PERTH.- Sculpture by the Sea and Alcoa of Australia announced the highly regarded Western Australian visual artist Miik Green as the inaugural recipient of the Alcoa Aluminium Sculpture Award of $10,000.
The new award, which highlights Alcoas 15 years of continued commitment to supporting artists in Sculpture by the Sea, Cottesloe that use aluminium in striking and unique ways, was presented to Green for the creation of a sculpture substantially comprised of aluminium for the upcoming Sculpture by the Sea, Cottesloe 2019 exhibition.
His work Thicket 018 is a large structure of 6mm aluminium rods that will reflect and shimmer as viewers approach, creating exciting optical moments that will capture the imagination of visitors to exhibition from 1-18 March on the famous white sands of Cottesloe Beach.
Said Miik Green: My work is about opposing forces and Thicket 018 is no different, aligning natural/man-made and organic/geometric symmetries. Translating these ideas to a physical form is never a linear process, one often constrained by engineering, production and material costs. I sincerely thank Alcoa for their support of my work and patronage of the arts in Western Australia through their continued support of Sculpture by the Sea.
The award is a significant increase in the support from Alcoa to artists in Sculpture by the Sea, Cottesloe who work in aluminum.
Alcoa of Australia Managing Director Michael Parker said, Were proud to be a founding and major sponsor of Sculpture by the Sea, Cottesloe since it first graced the Western Australian coastline in 2005. The exhibition has generated far reaching community benefits for 15 years.
We are delighted to support artists to use our flagship product aluminium. Strong yet light and durable, aluminium is a perfect material for sculpture and this is a perfect exhibition to showcase our product.
This year, at least eight artists chose to work predominately with aluminium with West Australian Miik Green, a worthy recipient of the inaugural $10,000 Alcoa Aluminium Sculpture Award. Miik is a passionate advocate for contemporary art in our State and his standout sculpture embodies the versatility and artistic possibilities of aluminium.
David Handley AM, Founding Director of Sculpture by the Sea at Cottesloe and Bondi said: It is a great honour for Sculpture by the Sea, Cottesloe to host this major new national award for a sculpture made in aluminium and tremendous to see an artist of the calibre of Miik Green as the first recipient. Being a sculptor is one of the hardest art forms in which to forge a career. Major awards, of which there are few, play an important part in increasing an artists public profile while putting much needed funds in their pockets. Congratulations to Miik Green and thank you to Alcoa.
Miik Green is a visual artist and researcher living and working in Perth. He is an associate editor for two international art journals, published author and the current chair of Artsource, Western Australias peak visual arts body.
Green draws his inspiration from the microscopic aspects of nature and is currently involved in cross-disciplinary artistic collaborations that integrate the fields of science, mathematics and physics. He is interested in equilibrium, opposing force and material resistance in arts practice.
His works are held in collections such as Artbank (VIC, NSW and WA), Macquarie University, Edith Cowan University, BHP Billiton, Royal Perth Hospital, The Horn Collection, Crown Casino and in private collections interstate and overseas. Green is represented by Linton & Kay Contemporary in WA.
As a recipient of an Australian Postgraduate Award Scholarship, Green was recently awarded a doctorate in arts practice through Curtin University of Technology. He has been invited to speak on arts practice at national and international conferences, most recently in Paris, Rome and Budapest.
This year marks the 15th anniversary of Sculpture by the Sea, Cottesloe, which is Perths largest free to the public event, attracting an estimated 240,000 visitors to explore the art and creating Perths own version of the Italian passeggiata with thousands of people wandering among the sculptures on Cottesloe Beach at sunset each evening.
Thicket 018 will exhibit alongside over 70 sculptures from a broad range of Western Australia and interstate artists, as well as a large gathering of international artists from USA, Israel, China, Japan, South Korea, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Italy, Slovakia, Austria, Greece and Andorra.