CBCnews

Artist Rebecca Belmore wins Hnatyshyn Award

Last Updated: Monday, November 9, 2009 | 12:05 PM ET

Vancouver artist Rebecca Belmore was hailed as an inspiration to young First Nations artists. (Hnatyshyn Foundation)Vancouver artist Rebecca Belmore was hailed as an inspiration to young First Nations artists. (Hnatyshyn Foundation)

Rebecca Belmore, the Vancouver-based visual and performance artist whose dark humour helped make her an international sensation, has won the 2009 Hnatyshyn Foundation Visual Arts Award.

She was awarded the $25,000 prize on Monday for outstanding achievement by a Canadian artist.

Belmore creates work about the disenfranchised and marginalized in society, often referencing historical events. She works in sculpture, installation, video and performance.

"Since the late 1980s, Rebecca Belmore has challenged romantic conceptions of aboriginal cultures through a remarkable series of performance art pieces and mixed-media installations," said the jury that chose her as winner. It hailed her as an inspiration for young First Nations artists.

Belmore represented Canada at the 2005 Venice Biennale and has been exhibited internationally since 1987.

The Hnatyshyn Foundation also awards a $15,000 prize for curatorial excellence. That award went to Anthony Kiendl, director and curator of the Plug In Institute of Contemporary Art in Winnipeg.

Kiendl, currently an instructor at the University of Manitoba, has worked at the Banff Centre in Banff, Alta., and the Dunlop Art Gallery in Regina.

The awards, named after late governor general Ray Hnatyshyn, will be presented on Dec. 1, 2009, by Manitoba Lt.-Gov. Philip S. Lee at Government House in Winnipeg.

  •  
 

More Art & Design Headlines

Pope builds friendships with artists Video
Pope Benedict XVI met in Rome with more than 250 artists from around the world to foster dialogue between the Roman Catholic Church and the arts.
Tom Thomson winter scene set for auction
A striking, snow-covered forest scene by Tom Thomson bearing intriguing inscriptions on the back of the canvas is set for sale in Toronto on Tuesday as Canada's fall auction season gets underway.
King Tut casts magic in Toronto
King Tutankhamun has returned to Toronto. A new exhibit of artifacts related to the Egyptian boy king went on display Friday at the Art Gallery of Ontario.
Montreal to see terracotta warriors
China's terracotta warriors are coming to Montreal in 2011. The Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal will receive a rare visit of 14 of the warriors — life-sized replicas of soldiers of the Qin dynasty — it announced on Thursday.
Installation artist Jeanne-Claude dies
Artist Jeanne-Claude, who created the 2005 Central Park installation The Gates and other large "wrapping" projects with her husband, Christo, has died at 74.

More Arts Headlines

U2 will headline Glastonbury
Irish band U2 will be the top act at the Glastonbury music festival in England next June, organizers say.
Taylor Swift wins 5 American Music Awards
Michael Jackson made history by winning four American Music Awards posthumously, but he couldn't beat Taylor Swift as the year's favourite artist and the evening's top winner.
Plaskett double winner at Canadian Folk Music Awards
Joel Plaskett's triple album Three earned the Halifax singer-songwriter a double win at the Canadian Folk Music Awards on Saturday.
Kirov ballerina steps out at Cultural Olympiad
Uliana Lopatkina, principal dancer with the Kirov Ballet, will make her Canadian debut Feb. 10 at the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad
Documentary explores carbon trading business
Carbon Hunters is about a new breed of entrepreneurs working to get rich and save the planet at the same time.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

104 dead in China coal mine blast
The death toll from a Saturday mine explosion in China is now up to at least 104, and grieving family members on Monday demanded answers from officials.
Iranian-Canadian journalist talks of prison ordeal Video
Iranian-Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari says he was regularly beaten and threatened with execution while imprisoned in Iran for 118 days.
21 abducted, killed in Philippines
The Philippine army said 21 people who were taken hostage in the volatile southern part of the country have been found dead. The victims are reported to have been taken when they tried to file election nomination papers.
Separatists kill 5 soldiers in India
Separatist rebels ambushed a paramilitary vehicle Monday killing five soldiers in India's insurgency-wracked northeastern state of Manipur, an army official said.
Afghan prisoner transfers halted 'more than 1 time' Video
Canadian officials have halted the transfer of prisoners to Afghanistan's intelligence service "more than one time," because of the possibility of torture, Canada's chief of defence staff said Sunday.