Applications for the 2013 award are now open
Deadline: 17 March 2013
Application fee: £15
Selectors:
Richard Deacon CBE, RA: winner of the Turner Prize in 1987
Lisa Le Feuvre: Head of Sculpture Studies at the Henry Moore Institute
Jemima Brown: MTSA winner 2010/11
Rebecca Scott: MTSA trustee
The largest award of its kind in the UK, which since 2001 has celebrated and supported the work of emerging London-based sculptors, the MTSA will now be open to artists from the whole of mainland UK.
To mark this transition onto the national stage, Black Dog Publishing will be launching the book ‘Thinking is Making, Presence and Absence in Contemporary Sculpture’. The book includes essays by Martin Herbert on the changing role of the object within recent and contemporary sculpture, a short history of sculptural practice as taught at St. Martins School of Art during the 1960s and 70s by Matilda Strang (independent curator) and an introduction and commentary on each of the past winners of the award by Fiona MacDonald (curator Standpoint Gallery).
Further information and application
http://www.standpointlondon.co.uk/mtsa.html
Book launch Thinking is Making: April 2013
Exhibition at Standpoint of the 10 previous winners, plus the announcement of new award winner: May 2013
We seek to reward outstanding and innovative practice in the field of sculpture and are particularly interested in work that demonstrates a commitment to process and materials. The award is £8,000 plus the costs of presenting a solo exhibition at Standpoint Gallery.
Previous selectors have included Phyllida Barlow, Rachel Whiteread, Cornelia Parker and Cathy de Monchaux.
Standpoint is an independent artist-run project space and studios in Hoxton, London. We are a vibrant platform for the development of emerging and mid-career artists, running exhibitions, events and residencies.
The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award is central to Standpoint's charitable aims –
- to act as a platform for emerging artists outside the commercial gallery system
- to support the diversity and vibrancy of artistic production
- to promote excellence in and commitment to the artist as maker
- to provide an arena for artists’ networks and professional development
Mark Tanner trained at St Martins School of Art and was one of the first artists to show at Standpoint. The award was established on the initiative of a private charitable trust to keep alive his passion and enthusiasm for the making of art. He died in 1998 after a long illness.




























