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An image from One Hundred Days at 7pm 2015.
An image from One Hundred Days at 7pm 2015.
13 November 2015

Victorian artist Fiona McMonagle has been awarded one of Australia’s most prestigious art prizes, Õ¬Äе¼º½’s National Self-Portrait Prize 2015.

The award was judged by  Curatorial Manager of Australian Art Jason Smith.

The winner was announced at the opening of the National Self-Portrait Prize exhibition at the on Friday evening, 13 November.

Fiona McMonagle’s winning artwork, One hundred days at 7pm 2015, is a single-channel, 16-second video animation of 100 self-portraits. The artist painted a single portrait at 7pm every day over 100 days.

“To me, ‘becoming’ is the process of change and moving forward, and I wanted to translate these ideas into an artwork that had a fluidity about it,” she said.

“As a medium, watercolour lends itself very nicely to the moving image, but the challenge was to keep my self-portraits as consistent as possible by using a restricted palette and a restricted number of brushes.

“I also didn’t allow myself to view the previous portrait when making the next.

“The process itself turned out to be an intrinsic part of the work. The ritual of painting one’s self-portrait at the same time every day was an exercise in self-discipline and a test of my painting skills.”

Mr Smith said self-portraits did not allow an artist to divorce themselves from their subject, and it had been a poignant and challenging process to judge artworks with such captivating qualities and personal backstories.

“Judging art prizes is never easy, but I kept coming back to Fiona McMonagle’s work, not only because it addressed the theme of ‘becoming’ in many ways, but it also did so in a way that drew me to her process of constant looking and observation.

“I think perhaps this distinguishes one self-portrait over another,” he said.

“Fiona is well known for her lyrical watercolours, so it was also intriguing to see how she has pushed her practice into the realm of animated film. It was a remarkable transformation that resulted in a poetic, mesmerising and wonderfully alternative view of the artist.

“For me, transformative artworks always are more than the sum of their parts.

“It sustains the viewer until the end and, for some indefinable reason, keeps driving you back to it. Fiona’s work achieves this and she has produced a quiet but complex, poetic picture of herself.”

Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum Director Dr Campbell Gray said 30 artists at the forefront of Australian visual arts practice were invited to vie for the acquisitive prize, responding to the theme of ‘becoming’.

“It is wonderful to see these diverse and innovative responses to the theme by some of Australia’s most senior artists and many exciting newcomers,” Dr Gray said.

“The self-portrait is an important focus area for both collection development and exhibitions at Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum through our National Collection of Self-Portraits, and Fiona McMonagle’s work makes an important addition to the Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Collection.”

The $50,000 invitation-only acquisitive prize is a biennial event, curated this year by National Portrait Gallery former Deputy Director Mr Michael Desmond.

Õ¬Äе¼º½ National Self-Portrait Prize 2015 will be on display at the Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum at Õ¬Äе¼º½’s St Lucia campus until 13 March 2016.  Admission is free.

Participating artists:
Khadim Ali (NSW/Pakistan)• Jacqueline Bradley (ACT) • Jon Cattapan (VIC)• Bindi Cole Chocka (VIC) • Michael Cook (QLD) • Janet Dawson (NSW)• eX de Medici (ACT)• Julia deVille (VIC/NZ)• Fiona Foley (QLD)• Julie Gough (Tas) • Emily Hunt (NSW) • Guan Wei (NSW/China) • Marie Hagerty (ACT) • Nicholas Harding (NSW/UK) • Anna Hoyle (VIC) • Lindy Lee (NSW)• James Lieutenant (ACT)• Hilarie Mais (NSW/UK) • Fiona McMonagle (VIC/Ireland) • Dan Moynihan (VIC) • John Nixon (VIC) • Patricia Piccinini (VIC/Sierra Leone)• Andrew Sayers (VIC/UK) • Tanya Schultz (WA)• Pamela See (QLD) • Tyza Stewart (QLD)• Christian Thompson (SA/UK)• Kensuke Todo (ACT/Japan)• Philip Wolfhagen (TAS)• Judith Wright (QLD)

Peoples’ Choice Award: Visitors to the exhibition will be invited to cast their vote in the Peoples’ Choice Award.

Public program, Saturday 14 November 11am - 1pm: Join Art History lecturer Dr Sally Butler, artist Jon Cattapan and curator Michael Desmond as they discuss contemporary self portraiture, followed by artist talks by NSPP winner Fiona McMonagle, Jacqueline Bradley, Julia deVille, Guan Wei and John Nixon.

Media: Sonia Uranishi, +61 409 387 623, sonia@soniauranishicommunication.com or Sebastian Moody, +61 7 3346 8761, s.moody@uq.edu.au.

Fiona McMonagle’s CV is available ; the judge’s comments video is available (password NSPP2015); and high-resolution images of the artworks are available for download .

The winning artwork is .