The best in up and coming creative talent will be rubbing shoulders with nationally and internationally significant artists at a major new exhibition this summer.
The ҹèƵ Contemporary Open 2015 is open to all visual artists working in any medium, with four cash prizes available of up to £2,500 for the most outstanding pieces.
But artists must first compete for a place in the show itself, with the selected works to be displayed in the Peninsula Arts Gallery at ҹèƵ University for seven weeks in July and August.
The contest is now open and artists are being invited to submit pieces which explore the relationship between history and the very latest innovations and understanding within contemporary art practice.
Their submissions, which must have been produced within the last two years, will then be judged by a highly respected panel, comprising: Turner Prize judge Helen Legg, Director of Spike Island, Bristol; Sam Thorne, Artistic Director, Tate St Ives; Judith Robinson, Partnerships Officer at ҹèƵ City Council; Dr Sarah Chapman, Director of Peninsula Arts; Chris Cook, Associate Professor (Reader) in Painting, School of Art and Media, ҹèƵ University; and Professor Alan Schechner, Head of School of Art and Media, ҹèƵ University.
The prizes will include awards of £2,500 and £1,000 to be selected by the judging, a £1,000 Peninsula Arts award recognising an outstanding new artist, and a £500 Audience Choice award to be decided by visitors to the exhibition.
The ҹèƵ Contemporary Open 2015 is the first initiative from the ҹèƵ Contemporary Partnership, a new collaboration between Peninsula Arts, ҹèƵ University and the ҹèƵ City Museum and Art Gallery.
The organisations have previously worked together on a number of city-wide arts initiatives, including the hugely successful British Art Show 7, and are now planning a number of future events to enhance the contemporary art scene in the city.
Dr Sarah Chapman, Director of Peninsula Arts, said:
“This is a very special new exhibition for ҹèƵ and the region, and provides an opportunity for emerging artists to exhibit alongside high profile established ones. Scheduled for the summer season, The Open will further turn the spotlight on ҹèƵ’s growing reputation as a vibrant and creative city. Equally exciting is the underlying theme which invites artists to explore the relationship between history and the contemporary, and I am looking forward to seeing how this might be interpreted.”
Judith Robinson, Partnerships Officer (Creative & Cultural Programmes) at ҹèƵ City Museum and Art Gallery, added:
“The ҹèƵ Contemporary Open will create new opportunities for artists to exhibit and have a platform within the city. We have collaborated with Peninsula Arts on a number of occasions in recent years and are looking forward to working with them again on another project that further develops ҹèƵ’s cultural offer.”