The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

WAMA Art Prize finalists online

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Wildlife Art Museum of Australia has launched an online Works on Paper exhibition featuring work of finalists from the inaugural WAMA Art Prize.

The exhibition features 40 works by a range of artists from across the nation engaged in the theme of art and nature.

Among the artists is Tasmanian Melissa Smith, who won the major acquisitiv­e prize of $15,000 for her work ‘Listen Deeply – Lake Sorell’.

Judges presented awards of excellence to Diane Fogwell for her work ‘The Dead Tree Scroll – Silent Extinction’; Janet Matthews, ‘Just flying through’ – red-tailed black cockatoos; and Juanita Mclauchlan, ‘Found’.

WAMA Foundation patron Glenda Lewin said she was ‘thrilled’ with the chosen artworks.

“The judges did a remarkable job of selecting some wonderful artworks that I believe the public are really going to enjoy,” she said.

“The exhibition of finalists clearly demonstrat­es the quality and diversity of work entered was simply outstandin­g and this is a fantastic result given this is the first year of the prize.”

The prize attracted more than 500 entries from across Australia.

Ms Lewin said the judging panel comprising Anne Virgo, Robert Nelson, Suzanne Davies and Jacky Healy had the ‘extremely challengin­g’ task of selecting only 40 finalists out of a remarkable body of work.

Exhibition viewers will be able to vote for their favourite artwork.

The winner of the People’s

Choice Award will receive $2500. Voting is open until October 22, with the winner announced on October 25, 2021.

People can view the WAMA Art Prize, Works on Paper exhibition online at www.wama. net.au.

Located adjacent to the national heritage-listed Grampians, Gariwerd, WAMA will be a wildlife and art precinct designed to inspire, educate and stimulate connection with nature. WAMA will boast a dedicated nature-inspired art gallery, set within botanic gardens and wetlands, that will nurture and protect rare species of plants and animals.

It will be a ‘unique tourist destinatio­n’ celebratin­g the relationsh­ip between art, science and nature.

 ??  ?? ART MEETS NATURE: Tasmanian artist Melissa Smith won the inaugural WAMA Art Prize for her work ‘Listen Deeply – Lake Sorell’. Forty artworks from finalists feature in a new Works on Paper online exhibition.
ART MEETS NATURE: Tasmanian artist Melissa Smith won the inaugural WAMA Art Prize for her work ‘Listen Deeply – Lake Sorell’. Forty artworks from finalists feature in a new Works on Paper online exhibition.

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