Art Fervour

Let No Art Go Unrewarded: Awards in the Arts

After the history of recognition was decorated by royal patronage, apprenticeship and art competitions in the Summer Olympics, time lapsed to several awards that carried an immense responsibility of placing artists on their wall of fame.

Jean Jacoby, “Corner” (L) and “Rugby” (R), at the 1928 Olympic Art Competitions in Amsterdam. Jacoby won a gold medal for “Rugby”. From the collection of the Olympic Museum Lausanne. Courtesy: Smithsonian Magazine
Jean Jacoby, “Corner” (L) and “Rugby” (R), at the 1928 Olympic Art Competitions in Amsterdam. Jacoby won a gold medal for “Rugby”. From the collection of the Olympic Museum Lausanne. Courtesy: Smithsonian Magazine

Awards in the arts in the present day, although with new structures, take their inspiration from artistic rituals belonging to the past – those of providing opportunities of exchange and education like no other.

While we ponder about accolades and the impact they create in the area, let us take a quick chronological stroll through some of the most important awards and their method of amplifying artistic excellence over the centuries!

1880 – 1900

1900 – 2000

Mim Stirling, Vincent Namatjira’s “Stand Strong for Who You Are”, a portrait of Adam Goodes for which he won The Archibald Prize 2020.

While the former is an important honour for portraiture, the Bald Archy Prize awards artists creating cartoons or humorous works making fun of Australian celebrities. If you thought that was all, it is judged by Maude, a cockatoo!

A strip from the first volume of “The Poe Clan” by Moto Hagio, who received the 2016 Asahi Prize for Arts for her contribution to the art of manga. Courtesy: Gregory Kimbrell on Twitter

The President Pranab Mukherjee presenting the Padma Vibhushan Award to artist Sayed Haider Raza at an Investiture Ceremony-II at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi on April 20, 2013. Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons

Another prestigious award is that of the Lalit Kala Akademi Ratna, which was first awarded to artist Jamini Roy. It is now referred to as the Lalit Kala Akademi Fellowship, granted to visual artists.

David Summers Cook won the 2018 Turnip Prize for his entry “Colly Wobbles”. Courtesy: The London Economic

Its spoof was the “Turnip Prize”, initiated as a joke in 1999, until it became a subject of attention to many, rewarding deliberately bad modern art, including bad puns and a lack of effort.

2000 – 2020

Filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul, the winner of Artes Mundi in 2019. Courtesy: ArtAsiaPacific

With a new theme each year, the participating photographers display the power of images in visual discourses, as seen in 2019’s theme ‘Hope’, where winning photographer Joana Choumali presented it through her project, “Ça va aller”, meaning “It will be OK”.

Joana Choumali, Untitled from “Ça va aller” (2017). Courtesy: Joana Choumali

A still from the 2017 Future Generation Art Prize ceremony. Courtesy: Future Generation Art Prize

A still from the 2017 Future Generation Art Prize ceremony. Courtesy: Future Generation Art Prize

The institutions in the art circuit have amplified the presence of the arts through accolades placed in the hierarchy of human agency over fame.

They contribute to various spheres of the society at large and individual thought at an immediate level. The power they assign to the visual and experiential discourses every participating fragment emits is something even a timeline may not be able to fully consist.

Now that you’ve relived a short history of awards in the arts hall of fame, take a look at some of our favourite celebrity art collections here!

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