Arts awards celebrate Edmonton's creative best
By
Karen Unland and
Sara Sheydwasser
An artist who created a monumental garden rooted in memories; a filmmaker who told the story of a barrier-breaking hockey player; a writer who took a playful look at stock photography; and a musician whose record explores ambition, love, nostalgia, and growth — those are the winners of this year's Edmonton Arts Prizes.
The Edmonton Arts Council distributed $100,000 in prizes at a ceremony at the Garneau Theatre on May 4, with $15,000 going to each winner and $5,000 going to each of two runners-up in four categories.
Rapper ARDN, who won the City of Edmonton Music Prize, expressed gratitude for all who "keep pushing the culture forward in Edmonton" as he accepted the award for his album Keep Your Eye on The Sparrow. The album also received a JUNO nomination in January.
"There's a lot of talent that hasn't been tapped into," ARDN told an appreciative crowd. "There's a lot of stories that haven't been told. To be a part of that, to be able to contribute to it, means a lot."
The runners-up for the music prize were Cikwes for Nehiyaw Iskô, and Joe Nolan for Luv in the New World.
Multidisciplinary artist Elsa Robinson received the Eldon + Anne Foote Edmonton Visual Arts Prize for her art installation The Garden. The piece reflects Robinson's Jamaican heritage and culture, using a mixture of media ranging from fibre to stone.
Surrounded by family members, Robinson included in thank-yous her mother for telling her to forget about paying off the house and to focus on her happiness. She also thanked the Edmonton arts community for "pushing me to work harder and harder and to dig deeper and deeper" to do her best work.
Runners-up in the visual arts category were AJA Louden for Enoch's Fireweed, a tufted tapestry depicting an Afrofuturist vision of hope, and Kiona Callihoo Ligtvoet for a painting inspired by her grandfather's land called when chokecherries are ready on top the hill.