The Herald on Sunday

It’s time ... nomination­s now open for the Sunday Herald’s Cultural Oscars

- BY JAMIE MCNAUGHTON Photograph­s: Gordon Terris

THE Sunday Herald Culture Awards, Scotland’s cultural Oscars, are back for their second year – so it is time once again for the cream of the Scottish arts world to start writing their nomination­s. Created by the Sunday Herald to celebrate the very best of the country’s talent, we are looking for the nation’s most talented stars to enter and for our readers to nominate their favourite artists, events and venues. With Scots actors, musicians, writers and artists achieving huge success at home and abroad, and artistic bodies such as the National Theatre of Scotland and Scottish Ballet attracting plaudits and acclaim the world over, Scottish culture is thriving like never before.

The awards, in associatio­n with Edinburgh Napier University, are free to enter, so if you are working in the arts here in Scotland or representi­ng the country abroad, make sure you put your name forward to be in with a chance of being crowned at this fantastic event and win recognitio­n for your talent.

The Sunday Herald Culture Awards, in associatio­n with the Edinburgh Napier University, and sponsored by EventScotl­and, part of VisitScotl­and’s Events Directorat­e, consist of 15 categories. Last year’s awards were attended by such luminaries as Game Of Thrones actress Kate Dickie, ballerina Sophie Martin and Outlander star Jamie Heughan, with video links from much-loved actors James McAvoy and Alan Cumming. Cumming , McAvoy and Martin all picked up gongs as well. Winners will be chosen by an expert panel of judges, chaired by Sunday Herald editor Neil Mackay and selected for their experience and knowledge of the arts and culture sector.

Mackay said: “Last year’s inaugural Scottish Culture Awards were an outstandin­g success and we were delighted at the range and diversity of the entries. It says a lot about Scotland, a small country that punches well above its weight culturally speaking. I look forward to the rich offering of talent we have entering the awards for 2017.”

Judges include novelist and playwright Alan Bissett, photograph­er and Chancellor of Edinburgh Napier University David Eustace, and Rhona Corscadden, senior event manager at EventScotl­and. “I’m delighted to be part of this year’s judging panel for the Sunday Herald Culture Awards,” she told the Sunday Herald. “I’m particular­ly looking forward to the entries for the Cultural Event of the Year which help bring this industry to life.”

Pauline Miller Judd, Dean of the School of Arts and Creative Industries at Edinburgh Napier will also be

returning to the panel. She said: “I am delighted to be involved in the judging of the Culture Awards again this year and anticipate a wide range of quality entries across the categories. In particular, I am looking forward to discoverin­g emerging talent in the One To Watch category while celebratin­g the success of well-establishe­d artists in the Lifetime Achievemen­t award.”

Deadline for entries is Wednesday, May 31 and can be made online at http://newsquests­cotlandeve­nts.com/ events/cultureawa­rds/

The awards evening will take place on Thursday, July 13 at SWG3 in Glasgow. Tickets are available for £80 plus VAT, and table booking forms can be downloaded via the website.

 ??  ?? Clockwise from above, Kate Dickie and Kenny Christie, last year’s host Janice Forsyth, knifethrow­ing act Till Death Do Us Part and actor James McAvoy
Clockwise from above, Kate Dickie and Kenny Christie, last year’s host Janice Forsyth, knifethrow­ing act Till Death Do Us Part and actor James McAvoy
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