First Plinth: Public Art Award (original) (raw)
Awards
Closing Date
21st January 2025
First Plinth: Public Art Award is designed to offer sculptors an opportunity to extend their practice into competing for public art commissions. The winning sculptor is awarded £15,000 to produce a large-scale sculpture for the sculpture terrace at Dora House before moving to a second site.
This year's theme is Tomorrow.
Submissions for the First Plinth: Public Art Award 2025 are open now until 21 January 2025.
About the prize
This biennial award is open to any artist working in three dimensions, providing a unique and rare opportunity for the winner to build a track record in the competitive arena of public art.
The fabrication of the winning work is supported by the award, with the winner receiving mentoring from a team of experienced professionals – engineers, consultants and artists – to ensure the concept is delivered to the exacting standards required of work to be installed in public spaces.
This award is generously supported by the Mirisch & Lebenheim Charitable Foundation
The making of 'The Double Act'
What how 'The Double Act' by Madi Acharya-Baskerville MRSS winner of the First Plinth: Public Art Award 2023 was made.
Recent winners
Current Winner
Madi Acharya-Baskerville MRSS
Madi Acharya-Baskerville MRSS is an Asian born, London based diaspora artist. Her cultural heritage continues to have a profound influence on her practice. Her work explores migration and exile gender issues in the context of climate change. The core of her work exists in the found element, matter that already exists around us, an enduring reflection of the human condition. Her practice involves the synthesis of unlikely elements which she collect from the coastline, woodlands and vintage markets. Using found objects, and textiles which resonate with her, she create works where materials flow effortlessly into each other. Her practice involves a variety of processes and techniques including painting, beadwork and modelling. Through joyous transformative processes, these objects and materials are reborn as part of something new.
Madi Acharya-Baskerville graduated with an MA in Fine Art at University of Wales Institute, Cardiff. She was selected for the 20/20 residency commission, supported by Arts Council England, Freelands Foundation and University of the Arts London, Decolonizing Institute (2022).Her work entered the Whitworth permanent collection, University of Manchester through the Art Fund New Collecting Award (2021) and is currently on display in ‘Exchanges: Recent Additions to the Collection’.She was awarded DYCP Grant from Arts Council England (2021-22) for developing Ceramic works in the context of museum collections at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
'I think this award will really help me to develop my practice and enable me to connect with wider audiences. I am also very much looking forward to working towards a solo exhibition at Dora House as part of this award. Thank you so much Royal Society of Sculptors for this wonderful opportunity!'
Past Winners
2021 Polly Morgan MRSS
2019 Fabio Lattanzi Antinori MRSS
2017 Rupert Norfolk
2015 Tabatha Andrews MRSS
2013 Sam Shendi MRSS
2011 Jenske Dijkhuis
2010 Suresh Dutt
2009 Robert Worley MRSS