The Coronet #16 June 2021

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Aword from our CEO The beginning and the end

Over the past three decades, The Ian Potter Foundation and The Ian Potter Cultural Trust have supportedArt Commissions in various forms to support established artists creating in the mediums of sculpture, music composition, and currently moving image art.

Last month, we were delighted to announceAngelaTiatia as the winner of the final $100,000 Ian Potter Moving Image Commission (IPMIC). It is both the beginning of an exciting new work and the end of a decade-long series of commissions in moving image art.The IPMIC 2022 judging panel was so impressed with the competitive pool of applicants, that for the first time the Cultural Trust andACMI will support three runner-up artists via a six-month Creative Development and Mentorship Program.

You can learn more about IPMIC 2022 winnerAngelaTiatia, her commissioned work Liminal Persuasion (working title), and the Creative Development and Mentorship Program grantees below

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Gabriella Hirst's DARLING DARLING, Ian Potter Moving Image Commission 2020, now exhibited at ACMI.
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The long-awaited premiere exhibition of IPMIC 2020 Darling Darling by Gabriella Hirst opened atACMI in February The planned 2020 premiere of the commission was postponed due toACMI’s extended closure as a result of its redevelopment works and COVID-19 restrictions. I would like to congratulate Gabriella on her outstanding new work which contrasts the preservation of a colonial painting of the Darling River and the reality of environmental preservation in the Barka Darling region.

Darling Darling highlights the critical importance of preservingAustralia’s freshwater resources. It is my hope that the recent establishment of an independent water and catchment policy centre, supported byThe Ian Potter Foundation and a coalition of 16 Australian philanthropic foundations, will be a catalyst for change in how this precious resource is managed.

With IPMIC slowly coming to a close and our emerging artist development grants paused due to travel restrictions, we have initiated an evaluation of the Cultural Trust's grant programs.The evaluation will seek to understand how the Cultural Trust grant programs benefit artists and how we might improve the impact of the Trust’s grants. We look forward to the new insights we will gain from this process.

Lastly, I hope that you are all safe, healthy, and able to pursue your creative goals despite the continued disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic.

2020 Ian Potter Moving Image Commission Darling Darling

The long-awaited premiere exhibition of IPMIC 2020 Darling Darling by Gabriella Hirst opened atACMI in February Darling Darling presents two contrasting visions of the Barka Darling River in dialogue with each other and explores the contradictions in how we revere

Gabriella Hirst on DARLING DARLING, ACMI YouTube.
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nature in art yet exploit and degrade it in reality The major moving image installation explores notions of care, containment, and how depictions of nature reveal underlying cultural and political values.

Owing to new circuit-breaker restrictions keeping Victorians safe,ACMI and the Darling Darling exhibition are currently closed. Learn more about Darling Darling in the video above.

Commission 2022 Angela Tiatia awarded IPMIC 2022

Ian

The final in a decade-long Ian Potter Moving Image Commission (IPMIC) series has been awarded to paint, sculpture, video installation, and performance artistAngelaTiatia.

The $100,000 commission will make possible Tiatia’s new video work,Liminal Persuasions(working title), which will have its world premiere atACMI in 2022 and enter theACMI Collection.

Tiatia's work explores contemporary culture, drawing attention to its relationship to representation, gender, neo-colonialism, and the commodification of the body and place.

Potter Moving Image Artist Angela Tiatia.
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Creative Development and Mentorship Program

Additional grants for IPMIC 2022

The Ian Potter Cultural Trust andACMI will support three Ian Potter Moving Image Commission 2022, runner-up artists, through a six-month Creative Development and Mentorship Program. Each artist will receive $20,000 whileACMI staff will provide their expertise and support to help with the development of their proposed artworks.

The grants have been awarded to Pilar Mata Dupont for her proposed work La Piedra, Roberta Joy Rich for her proposed work traced. and Nicholas Mangan for his proposed work Core Coralations

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Grantee stories

Adapting:Art in the time of Coronavirus

The following case studies provide insight into the personal experiences of our grantee community and the effect COVID-19 has had on their professional development plans, creative practice, and personal wellbeing.

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GrahamAkhurst

GrahamAkhurst is anAboriginal writer and academic from the Kokomini of Northern Queensland. With the aid of a CulturalTrust grant, Graham began the Master of FineArts in Creative Writing Fiction at Hunter College, New York. When NewYork City became a COVID-19 epicentre, Graham made the difficult decision to stay in the United States while completing his course online.

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Emily Jane Read

WestAustralian contemporary musician Emily Jane Read was awarded a Cultural Trust grant to undertake training at recording studio Hyperballad Music in NewYork, and attend the SXSW 2020 conference inAustin. Emily reflects on the impact of her development project being interrupted mid-way by the onset of COVID-19 in the United States, and the pandemic's effect onAustralian artists.

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Funding rounds

Travel bans

Funding rounds will not open until 2022 in line with theAustralian Government travel ban and the continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Ian Potter Cultural Trust team will be monitoring smartraveller.gov.au and when the situation improves we will announce new funding round dates via our website and social media.

The Ian Potter Cultural Trust is fully funded by The Ian Potter Foundation, a major Australian philanthropic foundation that supports and promotes excellence and innovation.

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We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.

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