Rotary Art Spectacular

The Brisbane Rotary Art Spectacular is an annual art exhibition held in Brisbane, Queensland and the next will be held from 14–18 May 2018 in the Foyer of Central Plaza I on the corner of Queen and Creeks Streets in Brisbane. It is hosted by the Rotary Clubs of Stones Corner, Hamilton and Brisbane High-Rise.[1] From humble beginnings in 1979, the Rotary Art Spectacular has matured into Queensland's largest and most prestigious annual art exhibition. The exhibition has raised nearly $2 million for Brisbane Rotary community projects and local charities.[1] The event is a week-long exhibition with opening night and an online gallery. Planning for the exhibition commences immediately after the conclusion of the previous year's exhibition.

Beneficiaries

The event has raised nearly $2 million, with all profits from the event given to non-for-profit organisations. Past beneficiaries include: the Heart Foundation, ROMAC, Drug ARM and the Cerebral Palsy League of Queensland. The 2018 beneficiaries are the AEIOU Foundation and the Rotary Clubs of Brisbane High–Rise, Hamilton and Stones Corner.[2]

AEIOU Foundation

AEIOU Foundation is a not-for-profit organisation and one of Australia's leading providers of full-time early education and therapy support for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), aged two and a half to six years. Their primary objective is to enhance the lives of children with autism throughout Australia. This year will be the third year, the AEIOU Foundation will be the major beneficiary of this event.[2]

Rotary Clubs

Rotary is a worldwide organisation of more than 1.2 million people, in over 32,000 Rotary clubs situated in almost every country of the world. Rotary provides humanitarian services which enhance the quality of life. It encourages high ethical standards in all vocations and builds goodwill and greater understanding amongst all people, to advance the search for peace in the world. Each club will identify local community causes to support to maximize our local and global impact. The clubs focus their service efforts in promoting peace, fighting disease, providing clean water, saving mothers and children, supporting education, and growing local economies.[2]

Curator

Since 2015, the event's Curator has been Brett Lethbridge. He is an established artist and owner of Lethbridge Gallery in Paddington, Brisbane. A strong supporter of the not-for-profit community, Brett has coordinated a number of other art shows on behalf of charity organisations. Before 2015 the Curator was Kim Slater.

Awards

Awards are presented during opening night. These awards include a monetary prize. The awards are judged by a panel of art professionals.

Some of the awards include:

  • Best of Show Prize Sponsored by Reliance - $10,000
  • People's Choice Prize Sponsored by Aurizon - $1,000
  • Best Oil Prize - $1,000
  • Best Acrylic Prize - $1,000
  • Best Watercolour Prize - $1,000
  • Best 3D work Prize - $1,000 [3]

Past winners

2014
Prize Winner Title Method
Best of Show Juliet Mackie[4] Turquoise - Flow N/A
Best Watercolour Philip Gough[4] The Daisy Dress N/A
Best 3D Artwork David Veal[4] Dodecagon Glass Topped Dining Table N/A
Best Mixed/Other Media Cherie Durant[4] Gifts From Above N/A
Best Oil/Acrylic Otto Schmidinger[4] Forgotten N/A
2015
Prize Winner Title Method
Best of Show J Valenzuela Didi[5] Einstein two ways of reckoning' Acrylic on canvas
People's Choice Janet Carew[5] Hoppla Time' Acrylic on canvas
Best Acrylic Mary Conder[5] Last Fuel Stop Acrylic
Best Watercolour Olivia Bailey[5] Chefs' Watercolour
Best 3D work Zygmunt Libucha[5] The morning after Marble
Best Mixed/Other Medium Jan Hodgson[5] Favourite fruits Pastel
2016
Prize Winner Title Method
Best of Show Anne-Marie Zanetti [6] Mandarin 12 Mixed/Other
People's Choice Julie Christensen[6][7] Dancing Poppy 2 Mixed/Other
Best Watercolour Pat Hall[6][8] Gum Watercolour
Best Oil Kristian T Mumford[6] Alley Oil
Best 3D Carolyn V Watson[6] Homebody Mixed/Other
Best Acrylic Anita West[6] Eucalypt Blossom Acrylic
Best Mixed/Other Medium Donna Malone[6] Brothers and their Pony Mixed/Other

Company details

Details
Typenon-for-profit[1]
WebsiteOfficial website
MailPO Box 2039, New Farm, Queensland, Australia 4005
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gollark: Besides, this is slower.
gollark: I mean, this is a full program...
gollark: ```haskell#!/usr/bin/stack{- stack --resolver lts-12.13 --install-ghc runghc --package Hclip --package deepseq-}import Data.Charimport Control.DeepSeqimport System.Hclipevaluate x = x `deepseq` xmain = do input <- evaluate <$> getContents let text = concatMap toFib $ zip input [0..] setClipboard text putStr textfibs :: [Int]fibs = 0 : 1 : zipWith (+) fibs (tail fibs)toFib :: (Char, Int) -> StringtoFib (c, i) = replicate (fibs !! i) ' ' ++ [c, "\n"]```
gollark: *opened haskell*

References

  1. "From the Chair". Rotary Art Spectacular. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
  2. "Beneficiaries". Rotary Art Spectacular. Retrieved 2016-04-28.
  3. "Prizes". Rotary Art Spectacular. Retrieved 2016-04-28.
  4. "Rotary Art Spectacular". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
  5. "2015 Prizes Winners". Rotary Art Spectacular. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
  6. "Rotary Art Spectacular". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
  7. "Rotary Art Spectacular". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
  8. "Pat Hall Art". Pat Hall Art. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
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