP for Alana - Figure with Box
Figure with Box by Michael Taylor RP |
Michael Taylor describes himself as a contemporary figurative painter. He was born in Sussex and studied at the Worthing School of Art (1969-70) and Goldsmiths School of Art (1970-73) . He has won a number of prizes - including the John Player Portrait Award (now known as the BP) in 1983 and has painted a number of notable people - including Baroness P.D.James, Julian Bream, Sir John Taverner and Lord Falconer.
Winner of The £2,000 Burke’s Peerage Foundation Award
Prize: £2,000 and framed certificate for the most classically inspired portrait in the exhibitionWinner: Paul Brason PPRP for Sarah Taylor, High Sheriff of Oxford
Sarah Taylor, High Sheriff of Oxford by Paul Brason |
I always think of Paul Brason as being the sort of portrait painter who is very popular with corporate clients.
Winner of The £2,000 RP Award
Prize: £2,000 for work best represents the year’s chosen theme – which for the inaugural year, 2018, is ‘Friends’.
Winner: Saied Dai RP NEAC for Sisters
Sisters by Saied Dai |
The Royal Society of PortraitPainters is delighted to announce a new £2,000 prize for portraiture, The RP Award. All works shown in the Annual Exhibition will be eligible. The award will be made to the artist whose work best represents the year’s chosen theme - which for the inaugural year, 2018, is ‘Friends’. The judges will be looking for the most interesting and engaging interpretation of the idea of ‘Friends’ within the parameters of portraiture.
Born in Tehran (in what was then Persia) in 1958, Saied Dai came to England at the age of six. He trained at Bournemouth and Poole College of Art and Design and was then awarded a place at the Royal Academy of Arts for his postgraduate studies. Subsequently he taught at the RA Schools during the time when Leonard McComb was Keeper and drawing was seen to be the cornerstone of all the disciplines. He now lives and works in Bath. He was elected to the RSPP in 2004 and won the Ondaatje Prize for Portraiture in 2006.
Saied Dai is one of a few artists whose work I consistently see in exhibitions on my travels.
Prize: £1,000 to the most deserving artist in the exhibition
Winner: Shawn McGovern for Jess and Hayden
So that's two cats in the list of prizewinners!
Shawn McGovern was the 2017 winner of the Ondaatje award. His art education comprised Wimbledon College of Art, BA Fine Art Painting (First Class Honours) (2010 - 2013 ) followed by the The Drawing Year Postgraduate Programme , Royal Drawing School (2013 - 2014 ).
There are RSPP members demonstrating in the Mall galleries as follows
Winner of The £1,000 Contemporary Arts Trust Award
Prize: £1,000 to the most deserving artist in the exhibition
Winner: Shawn McGovern for Jess and Hayden
Jess and Hayden by Shawn McGovern |
So that's two cats in the list of prizewinners!
Shawn McGovern was the 2017 winner of the Ondaatje award. His art education comprised Wimbledon College of Art, BA Fine Art Painting (First Class Honours) (2010 - 2013 ) followed by the The Drawing Year Postgraduate Programme , Royal Drawing School (2013 - 2014 ).
Artist Demonstrations
There are RSPP members demonstrating in the Mall galleries as follows
- Friday, May 11, 2018 - Free Portrait demonstration by Anastasia Pollard
- Wednesday, May 16, 2018 Free portrait demonstration by Andrew James
- Thursday, May 17, 2018 Free Portrait Paint-off with three artists
More about Past Annual Exhibitions
20182009-2016
- Prizewinners at the 126th Annual Exhibition of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters
- Review: Annual Exhibition of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters 2017
- Prizewinners at the 126th Annual Exhibition of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters
- Prizewinners at the 125th Annual Exhibition of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters
- Prizewinners at the 124th Annual Exhibition of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters
- Top 10 portrait painters - and a commissions checklist
- Review - 123rd Annual Exhibition of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters
- Review: Royal Society of Portrait Painters - Annual Exhibition 2013
- Royal Society of Portrait Painters - 2013 Prizewinners
- Jan Mikulka wins £20,000 SELF Portrait Prize
- Review: Royal Society of Portrait Painters - 121st Annual Exhibition
- Analysis of open entry to RSPP Annual Exhibition
- Antony Williams wins Ondaatje Prize 2012
- Review: Royal Society of Portrait Painters Annual Exhibition 2011 (Part 2)
- Review: Royal Society of Portrait Painters Annual Exhibition 2011 (Part 1)
- Review: Royal Society of Portrait Painters Annual Exhibition 2010
- Exhibition review: Royal Society of Portrait Painters 2009
- James Lloyd wins The Ondaatje Prize for Portraiture
- The ondaatje portraiture prize is re-awarded - to Tom Coates
- Portrait completed in 2 hours wins ondaatje prize
Thank you for your post on this exhibition which I thoroughly enjoyed, even though my feet were sore and I had just been round the Monet and architecture exhibition at the National Gallery!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading the details of the awards and the winners and taking another look at the paintings with my feet up!