VIENNA.- Peter Pakesch, Chairman,
Maria Lassnig Foundation, announced today that Glasgow-based artist Cathy Wilkes (b. 1966, Belfast, Ireland) has been awarded the Maria Lassnig Prize. Wilkes is the first artist to receive the biennial award, which was established in June 2016 to honor the achievements of mid-career artists.
The Maria Lassnig Prize was originally envisioned by pioneering Austrian artist Maria Lassnig before her death in 2014 at the age of 94, at height of her artistic powers. Having achieved recognition only later in life, she hoped to encourage the efforts of fellow career artists not yet familiar to the public. Each prize granted in her name will carry an award of 50,000 euros and a solo exhibition organized by a designated institution that has collaborated with the Foundation and a selection committee to choose a winner. For 2017, that institutional partner is MoMA PS1, New York, which in 2014 presented Lassnigs first comprehensive American museum survey to universal acclaim. The exhibition was organized by Peter Eleey, MoMA PS1 Chief Curator, who served on this years inaugural Maria Lassnig Prize selection committee with Peter Pakesch; noted curators Matthias Mühling and Hans Ulrich Obrist, both members of the Foundations Board of Directors; Laura Hoptman, Curator of Painting and Sculpture, The Museum of Modern Art; Sheikha Hoor Al-Quasimi, President, Sharjah Art Foundation; and noted New York- based artist Zoe Leonard.
Peter Eleey, who will curate Cathy Wilkes exhibition at MoMA PS1, has written of the artist: Since the start of her career in the 1990s, she has created sculptural tableaux that engage with the rituals of life. Regularly employing quotidian products and residual materials drawn from her domestic life, Wilkess installations connect the banalities of daily existence to larger archetypes of birth, marriage, child-rearing, and death. This combination of the personal and universal parallels a meditation at the heart of her work, in which Wilkess art enacts an exercise in empathy, exposing deeply felt subjective experiences to reach beyond herself while also insisting upon the fundamentally private nature of artmaking.
Eleey added, in representing aspects of her internal and domestic worlds, Wilkes evokes Maria Lassnigs celebrated method of body awareness, through which Lassnig sought to depict the way her body felt to her from the inside, rather than attempting to illustrate it from without. The only true things are my own sensations, Lassnig noted, which transpire within the house of my body.
Cathy Wilkes lives and works in Glasgow, Scotland. She represented Scotland at the La Biennale di Venezia in 2005 and participated in the International Exhibition of the Biennale in 2013. She was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2008. A survey exhibition presented at Tate Liverpool, UK, in
2015, traveled to Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz, Austria, and Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach, Germany (2015-2016). Recent solo exhibitions have been presented at The Renaissance Society, University of Chicago (2012); Gesellschaft für aktuelle Kunst, Bremen (2011); Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh (2011); and Kunstverein, Munich (2011).
Maria Lassnig is today viewed as a fiercely unique and significant figure in the history of modern art, said Peter Pakesch. But her risk-taking work did not receive international attention until quite late in her life and after decades of struggle. She was always engaged in the efforts of other artists as a teacher and peer, and in her last years spoke of hoping to find some way to acknowledge those at mid-career longstanding artists whose work deserves broader attention and appreciation. With this in mind, the Maria Lassnig Foundation established the Maria Lassnig Prize in her spirit of encouragement. The unique structure of the prize is a key element in realizing Marias wishes: by collaborating with a leading international institution, we are able to ensure the broadest possible platform for the prize winner. We are delighted to bestow the inaugural prize on Cathy Wilkes, and are particularly honored that our first institutional partner is MoMA PS1, which presented Lassnigs first major U.S. museum exhibition.