Friday, April 20, 2012

TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL ART AWARDS



2012 Art Awards

DAYTON Jacobs
Jacobs #16 "Blue Skies" 
Oil, acrylic, resin and paper decal 
on birch panel, 24 x 14 
Heineken Audience Award 
Documentary

Peter Dayton


Peter Dayton was born in New York City and lives and works in East Hampton. His work pays homage to the high culture of post-painterly abstraction and the popular culture of surf art. He received a BFA from Tufts University in 1979. He has held solo exhibitions such as Greetings From Pleasantville,Dear Mr. Grey, P-111, Black Boards White Chicks, andBeginning of an Era in New York and outside the state in Massachusetts, Colorado, and Texas. He has participated in numerous group exhibitions across the country since the late 1980s. Dayton’s work is held in the public collections of the Parrish Art Museum, South Hampton, New York; Chanel USA, New York; Chanel Ginza, Tokyo, Japan; Neiman Marcus; Denver Art Museum; Museum of Fine Art, Houston, Texas; Green Point Bank, Brooklyn, New York; Phillip Morris & Co., New York, New York; RNR Corporation, New York, New York; Teleflora, Los Angeles, California; and Guild Hall Museum, East Hampton, New York.

Walton Ford NANTES
Nantes, 2009
aquatint and drypoint on paper,
image: 39 3/4 x 29 7/8 inches
Best Narrative Short

Walton Ford


Walton Ford was born in Larchmont, New York and lives and works in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. His monumental watercolors expand the visual language and narrative scope of traditional natural history painting, meditating on the often violent and bizarre moments at the intersection of human culture and the natural world. Although human figures rarely appear in his paintings, their presence is always implied. Ford’s work is included in a number of collections, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Whitney Museum of American Art. A survey of Ford’s work was organized by the Brooklyn Museum in New York in 2006 and traveled to the San Antonio Museum of Art in Texas and the Norton Museum of Art in Florida in 2007. Last year, Ford’s mid-career retrospective traveled from the Hamburger Bahnhof Museum Fur Gegenwart in Berlin, to the Albertina in Vienna and to the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark. Taschen Books has issued three editions of his large-format monograph, Pancha Tantra.


Study: A Recent History of Art in Southern California
(Mass MoCA #169), 
2012

polished acrylic on panel
8 x 20 inches
TAA Creative Promise Award 
Narrative

Stephen Hannock


Stephen Hannock is an American luminist painter known for his atmospheric landscapes and incendiary nocturnes. He has demonstrated a keen appreciation for the quality of light and for the limitations of conventional materials and techniques for capturing it. His experiments with machine-polishing the surfaces of his paintings give a trademark luminous quality to his work. The larger vistas also incorporate diaristic text that weaves throughout the composition. His design of visual effects for the 1998 film What Dreams May Comewon an Academy Award®. His works are in collections worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Whitney, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. Hannock recently received an honorary doctorate in fine arts from Bowdoin College. Stephen is represented by the Marlborough Gallery.

KEEVER Waterfall
Waterfall 104f, 2010
c-print, image: 39 x 31 inches
Student Visionary Award

Kim Keever


Kim Keever was working on his graduate degree in thermal engineering when he realized art was the true love of his life. He moved to New York in 1980 and still lives and works in the East Village. In 1995 Keever began making his signature work through setup photography. He began building landscapes and objects out of plaster and many other materials and submerging them into water in a large tank. These new environments create a special diffused glow with the use of paint pigments suspended in the water. In the last year Keever has been in four museum exhibits: Otherworldly at the Museum of Arts and Design, New York, There were Mountains, Sunsets, and Ocean Shores at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art; 25 American Artists at the Gyeongnam Museum of Art, South Korea; andDeconstructing Nature at the Hunterdon Museum in New Jersey. He also had a solo exhibit at the Charles Bank gallery in New York City and the David B. Smith gallery in Denver. Keever is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, and Brooklyn Museum of Art in New York, as well as the Hirshhorn Museum and George Washington University Gallery in Washington, DC.

