CAPE TOWN, South Africa, 2024 /African Media Agency (AMA)/- Norval Foundation and The Sovereign Art Foundation (SAF) have announced the latest winner for the 2024 iteration of the Norval Sovereign African Art Prize, crowning Amina Ageuznay the Grand Prize Winner.
During the private exhibition opening dedicated to the finalists for the NSAAP, the Moroccan artist was pronounced the grand prize winner of the 3rd annual Norval Sovereign African Art Prize. The winning work, Portal #1, is tactile and sensory, featuring natural materials including palm husk, untreated wool and palm leaves. The work originated from an invitation by eco-architect and anthropologist Salima Naji to lead workshops for the women of Tissekmoudine, a “ksar” or settlement in southern Morocco. Central to the “ksar's” identity are its doors. During these workshops, participants engaged in self-observation, documenting their daily routines and spatial interactions. The women's sketches of these doors were transformed into wool weavings. Agueznay developed her own interpretations of these doors, incorporating alternative materials from the oasis like talefdamt (palm husk) and ifraoune (palm leaves). Agueznay’s work was selected through a rigorous ajudication process by a panel of five global judges, and beat out 374 entry works and 26 shortlisted finalist works to secure the win. Agueznay is represented by Loft Art Gallery in Marrakech, Morroco.
As an architect, Agueznay embarks on journeys through urban and rural regions across Morocco seeking out artisans to document their indigenous design techniques and traditions. This research profoundly influences her own contemporary interventions, emphasizing the collaborative essence of creation, especially in the realm of textile work.
Agueznay had the following to say, upon winning the prize, “I am so honoured and that I am being awarded a Prize from another part of the continent other than where I am from is that much greater! The recognition means the world to me and a win such as this reassures me that the way I have been pursing my work and how I want to work in the future is the correct way.”
The third annual of the annual prize, the winner announcement and exhibition opening event served as one of the opening events for the VIP programming of the annual Investec Cape Town Art Fair. A board of 59 independent art professionals from across the globe nominated 160 artists, who ultimately submitted 375 works for the prize.
The Norval Sovereign African Art Prize entries were judged by a board of international art professionals, namely Ashraf Jamal – Writer and Researcher, ArtBankSA and University of Johannesburg; Heba El Kayal – Chief Curatorial Consultant, Norval Foundation; Marie-Ann Yemsi – independent Exhibition Curator and Contemporary Art Consultant; Ngaire Blankenberg – Founder and Director, Institute for Creative Repair; and Sean O’Toole – Writer, Editor and Curator. |
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