Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Aimia | AGO Photography Prize Announces 2013 Short List


Jury selects four outstanding photographer finalists; public vote for
$50,000 Prize begins today



TORONTO, Aug. 27, 2013 /CNW Telbec/ – Aimia, a global leader in loyalty management, and the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) announce the four artists who have been shortlisted for the Aimia | AGO Photography Prize, Canada’s leading international contemporary photography award. The

winner of the $50,000 Prize is chosen entirely by public vote, and

online voting opens today at AimiaAGOPhotographyPrize.com and, for the first time, on the Prize’s Facebook page. Visitors to the AGO can also cast a vote inside the Aimia | AGO Photography Prize 2013 Exhibition, on view at the AGO from Sept. 11, 2013 to Jan. 5, 2014.



The finalists are: Edgardo Aragón (Mexico), LaToya Ruby Frazier (U.S.A), Chino Otsuka (Japan/U.K) and Erin Shirreff (Canada). As a group, these four artists represent a snapshot of

current directions in photography and video, in which images are used

to build powerful, complex and often personal narratives.




  • Edgardo Aragón was born in Mexico, and his work invites reflection on the history of

    violence in his homeland. Deeply engaged with political and social

    histories of Oaxaca, the province where he was born and still lives,

    his video and photography often document performance and sculptural

    interventions against landscapes that appear at once serene and

    foreboding. His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at

    institutions including Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporaneo

    (MUAC), Mexico City; MoMA P.S.1, New York; and the Luckman Gallery, Los

    Angeles
    . 



  • LaToya Ruby Frazier was born and raised in Braddock, Pennsylvania. Her work is informed by

    late 19th- and early 20th-century modes of representation in

    documentary practice. She uses the conventions of social documentary

    and portraiture to expose untold stories of post-industrial decline in
    the United States, filtered through the experiences of her own family

    and community in Braddock. Her work has been shown at the Brooklyn

    Museum; the Whitney Museum of American Art; MoMA PS1; and the New

    Museum of Contemporary Art, among others. In 2012 Frazier was appointed

    critic in photography at Yale University.



  • Chino Otsuka was born in Tokyo, Japan, and moved to the U.K. at the age of 10 to

    attend school. Often mining her own autobiography, Otsuka uses

    photography and video to explore the fluid relationship between memory,

    time and photography. She has also published four books in Japan as a

    writer and published her first autobiographical book at the age of 15.

    Her works are found in public collections including National Media

    Museum, U.K., Wilson Centre for Photography, U.K., Los Angeles County

    Museum of Art, Huis Marseille Museum for Photography and Tokyo

    Metropolitan Museum of Photography. 



  • Erin Shirreff was born in 1975 in Kelowna, B.C., and now lives and works in New York.

    Her work interweaves photography, video and sculpture to extend and

    explore the act of looking, asking questions about the often

    paradoxical relationship between time and space and the image, and the

    impact of perception on the location of meaning. Recently her work has

    been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Contemporary Art Gallery,
    Vancouver, B.C.; White Cube, London, U.K.; Agnes Etherington Art

    Centre, Kingston, Ont. Her work is also in the collections of the

    Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and the

    Metropolitan Museum of Art, among others.




A jury of three—made up of lead juror Elizabeth Smith, former AGO executive director of curatorial affairs and current

executive director of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation in New York; Urs Stahel, director, curator, and editor of Fotomuseum Winterthur; and artist Kader Attia—selected the four finalists from a long list of 14.



“The jurors were delighted with the strength and diversity of the

long-listed artists,” said Smith. “In choosing the four finalists, we

responded most to qualities that made the work fresh, powerful and

original in some way. We looked for strength, coherence and

consistency in the interplay of imagery and content and selected the

artists whose work made the most pronounced impact on all of us.” 



These artists will receive a fully funded six-week residency in Canada

next year, and their work will be exhibited at the AGO beginning Sept.11, 2013. A free public launch party will be held at the AGO that night, with

presentations by nominators and members of the jury about each of the

four artists. The following evening, Sept. 12, 2013 at 7 p.m., the four

artists will speak at a special panel event at the AGO alongside Smith; AGO associate curator of photography Sophie Hackett; and nominators Jennifer Blessing, senior curator of photography at The Guggenheim; and Helga Pakasaar, curator at Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver. Tickets to the event are available now.



The winner will receive $50,000 CDN and the three remaining finalists

will each receive a cash honorarium of $5,000 CDN. Online voting begins

today at AimiaAGOPhotographyPrize.com and is open until 11:59 p.m. on Nov. 5, 2013. For the first time, voters can also make their choice via Facebook at Facebook.com/AimiaAGOPhotographyPrize. Users who vote on Facebook can also enter for a chance to win a trip

to the winner announcement event on Nov. 7, 2013, at the AGO’s popular First Thursdays art party.



