Artadia is pleased to announce the 2020 San Francisco Artadia Awardees:
Awardees will receive $10,000 in unrestricted funds, as well as access to the ongoing benefits of the Artadia Awards program. The 2020 San Francisco Artadia Awards application was open to all visual artists living in the five Bay Area counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, and San Mateo for over two years, working in any media, and at any stage of their career.
The decision followed an extensive jury process, culminating in a virtual studio visit between shortlisted finalists and jurors Anthony Huberman, Director & Chief Curator, CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts; and Lucy Mensah, Clinical Visiting Assistant Professor, MUSE Program, School of Art & Art History at University of Illinois at Chicago.
Upon receiving the 2020 San Francisco Artadia Award, Marcela states “I was extremely honored to share space as a Finalist with incredible artists I respect and admire. It is so heartwarming to be an Awardee at this moment in time, it’s definitely one big highlight in the midst of 2020. I’m stoked to join the intergenerational web of artists and curators around the country that are part of Artadia.” Lava notes, “I am absolutely thrilled to be a recipient of the 2020 San Francisco Artadia Award. I was an Artadia Finalist in 2018, so receiving the award this year is especially gratifying; it comes at a critical juncture in my practice. I am so grateful for Artadia’s recognition and support and honored to join the stellar roster of Artadia Awardees.”
Of the Awardees’, Anthony notes “as a Bay Area local, it gives me great pleasure to know that two of our community’s most inspiring artistic voices, Marcela Pardo Ariva and Lava Thomas, are receiving not only an important and well-deserved recognition on a national scale, but an award that might help them overcome some of the countless obstacles they are surely facing in this extraordinarily challenging moment.”
Additionally, Lucy states, “Lava Thomas’ recent body of work, a series of portrait drawings showing subjects wearing face masks, demonstrates the artist’s remarkable ability to provoke contemplation and reflection through art. I was similarly impressed by Marcela Pardo Ariza’s public art projects that are bringing attention to the history of the LGBTQIA+ community in San Francisco and situate the city’s gay bar scene as a critical space for kinship and solidarity.”
Awardees were selected from a shortlist of five finalists: Zeina Barakeh, Sofía Córdova, Marcela Pardo Ariza, Chanell Stone, Lava Thomas. The Finalists were selected by jurors Allison Glenn, Associate Curator, Contemporary Art, Crystal Bridges; Anthony Huberman, Director & Chief Curator of CCA Wattis Institute; and Xiaoyu Weng, Robert H.N. Ho Family Foundation Associate Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. San Francisco Finalists, and ultimately Awardees, were selected solely by the four participating jurors.