Tag Archive for 'john moores'

John Moores Prize Registration Deadline Extended

COMPETITION DEADLINE EXTENDED

Last chance to enter Walker Art Gallery’s major art prize

The last chance to register for Britain’s biggest contemporary painting competition, John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize 2010, has been extended until 17:00 on Monday 22 February 2010.

With a first prize of £25,000 (cash prize) and four further prizes of £2,500 each for the runner’s up, this is one of the most illustrious events in the British art world.

For the first time entrants can register online at www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/johnmoores

Juror Ged Quinn, a Liverpool born artist who exhibited in John Moores 25 in 2008 says: “I am very proud to join the jury of the John Moores Prize. The competition has such an important pedigree that curators and cultural workers alike, look to it to determine what is going on in British painting. It galvanises attention to the medium of painting.  Also it provides a crucial platform for artists to compete with their peers, vital to their ongoing development.”

The judging will take place throughout 2010 and will result in an exhibition at the Walker Art Gallery from 18 September 2010 to 3 January 2011, forming a central part of the Liverpool Biennial. This year the popular Visitors’ Choice prize will award its winner £2010.

The jurors form a strong team of experience and expertise, with former Royal Academy Exhibitions Secretary Sir Norman Rosenthal joined by contemporary artists Goshka Macuga and Gary Hume, Liverpool-born artist Ged Quinn and painter Alison Watt.

The John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize is an open submission competition available to all UK-based artists working with paint. Previous winners have included David Hockney, Peter Doig and Michael Raedecker.

Littlewoods founder Sir John Moores, a keen painter, started the exhibition in 1957. In the last 50 years nearly 2,000 artists have exhibited. More than 100 people have sat on the jury including singer Jarvis Cocker, writer Germaine Greer and artists Peter Blake, Tracey Emin and Jake and Dinos Chapman. The Moores family remain involved through the Walker’s partnership with the John Moores Liverpool Exhibition Trust.

You can now follow the progress of the competition at: http://twitter.com/JohnMoores2010.

REMINDER – Deadline to Register For John Moores Prize is 19 Feb 2010

FINAL CALL FOR ENTRIES
Last chance to enter Walker Art Gallery’s major art prize

The last chance to register for Britain’s biggest contemporary painting competition, John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize 2010, is Friday 19 February 2010.

With a first prize of £25,000 (cash prize) and four further prizes of £2,500 each for the runner’s up, this is one of the most illustrious events in the British art world.

The judging will take place throughout 2010 and will result in an exhibition at the Walker Art Gallery from 18 September 2010 to 3 January 2011, forming a central part of the Liverpool Biennial. This year the popular Visitors’ Choice prize will award its winner £2010.

The jurors form a strong team of experience and expertise, with former Royal Academy Exhibitions Secretary Sir Norman Rosenthal joined by contemporary artists Goshka Macuga and Gary Hume, Liverpool-born artist Ged Quinn and painter Alison Watt.

The John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize is an open submission competition available to all UK-based artists working with paint. Previous winners have included David Hockney, Peter Doig and Michael Raedecker.

The final deadline for artists to register is 19 February 2010 – online registration can be found on www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/johnmoores.

Images must be sent in by 5 March 2010 and winners will be announced at the opening of the exhibition.

Littlewoods founder Sir John Moores, a keen painter, started the exhibition in 1957. In the last 50 years nearly 2,000 artists have exhibited. More than 100 people have sat on the jury including singer Jarvis Cocker, writer Germaine Greer and artists Peter Blake, Tracey Emin and Jake and Dinos Chapman. The Moores family remain involved through the Walker’s partnership with the John Moores Liverpool Exhibition Trust.

Entries have to be original, new or recent paintings within a set size, designed to hang on walls, by someone who lives, or is based, in the United Kingdom. Full conditions are on the website. Judges will see all shortlisted artworks at Stage 2 of the judging process.