Previous winners of the Prize, formerly titled The Grange Prize, include

British photographer Jo Longhurst (2012), Gauri Gill of India (2011),

Canadian photographer Kristan Horton (2010), Marco Antonio Cruz of
Mexico (2009) and Canadian photographer Sarah Anne Johnson (2008).



For updates on the Prize, further details on the shortlisted artists and

additional information, please visit AimiaAGOPhotographyPrize.com and follow @AimiaAGOPrize on Twitter.



ARTISTS: IN THEIR OWN WORDS

“One of the approaches I use to process what is happening around me is

to use art as a tool for understanding the world.” – Edgardo Aragón



“Relentlessly documenting encounters with Grandma Ruby (b.1925-2009),

Mom (b.1959) and myself (b.1982) enables me to break unspoken

intergenerational cycles. We are wrestling with internalized life

experiences, perceptions of our-selves and familial personas developed

by sociopolitical baggage.” – LaToya Ruby Frazier



“The digital process becomes a tool, almost like a time machine, as I’m

embarking on the journey to where I once belonged and at the same time

becoming a tourist in my own history.” – Chino Otsuka



“Photographs work in two ways: they freeze a specific moment, but then

are carried forward in time and accrue these different meanings and

relationships. I think in some psychological sense that duality mimics

an experience I have of myself, my body – of being both in time and

somehow outside of it.” – Erin Shirreff



View videos of the finalists and continue the conversation at www.AimiaAGOPhotographyPrize.com.




ABOUT THE AIMIA | AGO PHOTOGRAPHY PRIZE 

The Aimia | AGO Photography Prize is Canada’s leading photography prize

and one of the largest arts and culture prize programs in the world.

The prize awards more than $85,000 directly to artists working in

photography each year, and is comprised of an annual exhibition at the

Art Gallery of Ontario, an online exhibition at

AimiaAGOPhotographyPrize.com, international artist residencies, public

programming, as well as an extensive national scholarship program.



ABOUT AIMIA

Aimia, a global leader in loyalty management, has unique capabilities

and proven expertise in delivering proprietary loyalty services,

launching and managing coalition loyalty programs, creating value

through loyalty analytics and driving innovation in the emerging

digital and mobile spaces. In Canada, Aimia owns and operates Aeroplan,
Canada’s premier coalition loyalty program, as well as a proprietary

loyalty division that designs, launches and operates new client

programs. Aimia also offers world-class data analytics through its

Intelligent Shoppers Solutions suite of tools and has a minority

position in Cardlytics, a pioneer of transaction-driven marketing in

banking. For more information, please visit: www.aimia.com.



ABOUT THE AGO

With a collection of more than 80,000 works of art, the Art Gallery of Ontario is among the most distinguished art museums in North America. From the

vast body of Group of Seven and signature Canadian works to the African

art gallery, from the cutting-edge contemporary art to Peter Paul

Rubens’
masterpiece The Massacre of The Innocents, the AGO offers an incredible art experience with each visit. In 2002
Kenneth Thomson’s generous gift of 2,000 remarkable works of Canadian

and European art inspired Transformation AGO, an innovative

architectural expansion by world-renowned architect Frank Gehry that in

2008 resulted in one of the most critically acclaimed architectural

achievements in North America. Highlights include Galleria Italia, a

gleaming showcase of wood and glass running the length of an entire

city block, and the often-photographed spiral staircase, beckoning

visitors to explore. The AGO has an active membership program offering

great value, and the AGO’s Weston Family Learning Centre offers

engaging art and creative programs for children, families, youth and

adults. Visit ago.net to find out more about upcoming special exhibitions, to learn about

eating and shopping at the AGO, to register for programs and to buy

tickets or memberships. 



The Art Gallery of Ontario is funded in part by the Ontario Ministry of

Tourism, Culture and Sport. Additional operating support is received

from the City of Toronto, the Canada Council for the Arts and generous

contributions from AGO members, donors and private-sector partners.



The AGO acknowledges the generous support of Aimia, Signature Partner of the Photography Collection Program and Founding

Partner of the Aimia | AGO Photography Prize.



SOURCE AIMIA



For further information:


For media inquiries or interview requests, please contact:


Sam Shecter
Arts Communications
sshecter@artscom.ca I 416.966.3421 x 206


Sabrina Bhangoo
Aimia
Sabrina.Bhangoo@aimia.com I 647.329.5123


Andrea-Jo Wilson
Art Gallery of Ontario
Andrea-Jo_Wilson@ago.net I 416.979.6660 x 406



Aimia | AGO Photography Prize Announces 2013 Short List

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