Artist of the Year

(Synopsis)
(Champions)
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|'''Celebrity editions'''
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Revision as of 06:54, 1 July 2022

Contents

Host

Joan Bakewell (2013-2020, 2021-)

Frank Skinner (2013-2018)

Stephen Mangan (2018-)

Co-hosts

Judges: Kate Bryan, Tai-Shan Schierenberg, Kathleen Soriano

Broadcast

Storyvault Films for Sky Arts, 5 November 2013 to present

Portrait Artist of the Week, Facebook Live and Sky Arts, 3 May 2020 to 14 March 2021 (21 episodes in 3 series)

Synopsis

In the latest union of high and low culture, art critic Joan Bakewell and football fan Frank Skinner combine forces to find the best portrait painter in the country. The prize is a £10,000 commission to paint a major cultural figure (in the first series, a portrait of author Hilary Mantel for permanent display in the British Library).

Heats took place in a travelling marquee, with competitors depicting various celebrities who could sit still for four hours. Three celebrities featured in each heat, with seven artists assigned to each one. Any non-digital 2D medium was acceptable, and indeed a lot of the interest lay in having contestants working in (for example) pastels, watercolour and pencil all up against each other. The best artist in each heat went to Paris for mentoring, before producing a piece for the final. Subsequent series dropped the mentoring. The marquee was also put into storage, with the 2014 series visiting art galleries across the UK and Ireland and assigning four artists to each sitter.

An excellent likeness of Kate Bryan, Stephen Mangan, Tai Shan Schierenberg, Joan Bakewell and Kathleen Soriano

After two years in the portrait shape, Sky rotated the canvas to produce Landscape Artist of the Year. This tours the country, featuring six contestants in each heat (eight for the first year), together with 50 "wildcards" - a wildcard winner from each heat goes into a pool from which the judges select one to go forward to the semi-final. Competitions ran in both orientations from 2017, with the Portrait series settling down first at the Wallace Collection in London, then from 2019 at Battersea Arts Centre. Portrait series finals have been held at the National Portrait Gallery from the start.

Wildcards at work

With the adoption of a regular location, the 2017 competition saw the Portrait series settle into its now-familiar form, with only three artists painting (or in some way depicting) each sitter instead of four, and the big reveal of the portraits to their subjects given its due prominence; the earlier series now look incredibly rushed in comparison.

Three artists reveal their portraits of Dave Myers

Channel 4 bought the series in 2019, as part of a wider content-sharing deal with Sky. The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a few changes, with that year's second Portrait series being socially-distanced, audience-free, and with Stephen Mangan hosting solo as 87-year-old Joan Bakewell was shielding. Bakewell fronted the audience-participation spin-off Portrait Artist of the Week (a sitting livestreamed on Facebook with Sky Arts joining in for the last hour, after which viewers can submit their handiwork with a winner declared the following week) from home, and was still able to join Mangan for the Landscape series as it is, naturally, filmed almost entirely out of doors.

Trivia

Kate Bryan was absent from three episodes of the 2019 Landscape series (two heats and the semi-final) due to the birth of her daughter Juno, whom she brought along to the final, to much ooh-ing and aww-ing.

When Gareth Reid won the 2017 Portrait series, the prize was a commission to paint Graham Norton for the National Gallery of Ireland. As part of his preparation, Reid watched Norton's episode of Who Do You Think You Are?, from which he discovered that they had a shared ancestor and were in fact third cousins. Norton noted that his family wasn't one where there were typically lots and lots of siblings, making the coincidence even more surprising.

The potentially somewhat intimidating painting that the sitter for the Portrait final is always posed in front of is George Hayter's scene of the House of Commons in 1833. One of the National Portrait Gallery's earliest acquisitions, it includes among its 375 figures ten past, present and future Prime Ministers.

Champions

2013 (Portrait) Nick Lord
2014 (Portrait) Christian Hook
2015 (Landscape) Nerine Tassie (as Nerine McIntyre)
2016 (Landscape) Richard Allen
2017 (Portrait) Gareth Reid
2017 (Landscape) Tom Voyce
2018 (Portrait) Samira Addo
2018 (Landscape) Jen Gash
2019 (Portrait) Duncan Shoosmith
2019 (Landscape) Fujiko Rose
2020 (Portrait, March) Christabel Blackburn
2020 (Portrait, December) Curtis Holder
2021 (Landscape) Ophelia Redpath
2021 (Portrait) Calum Stevenson
2022 (Landscape) Elisha Enfield
Celebrity editions
2019 (Portrait) Jim Moir
2019 (Portrait) Fenella Woolgar
2021 (Landscape) Tomasz Schafernaker

Theme music

Nick Harvey

Web links

Official site

Wikipedia entry

The show publicised the hashtags #PAOTY or #LAOTY as appropriate.

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