ROSS Harmonium
Harmonium Mountain V, 2011
archival pigment print on
Hahnemuhle paper, 27 1/2 x 36 1/2
Best Documentary Short

Clifford Ross


Clifford Ross began his career as a painter and sculptor after graduating from Yale in 1974 with a degree in both art and art history. In 1995, he turned his attention toward photography and other media. Clifford invented and patented the “R1” camera in 2002 and made some of the highest resolution large-scale landscapes in the world. His work is in numerous public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, among others. He is represented by Sonnabend Gallery, New York. In 2009, a 10-year survey of his photographic work was exhibited at the Austin Museum of Art, and an exhibition of his Mountainand Hurricane series opened at the MADRE/Museo Archeologico in Naples, Italy. Among other projects, a survey exhibition is scheduled for the Museum of Image and Sound in São Paulo, Brazil for 2012. His current work includes a stained glass wall for the federal courthouse in Austin, Texas, and Harmonium Mountain, an animated, computer-generated landscape video with an original score by Philip Glass.

SAWAYA Acesnsion
Ascension
plastic bricks, 52 x 14 x 16
Heineken Audience Award
Narrative

Nathan Sawaya


Nathan Sawaya is a New York-based artist whose work focuses on large-scale sculptures using only toy building blocks: LEGO® bricks to be exact. For years, Nathan’s touring exhibit—The Art of the Brick®—has entertained and inspired millions of art lovers and enthusiasts around the globe. It is the only exhibition focusing exclusively on LEGO as an art medium. The creations, constructed from nearly one million pieces, were built from standard bricks beginning as early as 2000. Born in Colville, Washington and raised in Veneta, Oregon, Sawaya studied law at NYU and became an attorney before realizing he would rather be sitting on the floor expressing himself with LEGO. Today Sawaya has more than 1.5 million colored bricks in his New York art studio. His ability to transform LEGO bricks into something new, his devotion to scale and color perfection, and the way he conceptualizes the action of the subject matter, enables him to elevate an ordinary toy to the status of fine art. Sawaya’s art form takes shape primarily in 3-D sculptures and oversized portraits. He continues to create daily while accepting commission work from around the world.

 
Untitled, 1980/2000
two sepia tone photographs,
10 x 8 inches
25.4 x 20.3 cm
(MP# MPs-) 
Courtesy of the artist and
Metro Pictures
Best New Documentary Director

Cindy Sherman


Cindy Sherman lives and works in New York. Throughout her career, Sherman has appropriated numerous visual genres—including the film still, centerfold, fashion photograph, historical portrait, and soft-core sex image—while disrupting the operations that work to define and maintain their respective codes of representation. A major retrospective of her work opens at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in February and will travel to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, and the Dallas Museum of Art. Sherman has also had retrospective exhibitions at the Boijmans van Beuningenin Musuem in Rotterdam (1996), Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles (1997), Museum of Modern Art in New York (1997), and Jeu de Paume in Paris (2007). Other solo exhibitions include the Whitney Museum of American Art (1987), Basel Kunsthalle (1991), Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC (1995), and Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin (2006). Among her awards are the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Award (2003), National Arts Award (2001), and a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Award (1995). Sherman has participated in many international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale (1982, 1995) and five Whitney Biennial exhibitions.

TILLMAN The Echeverria
The Echeverria, 2008
lambda print on Fuji matte paper,
ed. 6, 30 x 40 in. 76.2 x 101.6 cm
TAA Creative Promise Award
Documentary

Hugo Tillman


Hugo Tillman is a photographer and portraitist who creates based on a deep conversation with an environment and a cast of characters not his own. He received his MFA from the Pratt Institute in 2004 and has been participating in group exhibitions since 1999 at the Shanghai Biennale, Guangzhou Photo Biennale, The Today Art Museum, the Birmingham Art Museum, MoMA P.S.1, the National Portrait Gallery in London, the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, the Galleria Arte Mexicana in Mexico City, and the Berlin Biennale. His solo exhibitions include His solo exhibitions include Upper Class at the Marina Kessler Gallery and Chinese Contemporary andDaydreams of Mine at Nohra Haime Gallery, all in New York, as well as Film Stills of the Mind at F2 Gallery in Beijing, Mind Games at Louis Vuitton Gallery in Hong Kong, Film Stills at Elementa in Dubai, and Impressions of Being at Corso Venezia 8 in Milan. Among Tillman’s honors are the Pratt Circle Award for Outstanding Academic Achievement, the Schweppes Photographic Prize, and the Magenta Foundation’s Flash Forward. Tillman also works withL’Uomo Vogue as a photographer.


