Archibald: Vincent Namatjira named art prize's first Aboriginal winner

3 years ago 511

Published2 minutes ago

image copyrightAGNSW

image captionVincent Namatjira's painting of himself and sporting champion Adam Goodes

Australia's most prestigious award for portraiture has been won by an Aboriginal artist for the first time in its 99-year history.

Vincent Namatjira, 37, claimed the annual Archibald Prize for a painting of himself and Adam Goodes, a champion Aboriginal Australian Rules footballer.

Last week another painter, Meyne Wyatt, became the first Aboriginal artist to win a secondary prize.

Namatjira is the great-grandson of celebrated artist Albert Namatjira.

Previous Archibald winners include some of Australia's most acclaimed artists, including Brett Whiteley, John Olsen, Wendy Sharpe and Ben Quilty.

"To be the first Aboriginal artist to win is really special," Namatjira said after the announcement.

"I feel like this is a very important moment in Australian art."

His entry, titled Stand Strong For Who You Are, was chosen from a record 1,068 submissions by the Art Gallery of New South Wales' board of trustees.

"Vincent's work shows how much portrait painting still has to say and what strong voices our Indigenous artists have," said gallery director Michael Brand on Friday.

His co-subject Goodes, a former Australian of the Year, took an early retirement from Australian Rules football in 2015 following persistent racial abuse from fan during games.

Last year, separate films about his experience reignited public conversations about racism in Australia.

Namatjira said Goodes had taken "a strong stand against racism" both on and off the sporting field.

Wyatt, an artist and actor, won the Packing Room Prize - which is selected by gallery staff - for a self-portrait.

Read Entire Article