Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsLocal artists win cash in Regional Art Awards

Local artists win cash in Regional Art Awards

Four local artists have been recognised for their artistic excellence, winning a share of over $40,000 worth of prizes in this year’s Queensland Regional Art Awards (QRAA).

The overall QRAA ‘Art for Life’ Award winner was Coolum Beach artist Kellie O’Dempsey.

In her acceptance speech, Kellie O’Dempsey commented on her artistic practice, highlighting her ongoing involvement with Flying Arts and the importance of supporting regional artists.

Capturing the spirit of the QRAA Kellie’s winning artwork Wish You Were Here 1, is a mixed media collage and projection reaching 120cm high and 120cm wide, which began as the artist’s reimagining of a post-pandemic life.

In her artist statement, O’Dempsey describes the artwork as where the “uncanny collides with the uncertain”, where in search of progress a figure attempts to travel yet goes nowhere.

Wish You Were Here 1 combines collaged paper with a video projection and uses repetition and monotonous loops to create a non-specific location and time.

Kellie’s artwork blends the physical and the psychological for a moment of hypnosis and absurdity to find balance in an uncertain world.

The QRAA has been a highlight on the regional arts calendar for over ten years, offering a significant opportunity for artists located outside of the Brisbane City Council area to reach an audience beyond their locality.

The annual visual arts prize is established for artists living in regional and remote Queensland, aiming to provide both cash prizes and a platform for further professional opportunities.

In 2022, the QRAA invited artists to explore the concept of ‘Reframe’. The award called for artworks that responded to our changing world, taking into consideration the widespread economic and environmental impacts on the arts sector in recent times.

This year, entries to the QRAA expressed the vast creativity, skills and imagination thriving in Queensland’s regional creative communities. With a 60 per cent increase in entries from the previous year, Queensland’s regions were well represented with artworks submitted from as far north as Thursday Island.

On 28 October 2022, Flying Arts Alliance hosted a gala event at Old Government House at QUT in Brisbane to announce the 2022 Queensland Regional Art Awards winners and to mark the conclusion of Flying Arts’ 50th Anniversary year.

Special delegates, industry representatives and peers joined Flying Arts on the night. Flying Arts was humbled by Yuggera, Turrbal, Nunukul, Gorenpul/Cooperoo, and Yugembir man Shannon Ruska, who delivered a moving Welcome to Country.

With much excitement, the prize category winners were announced with many representatives from award partners presenting the winning artist with their corresponding prize.

The official proceedings for the evening concluded with a live performance from students from the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts (ACPA), a highlight of the evening.

Local 2022 QRAA Winners:

‘Art For Life’ Award – Kellie O’Dempsey, Coolum Beach

$10,000 non-acquisitive cash prize thanks to Holding Redlich

$10,000+ in-kind print and digital editorial opportunity thanks to Artist Profile.

The Annie Tan Memorial Watercolour Award – Jule Polkinghorne, Tinbeerwah

$3,000 non-acquisitive cash prize, thanks to the Booth Memorial Fund of Annie Tan (Yuh Siew) and The Geoff Booth Foundation.

Environmental Art Award – Julie Field, Eumundi

$2,000 non-acquisitive cash prize, thanks to Turner Family Foundation.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Pedal and pump on local tracks

Rollers, berms and flowing turns are drawing riders back again and again to two popular Sunshine Coast pump tracks. These purpose-built spaces...

Community update

More News

Melbourne Olympics 70 years

Triple gold medallist Dawn Fraser and fellow Olympians from the Sunshine Coast will be among those celebrating the 70th anniversary of the 1956 Melbourne...

Home battery rebate, a game changer

When Andrew and Jenny moved into their new townhouse in Tewantin in late 2025, one of the first things they did was install solar...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. YANDINA COUNTRY MUSIC ACMA welcomes WOTYAGET as...

A more sustainable Bali

Bali has always been a popular ‘go to’ destination for antipodeans, and more recently the World. Tourists are now travelling far and wide for...

Council to highlight issues at NGA

Noosa Council have submitted six motions, all initiated by Cr Amelia Lorentson, for consideration by the Australian Local Government Association (ALGA) National General Assembly...

$15m Noosaville Bus Depot Opens

A $15 million investment in Noosa’s public transport network is set to bolster bus services across the northern Sunshine Coast, with operator Kinetic officially...

Lachlan’s legacy makes powerful impression

Precede The creation of the Lachlan Hughes Foundation to honour the life of a young farmer is making dramatic changes in the lives of others...

Surfing culture muscles up

To be honest, it doesn’t take that much to get our surfing councillor, Tom Wegener, excited – a one-foot wave at Tea Tree will...

Jazzing it up

Jazz lovers are in for a treat on Friday 27 March as live music comes to the heart of the Noosa in Noosaville with...

Huge drug bust

Police have seized more than $3 million worth of dangerous drugs and charged 25 people following a major trafficking investigation in Gladstone, about four...