You can now follow the progress of the competition at: http://twitter.com/JohnMoores2010

Sir Norman Rosenthal joins jury for UK’s largest painting prize

More details of the John Moores 2010

CALL FOR ENTRIES FOR JOHN MOORES CONTEMPORARY PAINTING PRIZE OPEN
Sir Norman Rosenthal joins jury for UK’s largest painting prize

Artists have the chance to win prize money of £25,000 by entering the John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize 2010 from 9 November 2009.
This year’s jury sees former Royal Academy Exhibitions Secretary Sir Norman Rosenthal joined by contemporary artists Goshka Macuga and Gary Hume, Liverpool-born artist Ged Quinn and painter Alison Watt.

The John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize is an open submission competition available to all UK-based artists working with paint. Previous winners have included David Hockney, Peter Doig and Michael Raedecker.
www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/johnmoores

The judging will take place throughout 2010 and will result in an exhibition at the Walker Art Gallery from 18 September 2010 to 3 January 2011, forming a central part of the Liverpool Biennial.

Reyahn King, director of art galleries at National Museums Liverpool, says: “The John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize provides a first prize of £25,000 and is a unique opportunity for artists to show their work in a major gallery.”

Littlewoods founder Sir John Moores, a keen painter, started the exhibition in 1957. In the last 50 years nearly 2,000 artists have exhibited. More than 100 people have sat on the jury including singer Jarvis Cocker, writer Germaine Greer and artists Peter Blake, Tracey Emin and Jake and Dinos Chapman. The Moores family remain involved through the Walker’s partnership with the John Moores Liverpool Exhibition Trust.

The final deadline for artists to register is 19 February 2010online registration can be found on www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/johnmoores.

Images must be sent in by 5 March 2010 and winners will be announced at the opening of the exhibition.
Entries have to be original, new or recent paintings within a set size, designed to hang on walls, by someone who lives, or is based, in the United Kingdom. Full conditions are on the website. Judges will see all shortlisted artworks at Stage 2 of the judging process.

Juror’s Biographies

Gary Hume
Gary Hume was born in Kent in 1962 and lives and works in London and upstate New York, USA. He is renowned for paintings distinguished by a bright palette, reduced imagery and flat areas of seductive colour. Hume first received critical acclaim with a body of work known as the ‘Door’ paintings. His recent solo shows include Kunsthaus Bregenz (2004) and the Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover (2004). Recent group shows include Tate Britain, London (2004) and Louisiana Museum, Denmark (2004).

Alison Watt
Alison Watt was born in Greenock in 1965 and studied at Glasgow School of Art from 1983-88. From 2006 to 2008, Watt was the Associate Artist at The National Gallery in London, the youngest artist in the scheme’s history. Her solo exhibition ‘Phantom’ (2008) explored her enduring fascination with one particular painting in their collection, Zurbaran’s ‘St. Francis in Meditation’ (1635-9). In 2003, she was shortlisted for the Jerwood Painting Prize and was awarded an OBE in 2008.

Ged Quinn
Ged Quinn was born in Liverpool in 1967. He studied at Ruskin School of Drawing, Oxford and Slade School of Fine Art. He has had many solo shows including ‘Utopia Dystopia’ at Tate St Ives (2004) and ‘My Great Unhappiness Gives me a Right to your Benevolence’ at Wilkinson Gallery, London (2007). His painting ‘There’s a House in my Ghost’ was exhibited in the John Moores 25 exhibition in 2008. He also exhibted work at Tate Liverpool as part of the Liverpool Biennial during the same year.

Goshka Macuga
Goshka Macuga was born in Poland in 1967 and lives and works in London. She studied at Wojciech Gerson School of Art, Warsaw; Central Saint Martins School of Art, London; and Goldsmiths College, London. Goshka Macuga has been nominated for her solo exhibition ‘Objects in Relation’, ‘Art Now’ at Tate Britain and her contribution to the 5th Berlin Biennial for Contemporary Art. In 2008 she was nominated for the Turner Prize and in 2009 exhibited work at the Venice Biennale.

Sir Norman Rosenthal
Sir Norman Rosenthal was born in Cambridge in 1944 and is a freelance curator and writer. He became Exhibitions Secretary of the Royal Academy of Arts in 1977, where he stayed for 30 years, overseeing loan exhibitions and working with distinguished curators. Sir Norman Rosenthal has already been awarded the highest Honours and Decorations from the Italian Republic, Federal Republic of Germany, French Republic and the Federal Republic of Mexico. In 2009 he contributed an essay to the Anish Kapoor exhibition catalogue which was written to accompany the artist’s show at the Royal Academy.

