Alt tag
Quadriplane Structurist Relief (detail) by Eli Bornstein

Applications now accepted for the Structurist Award

Proposed projects will have a budget of up to $18,000 and eligibility is open internationally

News

Applications for the second Structurist Award at the University of Saskatchewan (USask) will be accepted until Jan. 31, 2020.

The award, which is available to individuals pursuing research and creative work, recognizes the legacy of the international art journal The Structurist, which was founded at USask in 1960 by Eli Bornstein, an award-winning artist and now professor emeritus.

Incorporating the root word structure, The Structurist is concerned with the building processes of creation in art, architecture and nature. It focuses on ideas in architecture and the arts—including painting, sculpture, design, photography, music and literature—and their histories and relationships to each other, as well as to science, technology and nature.

Projects undertaken as part of the Structurist Award will culminate in a form that will be available to the public, such as a publication, exhibition or film or other media.

Projects must also include a seminar, symposium or public lecture in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Proposed projects will have a budget of up to $18,000 CAD. Eligibility is open internationally. Access to the use of all USask archival material pertaining to The Structurist will be available to the award recipient.

Click here for more information about the Structurist Award selection criteria or to apply online.

Professor Lawrence Blough, principal of GRAFTWORKS Design Research and professor at Pratt Institute School of Architecture, was named the inaugural 2018-19 Structurist Fellow. His exhibition, entitled Domestic Mutations in the Age of the Sharing Paradigm, will remain on view at the Kenderdine Art Gallery until Dec. 13, 2019.


Related Articles

USask cybersecurity expert weighs in on AI benefits and risks

Computer Science associate professor Natalia Stakhanova (PhD) talks about the limitations and benefits of embracing AI

Is the beloved snowman melting away for good in Toronto? We asked experts

Water research expert Dr. John Pomeroy (PhD) discusses the shorter snow season in Canada

USask student challenging perception of dinosaurs with ‘paleoart’

USask geological sciences graduate student Kaitlin “KT” Lindblad reimagines some of the world’s best-known dinosaurs with artwork