Ignite your artistic side and take a tour of McGlade Gallery, where you will discover 68 mesmerising spiritual artworks by talented Sydney Catholic secondary students.
Sculptures, paintings, photographs and much more form part of the 2021 Clancy Religious Art Prize and Exhibition.
Sixty-eight individual and collaborative works were last year entered into the Sydney Archdiocesan competition and 14 picked up prizes on Friday 21 May.
The artworks illustrate students’ understanding of this year’s exhibition theme: ‘Celebrating 200 Years of Catholic Education in Australia’.
“I try to buy as much student work as I can; it’s good for me and for them” – Clancy Prize judge, Dr Victoria Carruthers
ABOUT THE CLANCY PRIZE
The annual Clancy Prize exhibition is a celebration of our students’ creativity and spirituality, expressed through visual arts, inspired by Cardinal Edward Clancy.
This is the 22nd year of the competition.
Taking part is a very practical way for students to mark and celebrate the bicentenary of Catholic education in Australia and, most importantly, it provides an opportunity for them to use their gifts and talents.
“To me it’s about how humanity and divinity meet, interlock and become one” – Clancy Prize coordinator, Ivanka Rancic
A JUDGES’ PERSPECTIVE
Dr Victoria Carruthers described the standard of entries as “extraordinary.”
“The quality of the work shows the quality of the teaching across Sydney Catholic schools” – Dr Victoria Carruthers
She is a senior lecturer in modern and contemporary art history at Australian Catholic University, specialising in all aspects of visual culture from the 19th century to today.
“I think that allowing students to explore all aspects of their humanity through creative expression is vital to developing empathy and understanding of human experience,” Dr Carruthers said.
Importantly, the Clancy Prize and exhibition is helping to “bring an awareness of this experience to an audience,” Dr Carruthers said.
“ACU really values the collaboration with Sydney Catholic Schools,” Dr Carruthers said.
“Last year and the year before I bought artwork from the exhibition.”
THE FULL WINNERS’ LIST
Packing Room Prize
- Year 9 Photographic and Digital Media for their artwork: Marist in name and nature (Marist Sisters’ College Woolwich)
Sponsors’ award from Eckersley’s
- Claudia Matek for her artwork: Diaspora (Domremy College Five Dock)
ACU School of Education Award
- Amelie Bald, Anya Radomir, Finn Rooney Weimers and Bella Seeto for their artwork: The Fiercest Fauves (Brigidine College Randwick)
- Anna Giannini for her artwork: Intricacy (St Ursula’s Kingsgrove)
- Stage 4 Collaborative for their artwork: This is who we are (Mary Mackillop College Wakeley)
ACU School of Arts and Sciences Award
- Year 9 Collaborative for their artwork: Red & White: MCK Now and Then (Marist College Kogarah)
- Damyana Moma for her artwork: The Spirit of Joy (Mary MacKillop Catholic College Wakeley)
- Gabriel Snooch for his artwork: Humble Bee (St Mary’s Cathedral Catholic College Sydney)
Br Kelvin Canavan Prize
- Sean Maquiran, Lily McAdam and Christina Stambolziovska for their collaborative artwork: The Lasallian Madonna (De La Salle College Cronulla)
The Brian Jordan Prize
- Jayden Gronau, Alistair Logan, Aidan McNeill, Cooper Roche, Jack Bowen and Orlando Murillo for their collaborative artwork: The Patrician Tradition (Holy Cross College Ryde)
- Sean Maguiran for his artwork: Lasallian Values (De La Salle Cronulla)
The Monsignor Doherty Prize
- Stage 4 Collaborative Portrait (Marist College Penshurst)
- For their collaborative artwork: 20 Decades (Loretto Kirribilli)
The Executive Director’s Award
- Charlotte McCaughan for her artwork: Tableland of Faith and Time (Southern Cross Catholic College Burwood)
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The Clancy Prize exhibition is showing at McGlade Gallery on Australian Catholic University’s Strathfield Campus until Sunday 30 May, 2021.