John Moores 2010 competition – Call for entries

jm2010-logo

Liverpool museums – John Moores 2010 competition | Call for entries | Walker Art Gallery.

Interesting – Same colours as our Liverpool Art Prize!

Call for entries

The John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize attracts a broad spectrum of artists and no preference is given to levels of experience or particular practices of painting. The works are selected anonymously from an open submission by the jury, who also award the main prizes.

In 2010 a first prize of £25,000 will be awarded along with four further prizes, each of £2500. In addition, the winner of the popular visitors’ choice prize of £2010, will be announced towards the close of the JM2010 exhibition. There is an entry fee of £25, which is non-refundable.

Please read the conditions of entry and ‘how to enter’ before registering. Please do not submit images until you have received Confirmation of Registration.

Register online:

Register by post:

Walker – John Moores Prize 25. Ends 4 Jan 2009

Walker – John Moores Prize 25

We thought this ended on December 23rd! Either we got it wrong or its been extended but anyway it means you still have time to see it – if you haven’t already.

Call for entries to John Moores 24

TRACEY EMIN AND SIR PETER BLAKE TO HEAD UP JURY FOR BRITAIN’S BIGGEST PAINTING COMPETITION
Call for entries to John Moores 24 exhibition of contemporary painting at the Walker Art Gallery

From 1 November 2005, artists can register for Britain’s biggest contemporary painting competition – the John Moores 24 exhibition of contemporary painting (16 September to 26 November 2006) With a jury featuring two of the biggest names in British art, next year’s exhibition looks set to be the most exciting show ever.

The often quirky and always unpredictable exhibition at the Walker Art Gallery – an integral part of Liverpool Biennial 2006 – is an open submission competition available to all UK-based artists working with paint.

Judges for the competition include conceptual artist Tracey Emin, artist Sir Peter Blake, former John Moores prizewinner Jason Brooks and curator of fine art at the Walker Art Gallery, Ann Bukantas. The fifth judge has yet to be announced

Sir Peter Blake was one of the leading figures in the development of British Pop art, incorporating imagery from modern culture into his work, including comic books, consumer goods and advertisements. Perhaps his most recognised work is the cover for The Beatles’s album, Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. He remains one of the most significant and influential painters in the UK.

Tracey Emin rose to fame with works such as My Bed (1998/99) and Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963-1995 (1994) that explore episodes in her life. Emin was last in Liverpool to unveil Roman Standard (2005) her first ever public sculpture in the grounds of the Anglican Cathedral in February 2005.

Jason Brooks was a prizewinner in John Moores 20 (1997) and was also included in John Moores 21 (1999), the same year in which he won the NatWest Art Prize. In 2004 he was selected to show in John Moores 23 where his painting ‘Cortina’ was purchased by the Walker for its collection.

In addition to an outright first prize of £25,000 there will be four prizes of £2,500 each. Initial judging will be by slides – one painting per artist with up to two slides of that painting. This will lead to a short-list of up to 500 works which will then be called in for judging and from which the final selection will be made. The £1000 ‘visitors’ choice’ prize, which proved very popular and provoked great debate during the 2004 exhibition, makes a welcome return.

Julian Treuherz, keeper of art galleries, says: ‘Despite predictions that painting is no longer the medium of choice for today’s cutting edge artists, the John Moores prize exhibition, generously supported by the Moores family, continues to demonstrate that painting is still one of the liveliest and most creative options open to today’s artists.’

The deadline for artists to register is 17 February 2006 – registration forms can be obtained through www.thewalker.org.uk/johnmoores24 or from the Walker Art Gallery. Slides must be sent in by 1 March 2006. Winners will be announced at the opening of the exhibition which runs from 16 September to 26 November 2006.

Entries have to be original new or recent paintings within a set size, designed to hang on walls, by someone who lives, or is based, in the United Kingdom. Full conditions are in the entry pack. Littlewoods founder Sir John Moores, a keen painter, started the exhibition in 1957.