Whilst it was an intimate affair, it provided Laurence Freedman and opportunity to meet most of the winning artists and present them with their Scholarship.
Taken from the media release NAVA issued at the time, here's some information about this year's winners and some images of their previous work.
We look forward to hearing from some of these artists in the next few weeks about their current travels.
Five Emerging Artists win Freedman Travel Scholarships
Five of Australia’s most promising young artists have been awarded the 2006 Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship for Emerging Artists. The $5,000 awards will support overseas travel to further their careers.
Travelling to China with the financial support of the Scholarship, Mimi Tong, whose work often crosses the divide between painting, architecture and traditional paper-folding, will investigate “local construction techniques such as the use of bamboo scaffolding”. Mimi will also participate in the artist-in-residence program at Red Gate in Beijing to further her investigation of contemporary Chinese urban environments.
Mimi Tong, Folding Interface, 2005
Photo credit: Cath Martin
Lori Kirk from Melbourne will join with an artist from Kyrgyzstan to erect a traditional yurt and adorn the surrounding area with agapanthus flower sculptures and other Australian popular culture icons, to create a “hybrid mix of the traditional and foreign”. The Scholarship will enable the collaborative project, Home Extension, to be developed by Lori and Kyrgyzstan artist Shaarbek Amankul (who was represented at the 2005 Venice Biennale) to be installed in the mountains of Bishkek in 2007.
Lori Kirk, Duck Activator
Photo credit: Brendan Finn
Heading to Vienna, James Hancock, from Sydney, will be using his award to participate in the artist-in-residence program at the invitation of the Austrian Federal Chancellery to further develop his city-based artworks and curatorial projects. “My fascination with what lies beneath the surface of the urban environment often leads me to collect pieces of the city to become a part of my artistic expression”.
James Hancock, Cut Here, 2004
Photo credit: Megan Hicks
Astra Howard from Sydney, will also be working with the urban environment, as part of the Cybermohalla project in Delhi, India which undertakes visual arts and social work with the slum communities of Delhi. With the money from the Scholarship, she “will extend upon previous research investigations into how city residents manipulate public spaces in order to survive”. For the duration of her project, Astra will be a resident at the established artist community of Sankriti Kendra and work with mentors at Sarai: New Media Initiative.
Astra Howard, Domesticity, 2005
Currently in Oslo, Norway, the Scholarship will enable Jade Boyd to continue investigating “the supernatural landscape”. Travelling to Norway, Iceland, Germany and Romania, Jade will research Nordic/Scandinavian mythological landscapes and areas important to Romantic history.
Jade Boyd, Untitled Video Installation
The Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship for Emerging Artists was established in 2000 and is administered by the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA). In the last 5 years it has already helped more than 30 emerging artists to broaden their perspectives through travel overseas.
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