Arts

The 2023 Sobey Art Award shortlist is here

Each nominee has a chance to win Canada’s largest art award worth $100,000, which will be handed out in November.

Five artists will vie for the $100,000 prize. The winner will be chosen in November

Photo composite of the 2023 Sobey Art Award finalists presented in a square grid of purple and teal squares. Text reads: "sobey art award 2023."
Left to right from top, the shortlist finalists for the 2023 Sobey Art Award are Kablusiak, Anahita Norouzi, Séamus Gallagher, Michèle Pearson Clarke and Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill. (Sobey Art Award)

Five artists from across Canada are now one step closer to winning the Sobey Art Award, a $100,000 prize and one of the most prestigious accolades an artist can achieve in this country. 

The shortlist was revealed Monday morning by the National Gallery of Canada and the Sobey Art Foundation, and per tradition, each nominee represents a different home region. 

The finalists are:

Séamus Gallagher (Atlantic)

Photo of a person wearing a costume of folded paper, posing at the centre of the frame in a constructed backdrop of greenery and rocks. The costume is in primary colours and resembles a toddler-toy of stackign rings. the model's face is a painted mask, suggesting glam drag makeup. They hold a stack of primary coloured paper balls on their head.
Seamus Gallagher. A Slippery Place 3, 2019. Inkjet print. 101.6 x 152.4 cm. © Seamus Gallagher (Seamus Gallagher)

Anahita Norouzi (Quebec)

Photo of 11 sculptures installed on a white plinth. the sculptures are iris flowers made of black glass.
Anahita Norouzi. What It Is in a Name, 2022. Eleven glass sculptures of mutated irises, each approximately 12.7 x 25.4 x 45.7 cm. © Anahita Norouzi (Paul Litherland)

Michèle Pearson Clarke (Ontario)

Composite photo. Four photo portraits edited side by side. Each is a medium shot depicting a different person standing in front of a floral backdrop. They each face the camera and appear to be singing.
Michèle Pearson Clarke. Still from Quantum Choir, 2022. Four-channel 4K video (12 min., 46 sec.) installation with soccer balls and training cones. 4.8 x 4.8 metres. © Michèle Pearson Clarke (Michèle Pearson Clarke)

Kablusiak (Prairies and North)

Photo of various objects on a white backdrop: roll of candies made of soapstone, colourful poster with illustration of broken pinata, buttplug-shaped keychain, temporary tattoos of hearts, smiley faces and balloons.
Kablusiak. Surprise Bag|Party City (where you belong), 2022. Soapstone candies, miniature wall hanging, keychain, stickers, temporary tattoos and archivally printed bag. Dimensions variable. © Kablusiak (Philip Kanwischer/Norberg Hall)

Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill (West Coast and Yukon)

Photo of a bulbous tube-like sculpture made of brown panthose stuffed with tobacco, sitting on a white plinth.
Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill. Exchange, 2019. Pantyhose, tobacco, cigarettes, thread, tobacco flowers, soft-drink tabs, spider charm and hair clip. 16 x 33 x 55 cm. © Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill (Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill/Unit 17/Cooper Cole)

Before the winner is announced in November, the NGC will open a group exhibition featuring work by this year's shortlisted artists. That show will appear in Ottawa Oct. 13 through March 3, 2024. In addition to the exhibition, the five finalists will also receive $25,000.

"The breadth of practices this year represents the multifaceted texture and strength of contemporary artistic talent in this country," said Jonathan Shaughnessy, NGC's director, curatorial initiatives, who is also the chair of the 2023 Sobey Award Jury. (That independent jury, which is comprised of six curators, will ultimately select this year's winner.)

"From the longlist to the short, each of this year's artists are deserving national and international recognition," Shaughnessy continued. "The work of the five finalists present views on many urgent matters of our time, including 2SLGBTQ+ solidarities and representation, as well as critical questions regarding diasporic experience and Canadian identity." 

"We all stand to gain from their perspectives that are propelled through a lens attuned to creativity, aesthetics and innovation." 

Founded in 2002, the Sobey Art Award was previously reserved to Canadian artists under 40, a rule that was abandoned in 2021. 

In 2022, the prize went to Winnipeg artist Divya Mehra, and previous winners include Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory (2021), Kapwani Kiwanga (2018) and Brian Jungen (2002).

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