Grange Prize Winner Announced!

Jo Longhurst Wins The Grange Prize 2012

Public vote awards U.K. artist $50,000 prize for contemporary photography
 
Jo Longhurst accepts the $50,000 Grange Prize at AGO First Thursday event, November 1, 2012The Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) and Aeroplan, an Aimia company, are pleased to announce that the public has chosen British photographer Jo Longhurst as the winner of The Grange Prize 2012.
 
Longhurst was selected over fellow contenders Emmanuelle Léonard (Montreal), Annie MacDonell (Toronto) and Jason Evans (U.K.). Voting began 10 weeks ago online at www.thegrangeprize.com. Members of the public have also had the opportunity to vote in person at Canada House in the U.K. and at the AGO, where exhibitions of the nominees’ work are on display until Jan. 6, 2013. The Grange Prize is Canada’s largest photography prize and the only major Canadian art prize determined by public vote.
 
Born in Essex, U.K., Longhurst has gained international recognition for her photographic work, having exhibited in London, Paris and Berlin, as well as at this year’s Documenta (13). A PhD graduate from the Royal College of Art, Longhurst’s two primary bodies of work investigate the ways we strive for perfection and the role photographs play in upholding these ideals, be they in breeding whippet show dogs in The Refusal (2003-2008) or performing classic poses in elite gymnastics in Other Spaces (2008-2012).
 
Longhurst receives the $50,000 cash prize, while the three other finalists each receive a cash honorarium of $5,000 dedicated to the research, creation and production of new work. All four finalists will receive an artist residency, one of the unique features of The Grange Prize. Longhurst begins her residency at the AGO on Nov. 4, 2012, and will occupy the Anne Lind Artist-in-Residence Studio inside the Weston Family Learning Centre until Dec. 15, 2012. Jason Evans will be in residence at the AGO in spring 2013, and Emmanuelle Léonard and Annie MacDonell will travel to the U.K. to conduct research and explore new avenues of practice next year.