WIGA 2012

 

How much truth can art bear? This enigmatic quotation from French philosopher Alain Badiou was the springboard for the third annual What Is Good Art? Competition and Exhibition.

Read a profile of the competition and exhibition in the Duke Chronicle here.

The distinguished panel of judges for the 2012 competition included a mix of people new to the project and a number of returning experts:

Christopher Bass, Vice President at Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P.
William Fick, Visiting Assistant Professor of the Practice of Visual Arts
Noah Pickus, Director, Kenan Institute for Ethics
Kimerly Rorschach, Director, Nasher Museum of Art
Raquel Salvatella de Prada, Assistant Professor of the Practice of Visual and Media Arts
Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Professor in Practical Ethics in the Department of Philosophy and the Kenan Institute for Ethics
Charles Thompson, Director of Undergraduate Studies, Duke Center for Documentary Studies

With a strong field, the judges chose to award two additional Honorable Mention Prizes in addition to First, Second, and Third Prizes.

Competitions winners were:

First Prize: Pinar Yoldas, Speculative Biologies
Second Prize: Nikita Yogeshwarun, Flaw
Third Prize: Rebecca Kuzemchak, Any Given Day
Honorable Mention: Yumian Deng, Musician Underground
Honorable Mention: Hannah Metaferia, Accademia

During the Opening Gala on April 13th, attendees voted for Gallery Choice prize, producing the the first-ever tie. This year’s Gallery Choice Prize co-winners are:

Carrie Arndt, Gollum
Colin Heasley, Gilt

View the Team Kenan’s curation companion guide to the exhibition here:

The full gallery is online below.

Ashley Brasier, Re-Imagining the Ellerbe Creek Watershed

Picture 14 of 21

Re-Imagining the Ellerbe Creek Watershed combines mapping and graphic arts to re-imagine this local watershed as a living and breathing organ with veins that connect it to the rest of the Earth’s lifeblood. The juxtaposition of the personified creek and the scars left by humanity persuades viewers to more ethically contemplate their relationship to this living entity. Though the images are not a truthful nor accurate representation of the landscape, they cultivate a certain truth in the minds of viewers about how they ought to live in relation to the Earth. This truth is different for each viewer, as they approach the piece with varied backgrounds, beliefs, and feelings towards environmentalism.

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