More dates

OPENING NIGHT: GENESIS 2024 | National Photographic Portrait Prize 2023

Share
Geraldton Regional Art Gallery
geraldton, australia
Host icon
Geraldton Regional Art Gallery
209 followers  ·  Contact host (Opens in new tab)
Add to calendar

Fri, 29 Nov, 6pm - 8pm AWST

Event description

Join us for the Exhibition OPENING NIGHT of  GENESIS 2024, Secondary Student Exhibition | National Photographic Portrait Prize 2023, A National Portrait Gallery touring exhibition


OPENING NIGHT: 6pm- 8pm, Friday 29 November 2024  

EXHIBITION DATES: 30 November 2024 - 2 February 2025

VENUE: Geraldton Regional Art Gallery, 24 Chapman Road, Geraldton, WA, 6530

Image Credit, Genesis 2023 Year 12 Winner: Adriel Human, Submarine, Earthenware

GENESIS 2024 | Secondary Student Exhibition


GENESIS is our annual survey of the best and brightest Visual Art Secondary Students in Greater Geraldton.
This exhibition features a selection of artwork from years 7-12, showcasing our emerging local artists in 2024.

Join us in celebrating the vibrancy of our enthusiastic young artists as they exhibit in a professional gallery setting.


Image detail: Brave New World 2022 (detail) by Heidi Margocsy

National Photographic Portrait Prize 2023
A National Portrait Gallery touring exhibition


Established by the National Portrait Gallery to support and celebrate photographic portraiture in Australia, the NPPP was first awarded in 2007 and has since become a highlight of the National Portrait Gallery’s annual calendar, attracting thousands of entries each year from amateur and professional photographers around the country.  The NPPP offers substantial cash and equipment prizes and the opportunity for photographers to have their work shown in a national gallery - and on tour - alongside their mentors, idols and peers.

Director of the National Portrait Gallery Bree Pickering said “The NPPP is a beloved national prize that supports the Australian photographic community and enlarges our collective experience of the Australian people, from the well-known and celebrated, to local heroes and identities. It is a pillar of the gallery’s travelling exhibition program, which sees many rich and varied examples of photographic portraiture shared with audiences across the country.”

In 2023, the judges - National Portrait Gallery Senior Curator Joanna GilmourDaniel Boetker-Smith, Director of the Centre for Contemporary Photography, and photo media artist Tamara Dean - selected 47 finalists from a pool of almost 2400 entries. 

Joanna Gilmour said: “In its purest form, portraiture captures the real time encounter between artists and subjects. Many of the 47 finalists in 2023 succeeded in revealing the quirks or flaws or vulnerabilities of their subjects and have gently yet uncompromisingly allowed their sitters to be themselves.” 

 The Winner, Highly Commended, Art Handlers’ and People’s Choice awards were announced in Canberra prior to the exhibition tour.

Shea Kirk’s portrait of friend and fellow-artist Emma Armstrong-Porter, titled Ruby (left view), won the 2023 National Photographic Portrait Prize. Shea won $50,000 in prizes: $30,000 cash from the National Portrait Gallery and $20,000 worth of Canon equipment thanks to Imaging Partner Canon Australia.

Renae Saxby was awarded the Highly Commended prize, for her work Bangardidjan 2022, a photo of proud Kine, Rembarrnga, and Dalabon women Cindy Rostron on the road in remote Central Arnhem Land.  Renae’s prize won a ColorEdge CG2700S 27” monitor valued at almost $4,000 courtesy of EIZO.

The Art Handlers’ award recipient was David Cossini, who received $2,000 cash from IAS Fine Art Logistics for his portrait of Ugandan man Godfrey Baguma, titled Ugandan Ssebabi.

The $10,000 People’s Choice Award, supported by the Calvert-Jones Foundation, went to Bruce Agew for his portrait KAHA, 2022.


The National Photographic Portrait Prize 2023 is a National Portrait Gallery touring exhibition.

This exhibition is supported but the National Collecting Institutions Touring and Outreach Program, an Australian Government program aiming to improve access to the national collections for all Australians.

Please note that photographs and footage may be taken throughout this event. These will be used by the City for publicity and reporting in our publications, on our website and in social media.




Powered by

Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix dedicates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity

Geraldton Regional Art Gallery
geraldton, australia