VIVA and Max Wyman awards announced for 2022

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      The Jack and Doris Shadbolt Foundation has announced the winners of 2022's Max Wyman and VIVA awards.

      This year's two VIVA prizes have been awarded to artists Jan Wade and Charles Campbell; UBC professor and contemporary-art curator Scott Watson received the Max Wyman Award for Critical Writing.

      The VIVA Awards—founded in 1988 to advance visual arts in B.C.—are worth $15,000 and are granted annually to mid-career B.C. artists who display "outstanding achievement and commitment" in their work.

      (In years that the Shadbolt Foundation bestows the biannual Alvin Balkind Curator's Prize, one VIVA prize is awarded; two are awarded in the subsequent year.)

      The Max Wyman award carries with it a $5,000 prize as well as a special emerald-and-gold pin designed by Robert Chaplin, a Vancouver artist and jeweller. It has been awarded by the Yosef Wosk Family Foundation in collaboration with the Shadbolt Foundation since 2021 and was founded by philanthropist Wosk in 2017 to honour Vancouver journalist, arts critic, and author Max Wyman.

      A Shadbolt Foundation release said that the award recognizes "informed and compelling writing that stimulates critical thinking, fosters ongoing discussion about the role of arts and culture in contemporary society, and demonstrates the value of creative commentary in our understanding of the world around us."

      Wade, an African Canadian painter and textile artist who creates mixed-media assemblages as well as text pieces, moved to Vancouver from Hamilton, Ontario, in 1983.

      The foundation release noted that her works—often made of recycled and found materials such as "antique buttons, coins, shells, Scrabble tiles, pop-culture figurines, and religious symbols"—are heavily influenced by the musical traditions of blues and jazz.

      Before Wade's recent solo Vancouver Art Gallery show, Jan Wade: Soul Power, she exhibited mainly in small public galleries throughout the U.S. and Canada.

      Victoria-based multidisciplinary artist and writer/educator Campbell is a former chief curator of the National Gallery of Jamaica and presently holds the title of adjunct curator with Charlottetown's Confederation Centre Art Gallery.

      Historical slavery and colonialism in the Caribbean region informs much of his work. Campbell, who was born in Jamaica and raised on Prince Edward Island, is presently studying B.C.'s Black pioneers.

      Campbell has exhibited extensively throughout North America and Europe.

      This year's VIVA jury members were former longtime Georgia Straight visual-arts critic Robin Laurence (who won the 2021 Max Wyman award), printmaker/artist Diyan Achjadi, curator Shaun Dacey, artist/educator Tania Willard, and curator Elliott Ramsey.

      UBC professor, writer, and curator Watson—who is a director emeritus and research fellow at UBC’s Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery—has won curatorial and writing awards, among other distinctions, during his more than three decades of professional work.

      The Max Wyman jury citation reads, in part, "...his informed and accessible curatorial commentaries lead the viewer not only to fresh insights about the work under discussion but also, more generally, fresh understanding of art’s relationship with contemporary society. His humane and perceptive writings...directly embody the values this award was established to honour."

      The Wyman jury consisted of Yosef Wosk, Max Wyman, and arts advocate/consultant Merla Beckerman, a former chair of the B.C. Arts Council.

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