At the revamped National Portrait Gallery on Tuesday evening, Egg Tempera painter Antony Williams was announced as the winner of the very prestigious £35,000 Portrait Award - now sponsored by Herbert Smith Freehills, a law form and long time sponsor of the NPG.
We were all very thankful to return to the formal Awards Ceremony, given the
combination of the refurbishment of the National Portrait Gallery and Covid
meant we hadn't had an Awards Ceremony since 2015 - and five years is a very
long time to wait....
I'll comment on the differences I
noticed in a future post - but first the awards....
The HSF Portrait Award opened to the public at the NPG today and continues until 27th October 2024. It is however not where it used to be due to the reconfiguration of the gallery. You'll find it at the far end of Floor 2. It's free to enter.
HSF Portrait Award - First Prize (£35,000): Antony Williams
Winner of the Herbert Smith Freehills Portrait Award 2024
Jacqueline with Still Life by Antony Williams RP NEAC
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I had a chat with him recently and told him that I confidently predicted he would win. He does after all fall very neatly in to the category of one type of winner - who is selected on a regular basis over the years and has previously won either second or third prize - or the Young Artist Award. I simply could not see him being shortlisted for an award this time and not winning (although Michael Gaskell will attest to the fact it does happen!). I have to say I was much more confident that he would win than he was, although that might be because he's had so many entries accepted which have not won! He does know I crunch the numbers though....
As I remarked in my blog post about the Shortlist for The Portrait Award 2024 Antony had become the last of "the regulars" who has been not yet won this Award.
The next day I got a pic of him with his winning painting of one of his regular models and some of the still life which he paints regularly. I thought it was a really interesting composition. It presents a really interesting interrelationship between the different objects in the picture plane and enhanced the potential for narrative explaining how they came about.
Jacqueline with Still Life with Portrait Award Winner 2024
- Antony Williams Egg Tempera on wooden board;
1222cm x 668cm (48 inches x 26 inches)
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The Judges were impressed with Williams confidence and mystery of the egg tempera medium. They felt the composition was nuanced and surprising. The painting sustains your attention, encouraging the viewer to unpack and make sense of the connections between Jacqueline and the still life elements in the background, creating an intriguing and enigmatic portrait.
More about egg tempera
I now know where I went wrong when I did an egg tempera course at the V&A! Below I've listed the egg tempera posts I've written for all those now interested in the media who want to know more - which also references famous paintings in egg tempera- Egg Tempera Class at the V&A: The support and the drawing
- Egg Tempera Class at the V&A: the pigments and the grinding
- Egg tempera class at the V&A: painting with egg tempera
- plus An egg tempera day - which is about a workshop with another egg tempera painter
Second Prize (£12,000): Isabella Watling
The second Prize of £12,000 was awarded to Isabella Watling for Zizi.
I correctly predicted she would win second prize. I was sorry I missed her at the Press View yesterday. Every time I looked across as her she was talking with someone - and then I looked across and she had gone.
Isabella Watling receiving her award for Second Prize |
Zizi by Isabella Watling oil on canvas, 1900mm x 220mm |
‘Zizi’ by Isabella Watling depicts the artist’s friend and was painted
while her sitter was finishing a Master's Degree in Textiles.
The Judges were instantly struck by Watling's portrait an the assertion of the sitter Zixi's presence. Although the work is a clear homage to the Old Masters, both through the materials and methods used and the choice of the sitter's pose, the sitter's piercings, tattoos and oversized jewl;aary pulls the viewer into the present day. The result is an excellent portrait that straddles both historic and contemporary portrait making.
Third Prize (£10,000): Catherine Chambers
The Judges admired Chambers use of bold and vibrant blocks of colour. They were also moved by the tender and intimate depiction of the sitter, with the artist providing a window into a moment of vulnerability.
Catherine Chambers with her painting which won Third Prize
Lying by Catherine Chambers
oil on canvas, 765 x 1130mm (30 inches x 44inches)
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The Young Artist Award (£9,000): Rebecca Orcutt
Rebecca Orcutt wins the £9,000 Young Artist Award for her self-portrait Before It’s Ruined (or an Unrealized Mean Side). Her painting is a self-portrait.
The Young Artist of the Year Award was won by Rebecca Orcutt for Before It’s Ruined (or an Unrealized Mean Side) (oil on canvas, 610 x 455mm) |
The Judges were taken by Orcutt's experimental and punchy use of symbols such as the oversized coat and spider web to create a surreal and performative image. These carefully chosen symbols, alongside her tense facial expression and gritted teeth, reveal a sense of fragility, amounting to a brave and moving artist's self-portrait
Selected Artists - BP Portrait Award 2015.
Her self-portrait is about "a specific moment of despair" and questions the lengths we might go to in order to shield ourselves from the pain of potential loss.
The Travel Award
More about the HSF Portrait Award
- my next post will be about artists with their paintings - on Sunday or Monday (this has been updated)
- followed by a list of the ten paintings I liked the best and a commentary on the exhibition. This will be published next week as I'd like to go back and see the exhibition again before commenting further.
- posting photos on my Making A Mark Facebook Page and will be
- trying to create a video of a walk around the walls of the exhibition.
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