An Unpeopled Land in Uncharted Waters, 2010
Portfolio of 6 etchings with aquatint,
sugar-lift, spit-bite and dry-point
(c) Kara Walker; Courtesy of Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York
Best Documentary Feature

Kara Walker


Kara Walker is known for her candid investigation of race, gender, sexuality, and violence through silhouetted figures that have appeared in numerous exhibitions worldwide. Her major survey show, Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love, premiered at The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis in 2007 before traveling to ARC/Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris, The Whitney Museum of American Art, and The Hammer Museum in Los Angeles. Other recent solo exhibitions have taken place in Warsaw, Poland; Málaga, Spain; and Deurle, Belgium. She participated in the 52nd Venice International Biennale in 2007 and was the United States representative to the 25th International São Paulo Biennial in Brazil in 2002. Walker is the recipient of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Achievement Award, the Deutsche Bank Prize, and the United States Artists Eileen Harris Norton Fellowship. Her work is included in numerous museums and public collections, including The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Tate Gallery, London; the Centro Nazionale per le Arti Contemporanee, Rome; and Deutsche Bank, Frankfurt. She lives and works in New York City.


Red Top, 2012
Oil on linen, 20 x 20
Best New Narrative Director

Stanley Whitney


Stanley Whitney is a painter and visual artist whose investigation of color is primordial. As Bob Nickas states in his book Painting Abstraction: New Elements in Abstract Painting, “In the work of Stanley Whitney, color and structure, two fundamental aspects of abstract painting, become color asstructure.” Whitney was born in Philadelphia and received his BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute and his MFA from Yale University. He is represented by Team Gallery in New York and Christine Koenig Gallery in Vienna, Austria. Whitney has shown frequently in the United States and Europe. He was recently included in a three-person show at the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art in Overland Park, Kansas, and also had work featured in The Jewel Thief at the Tang Museum in Sarasota Springs, New York (2010-2011). Whitney’s work is part of museum and private collections worldwide. Whitney currently lives and works in New York City and Parma, Italy, and is a professor emeritus of painting and drawing at Temple University’s Tyler School of Art. In 2011, Whitney became the first recipient of the Robert De Niro, Sr. Prize. His most recent exhibition, at Team Gallery in New York, runs from March 29 – April 28.


The Wrinkles of The City,
Los Angeles, Carl revealed on wood
, 2011

60 x 60 inches, Ink on Wood
Founder's Award for
Best Narrative Feature

JR


JR exhibits freely in the streets of the world, catching the attention of people who are not typical museum visitors. In 2006, he created Portrait of a Generation, portraits of suburban “thugs” that he posted, in huge formats, in the bourgeois districts of Paris. This illegal project became “official” when the Paris City Hall wrapped its building with JR’s photos. In 2007, with Marco, he made Face 2 Face, the biggest illegal exhibition ever. JR posted huge portraits of Israelis and Palestinians face to face in eight Palestinian and Israeli cities. In 2008, he embarked on a long trip forWomen Are Heroes, in which he underlines the dignity of women who are often the targets of conflicts, and started The Wrinkles of the City. In 2010, his film Women Are Heroes was presented at Cannes. In 2011 he received the TED Prize, after which he created Inside Out, an international participatory art project that allows people worldwide to get their picture taken and paste it to support an idea and share their experience—so far more than 60,000 people from more than 102 countries have participated. JR remains anonymous and doesn’t explain his huge full-frame portraits; he leaves the space empty for an encounter between the subject and the passerby. That is what his work is about, raising questions...

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