SYDNEY.- A 3D-style portrait of Academy Award-winning and Emmy-nominated New Zealand writer, director, and actor Taika Waititi by Sydney-based artist Claus Stangl has won this years Archibald Packing Room Prize. Stangls painting is one of 52 finalist works from 816 entries received for the Archibald Prize 2022.
This is the fourth time Stangl has entered the Archibald Prize, and the second time he has been a finalist. The first time he was a finalist was in 2020 with his portrait of Sydney hip-hop musician Sukhdeep Singh Bhogal better known as L-FRESH The LION.
The Packing Room Prize is a $3000 cash prize awarded to the best entry in the Archibald Prize as judged by the
Art Gallery staff who receive, unpack and hang the entries, including head packer Brett Cuthbertson, who holds 52 percent of the vote.
This year is Cuthbertsons final year as head packer as he retires from the Art Gallery after 41 years. Cuthbertson said he was thrilled to award his final Packing Room Prize to a portrait of one of his favourite movie makers.
I really love Taika Waititi and his movies like Hunt for the Wilderpeople and Jojo Rabbit, and shows like and What We Do in the Shadows and Reservation Dogs. I love his humour and how he sees the world in a way that other people dont that twisted, humorous way and thats the way Claus has painted the picture; its Taika all over, said Cuthbertson.
The painting immediately grabbed my attention, I love the look on his face and his pose. Its the first time Ive seen a 3D painting come in, but its kind of a fake 3D.
Im very happy this is my last Packing Room Prize choice. I think people wouldnt have expected me to pick this one, I usually pick more realistic-style portraits, so its nice to go off with a bang!
Stangl, a self-taught artist who was born in England, said the 3D-style concept is an homage to both artist and sitters passion for the cinema.
I wanted to create a portrait that captured Taika's sense of humour and to execute it in a playful cinematic style, reminiscent of the movies of the seventies and eighties that were popular when he was child, said Stangl.
After sharing some concepts with Taika, we landed on the idea of making a 3D-style portrait using the icon reds and greens from eighties retro cardboard glasses.
Painting in 3D-style was the hardest thing I have ever painted, because theres two of everything, two of each pupil, two noses, everything shifted. But I learnt so much and it was worth it.
Stangl captured Waititi during a sitting with the award-winning director while he was in Sydney making the upcoming Thor: Love and Thunder (released on July 8) which he wrote, directed and portrays Korg.
We tried a few poses, but I wanted to allow him the feeling to play and express himself, he said. This piece is part portrait and part performance an apt execution for a man that is as comfortable in front of the camera as he is behind it.
Of winning the Packing Room Prize, Stangl said: I'm gobsmacked and excited to receive the Packing Room Prize. It's genuinely amazing just to make it as a finalist, so to take home the Packing Room Prize is like a big cherry on an already sweet cake.
Waititi is a director, writer, actor and producer from Aotearoa New Zealand, known for his keen eye and for the absurd whose work has provoked both laughter and meaningful dialogues from audiences worldwide. His work includes Jojo Rabbit, which received six Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, and for which he won Best Adapted Screenplay, making him the first Māori person to win an Oscar; the critically-acclaimed blockbuster Thor: Ragnarok, as well as the beloved indie films Hunt for the Wilderpeople, What We Do in the Shadows and Boy, and the television productions Our Flag Means Death, Reservation Dogs, an award-winning Indigenous American teen comedy, the first Indigenous Canadian/New Zealand co-production, Night Raiders, and The Mandalorian.
This year, 1908 entries were received for the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes. The Art Gallery also received the highest ever total number of entries by Aboriginal artists in the Archibald and Sulman prizes.
The Archibald Prize received 816 entries; the Sulman Prize received 491 entries; and the Wynne Prize received 601 entries.
This year was a record year for the Young Archie competition, which celebrates 10 years since its inception. Over 2400 entries were received the highest ever and a record 70 finalists from across the four age categories have been selected to be exhibited at the Art Gallery and displayed online.
The Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes, the Young Archie competition and the Archibald Prize regional tour are all generously supported by presenting partner, ANZ.
Mark Whelan, Group Executive, Institutional at ANZ said: ANZ has a proud history of supporting the arts community in Australia. This is an important award and we congratulate artist Claus Stangl on receiving the 2022 Packing Room Prize.
The Archibald Prize, first awarded in 1921, is Australias favourite art award, and one of its most prestigious. Awarded to the best portrait painting, its a whos who of culture from politicians to celebrities, sporting heroes to artists.
Finalists for the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes 2022 were also announced today, as were the finalists for the Young Archie 2022 competition. Finalists in all Prizes will be exhibited at the Art Gallery of NSW from 14 May to 28 August 2022.
The Archibald Prize 2022 tour will travel to six venues in Victoria and regional New South Wales, offering audiences outside Sydney the opportunity to see all the finalists works.