Hunting Art Prize
The Hunting Art Prize is awarded annually to a Texas artist for excellence in drawing and painting. The prize of $50,000, sponsored by Hunting plc, was established in the UK in 1981 before relocating to Houston in 2006.[1]
Prizewinners
Texas
- 2016: Padaric Kolander for "You Step In" (drawing)
- 2015: Kevin Peterson for "Fire" (painting)
- 2014: Winston Lee Mascarenhas for "Rite of Spring" (painting)
- 2013: Marshall K. Harris for ""Round Up" B.F. Smith & Son Saddlery Circa 1940-1942" (graphite drawing)
- 2012: Michael Bise for "Children" (graphite drawing)
- 2011: Leigh Anne Lester for "Mutant Spectre"
- 2010: Lane Hagood for "Books I Have Possessed" (painting)
- 2009: Robyn O’Neil for "A death, a fall, a march: toward a better world "
- 2008: Wendy Wagner for "I Hope I'm Dreaming" (painting)
- 2007: Michael Tole for "Untitled (Woman)"
- 2006: Francesca Fuchs[2]
UK
- 2005: Adam Holmes-Davies for "The Sound of Silence" (oil)
- 2004: Henry Kondracki for "Little Eddie Looking North" (oil)
- 2003: Lisa Wright for "Diving" (oil)
- 2002: Nicholas Archer for "Flying Dumbo" (oil)
- 2001: Nicholas Charles Williams for "Searching III" (oil)
- 2000: Anita Taylor for "Containing Things" (charcoal)
- 1999: Gus Cummins for "Attendant Facts" (oil)
- 1998: Jennifer McRae for "What If? A Portrait" (oil)
- 1997: Martin Fuller for "Moving Figure" (oil)
- 1996: Colin Smith for "Wardrobe 8" (oil)
- 1995: Mary Griffiths for "Untitled" (oil)
- 1994: Michael Corkrey for "Fiona" (oil)
- 1993: Shani Rhys James for "Red Self Portrait" (oil)
- 1992: Dick Lee "The Wood Pile" (oil)
- 1991: Barry Burman for "Manac es" (oil)
- 1990: Gus Cummins for "Pretty Little Zygodatyle" (oil)
- 1989: Martin Churchill for "Building with Dust Sheets" (oil)
- 1988: Edward Chellfor "Across the Mill, Jarrow Steel Works" (oil); Tom Phillips for "Michael Kustow" (Oil)
- 1987: William Pullen for "Amia" (Egg tempera)
- 1986: Anthony Wishaw for "Still Life with landscape" (acrylic); Anthony Green for "The Life Drawing, circa 1961-1962" (oil)
- 1985: Charles Bone for "Puttenham Common" (watercolour); Daphne Todd for "Four Spanish Chairs" (oil)
- 1984: Jane Carpanini for "Backyards, Treorchy" (watercolour); Robert Buhler for "Vineyards, Neuchatel" (oil)
- 1983: John Gardiner Crawford for "Below the Cliffs" (watercolour); Ken Howard for "Self Portrait at South Bolton Gardens" (oil)
- 1982: F Donald Blake for "Stormy Harbour" (watercolour); Margaret Thomas for "The Rembrandt Drawing" (oil)
- 1981: Hans Schwarz for "Wills Neck, Quantocks" (watercolour); Richard Eurich for "Weymouth Bay 1980" (oil)[3]
gollark: And because the UK has similar things and "intelligence" sharing.
gollark: Because it's international surveillance, obviously.
gollark: Let me just find a constitution online, I'm not in America where these things must be everywhere.
gollark: I don't consider "constitutional" to be "ethical" and I think that it probably isn't constitutional under reasonable interpretations anyway.
gollark: You mean like it ALREADY HAS?
See also
References
- "The Hunting Art Prize". Hunting Art Prize. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
- "Previous Winners". The Hunting Art Prize. Retrieved 2017-01-17.
- "The Hunting Art Prizes (1981–2005)" (PDF). Huntingplc.com. Retrieved 2017-01-17.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.