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November 21 2008

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Shows a photo of the top of the Liver Building, with the Liver Bird. Copyright National Museums Liverpool.

Bold Shortlist Announced For John Moores Painting Prize

By 24 Hour Museum Staff

23/07/2008


A bold and divergent shortlist of forty paintings has been announced for the UK’s largest contemporary art prize, the John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize.

a painting showing a room interior and fireplace with two oversized porcelain dogs on the floor

Julian Brain, Special Relativity. © the artist

Organisers of the bi-annual competition, which has become a mainstay of the Liverpool Biennial, say the forty shortlisted entries demonstrate that far from being ‘old-fashioned’, painting has absorbed the legacy of conceptual art.

The forty works, which will be shown in a major exhibition at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool from September 20 2008 to January 4 2009, were selected from a record 3,222 submissions and are supposed to represent the best of the UK’s current and future painting talent.

a painting showing a black hooded figure against a backdrop of sun rays

Alex Gene Morrison, Black Bile. © the artist

“The John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize this year provides an up to the minute report on painting today,” said Reyahn King, Director of Galleries at the Walker Art Gallery. “The record number of entries demonstrates the excitement and importance of the John Moores as Britain’s pre-eminent painting prize.”

“The judges sought to select works that most reflect contemporary practice, and the resulting selection makes clear that far from being old fashioned, an artist’s decision to paint is exciting and challenging.”

Chosen by a panel including Jake and Dinos Chapman, the selected paintings range across a variety of styles and forms - from portraiture and landscape to still lives and abstracts.

Geoff Diego Litherland, my flag is better than yours. © the artist

a painting showing coloured bands against a grey background

The subject matter also draws inspiration from a disparate range of sources including the animal kingdom (Oportuno III by Georgia Hayes) and childhood experiences (The Baptism by Neil Rumming, who once witnessed a horrendous car crash, and Nought Lovely but the sky and stars by Kit Poulson, who found what he thought was a UFO as a child).

Elsewhere in the selection is Woman surprised by a werewolf by Stuart Pearson Wright who was inspired by the film An American Werewolf in London, and Cadet Congo Ganja by Tim Bailey who draws from both Heart of Darkness and Apocalypse Now.

The John Moores has a good track record of picking out talented painters and over the last 50 years the competition has given prominence to artists including David Hockney and Richard Hamilton, who both went on to find fame and acclaim after winning the prize. Peter Doig described winning the John Moores in 1993 as a pivotal moment in his career.

a photo of a group of people sitting in a room

The judging panel: art critic Sacha Craddock, artists Graham Crowley and Paul Morrison and Jake and Dinos Chapman. © NML

The judges for John Moores 25 are artists Jake & Dinos Chapman, art critic Sacha Craddock, and artists Graham Crowley and Paul Morrison, both former John Moores Prize winners.

The winner will be unveiled on September 20 at the Walker Art Gallery. The first prize is £25,000 with four runners up prizes of £2,500.

Featured Venue

Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool

Related Articles List

18/09/2008 Peter McDonald's Slasher Painting Wins John Moores Prize
03/01/2008 Liverpool Museums Predict Record Breaking Year For Liverpool 08
01/11/2007 Jake & Dinos Chapman Join Jury For UK's Biggest Painting Prize - John Moores 2008
21/09/2007 Preparations Underway For Liverpool Biennial 2008
06/04/2007 News In Brief - Week Ending May 13 2007
02/03/2007 Film Reveals Lutyens Cathedral Model Interior At The Walker

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