Szpilman Award

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Szpilman Award

The Szpilman Award is an annual art prize. It is awarded to works that exist only for a moment or a short period of time. The purpose of the award is to promote such works whose forms consist of ephemeral situations.[1] It was first presented in 2003 and is still the only award for ephemeral works worldwide.[citation needed] The prize is open for the public.

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The logo of Szpilman Award.

Background

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The Szpilman Award is initiated, financed and organized by German-based art group Szpilman. It was founded in 2003.[2] Initially only people from Germany could apply. Regulations were changed in 2004 and opened the call for Europe. The public interest in the prize raised. In 2006 Szpilman abolished any restrictions: everyone from all over the world[3] can apply now for the Szpilman Award. The winner is chosen by a panel of up to 10 independent judges including the winner of the previous year. The prize is accompanied with a dynamic cash award (sum of money collected by members of the jury parallel to the competition, called "Jackpot Stipendium"), a trip to Cimochowizna (Poland), and a challenge cup whichwill be handed over to the next prize winner in the subsequent year.[4]

Since 2008 the Szpilman Award is also running a daily bulletin about ephemeral works, called "Potz!Blitz!Szpilman!".[5]

To make ephemeral works more public and to show a greater variety of possibilities members of Szpilman Award curate exhibitions since 2006 in cities all around the world, called Szpilman Award Shows, e.g. in galleries, museums and public spaces in Austria, Germany,[6] Greenland, Israel, Italy,[7] Switzerland,[8] The Netherlands and Turkey.[9]

Winners and shortlisted artists

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More information Year, Winner ...
Year Winner Work Shortlisted Notes
2003 Julia Weidner
(Germany)
'Keep on' Shannon Bool
David Borchers
Karin Felbermayr
Stefan Hurtig
Alice Musiol
Gudrun Schuster
2004 Catrin Bolt
(Austria)
'Ausstellung in der galerie.kärnten' Shannon Bool
David Borchers & Gregor Schubert
Matthias Lehmann
Alice Musiol
Gloria Zein

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2005 Albert Heta [10]
(Kosovo)
'Embassy of the Republic of Kosova, Prague, Czech Republic' Wolfgang Breuer
C5
Sarah Ortmeyer
Michael Part
Simone Slee
Adrian Williams
2006 Martin Flemming [11]
(Germany)
'Wenn jeder denkt, es ist für alle, dann füttert niemand die Fische' Oleg Buryan
Pol Matthé
Stefanie Trojan

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2007 Doug Fishbone
(United Kingdom)

Michał Sznajder
(Poland)

'Untitled (Muslim in Cage in Freud Museum)'


'Here'
Evangelia Basdekis
Anja Brendle & Sebastian Höhmann
MeMe
Marc Nothelfer
Poison Idea

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2008 Kamila Szejnoch [12]
(Poland)
'Swing' Giorgina Choueiri
Julia Dick
Sai Hua Kuan
Kate Mitchell
Chris Richmond

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2009 Hank Schmidt in der Beek [13]
(Germany)
'In den Zillertaler Alpen' Jennyfer Haddad
Gerard Herman
Jaroslav Kyša
Roy Menahem Markovich
Alexander Thieme

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2010 Sara Nuytemans & Arya Pandjalu[14]
(The Netherlands & Indonesia)
'Treebute from Yogya' Anna Gohmert
Jennyfer Haddad
Maria Victoria Muñoz Castillo
Berndnaut Smilde
Tomas Werner

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2011 Jaroslav Kyša [15]
(United Kingdom)
'The Barrier' Jaś Domicz
David Horvitz
Petr Krátký
Jinho Lim
Péter Szabó

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2012 Miná Minov [16]
(Bulgaria)
'Bribe a Jury' Kush Badhwar
Alex Jones
Max Schranner
Amanda Wachob
2013 Luuk Schröder [17]
'Untitled' Vojtěch Fröhlich, Ondřej Mladý, Jan Šimánek and Vladimír Turner
Ilisie Remus
Marwin Rüffer
RoByn Thompson
Dominic Watson
2014 Paweł Stasiewicz [18]
'1,2,3,4' Robert Mădălin Demeter, Alexis Dworsky & Joachim Kaiser
Dávid Gutema & Dávid Mikulán
Lodewijk Heylen
Maciej Szczęśniak
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Jury

See also

References

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