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The Research Catalogue Annual Prize for Best Exposition

Each year, SAR hosts the prize for best exposition on The Research Catalogue. The winner is announced at the yearly SAR conference with an award prize of €500.

WHAT IS THE ANNUAL RC PRIZE?

The annual RC prize aims to foster and encourage innovative, experimental new formats of publication and, on the other hand, to give visibility to the qualities of artistic research artefacts.

WHO CAN SUBMIT?

Anyone is invited to make a submission, however the publication/exposition must have been published (not only shared) on the RC catalogue platform. The language used in the exposition must be English.

 

WHAT IS THE AWARD PROCESS?

Each year a new jury, consisting of a member of the SAR Executive Board, representatives from a Portal Partner and a former prize winner, is appointed. Following an in-depth review, a shortlist is made public. The winner is announced at the annual SAR conference in the spring.

HOW DO I SUBMIT?

Anyone who wishes to submit an exposition for the RC Prize, must first create an exposition on the RC Catalogue and publish it. Instructions on how to create and publish on the RC can be found here.

 

ABOUT THE PRIZE

 

To be the first to know when submissions for the RC Prize 2025 opens, sign up to the SAR Newsletter by creating an account on the RC and checking the 'Announcement' box.

 

The publication period runs from Jan 1 (year) to Dec 31 (year), so to submit for the 2025 prize, your exposition must have been published during the period of Jan 1, 2025 to Dec 31, 2025.

 

The deadline for submitting your exposition for the RC Prize usually falls at the beginning of the following year (January/February 2026).

 

Prize Award: € 500.

 

Conditions:

The publication/exposition must have been published (not only shared) on the RC platform.

 

The winner(s) of last year’s prize cannot submit a new exposition for the year after the prize has been received.

 

The language used in the exposition must be English. Anyone is invited to make a submission.

 

The following must be identified by the metadata of the exposition: Author(s), Title, Research Catalogue URL (including date of publishing) and identified in this format: https://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/xxxxx/xxxxx

 

Address for submissions: rc.prize@societyforartisticresearch.org

 

Award Ceremony: SAR International Artistic Research Conference 2026 (exact date TBA)

 

Contact: rc.prize@societyforartisticresearch.org

 

THE RC PRIZE 2024

THE SUBMISSION DEADLINE HAS NOW PASSED AND THE JURY HAS BEGUN THE REVIEW PROCESS OF THE MANY FANTASTIC EXPOSITIONS. A SHORTLIST WILL BE ANNOUNCED AHEAD OF THE SAR CONFERENCE 7-9 MAY. READ MORE ABOUT THE CALL BELOW TO PREPARE FOR NEXT YEAR!

CURRENT CALL (Nomination Deadline 01.02.25)

THE WINNER OF THE RC PRIZE 2024 WILL BE ANNOUNCED AT THE UPCOMING INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ARTISTIC RESEARCH WITH i2ADS IN PORTO 7-9 MAY 2025

2023 - Winner and Shortlist

1st place: Thomas Pearce

The jury was impressed by the exposition “On the Indeterminate Training Technologies of a Reconstructed Bauhaus Choreographer. A Research Practice Between Speculative Histography, Architectural Invention, and Performative Co-enactment” that is multi-layered and complex. It re-enacts a series of performance-based events that reconstructs the life of a fictional choreographer, in five instances. It relates the topography of the performing place with the topography of the screen in a novel way, presenting the reconstruction process and providing insights into the research underlying practice. The exposition mirrors the combination of several methods used in the performative research. Navigation allows users to connect the acts of the performance with the exhibition pages in a backward design: we enter the resulting piece and follow its reconstruction.A fundamental benefit is interdisciplinarity, in addition to the innovative and precise solution to the form of exposition, the interdisciplinary nature, the author’s dialogue with his own solution and the author’s discussion of the ethical limits of the research subject should also be appreciated.

2nd place: Emma Cocker et al.

Emma Cocker, Andrea Coyotzi Borja, Cordula Daus, Lena Séraphin, Vidha Saumya5 people standing in a circle reading on a large square in front of a big 5 story concrete building with shops.The exposition “TEXTORIUM: Collaborative Writing-Reading with/in Public Space” (by Emma Cocker, Andrea Coyotzi Borja, Cordula Daus, Vidha Saumya and Lena Séraphin) represents collaborative score-based approaches to live, situated writing and reading practices. The exposition explores different agencies of language-based practices, combining direct and indirect voices from the group. The navigation in the exposition creates parallel paths between document, reflective review and insights. Overall, the exposition organises a complex web of relationships between place, language, performative reading, collective agencies. The exposition uses excellent navigation in very clear design. In view of the large research team, the successful aim to document the process should be appreciated.

3rd place: Søren Kjærgaard & Torben Snekkestad

Søren Kjærgaard & Torben Snekkestad, challenges the idea of sonic identity by practice sharing of audio material and improvisation processes in his exposition “Traversing Sonic Territories (TST)”. it is not easy to convey a sound presentation in RC compared to other visual and graphic tools. The author copes with this predicament through design, navigation and illustrative visual elements and enables us to think about sonic identity, the idea of personal sound.

2022 - Winner and Shortlist

1st place: Andreas Berchtold

The jury highly appreciates the quality and compactness of the exhibition “In circles leading on”: It meaningfully targets a diverse audience using an original graphic design, especially the unconventional layout. Exposition is playful and thoughtful at the same time. It invites the reader to interact with the content while clearly articulating the dynamic character of the project. It is convincing that the inventive way of communicating the project’s outcome has been integral to the process of developing it. Berchtold`s exposition presents an inner point of view in close dialogue with the exhibition layout, transforming the screen into the metaphor of a stage. The individual components and tools used in the research catalogue enable the exhibition to amplify the content of the message towards differently motivated readers or viewers.

2nd place: Sheung Yiu

The exposition “Spotting A Tree From A Pixel” is an evocative and condensed report of the author’s research conducted as part of a wider collaborative project.The clarity of this exposition in terms of the subject, the way it is presented, and the unfolding narrative are of very high quality. The exposition is structured well in terms of both content and layout; its linear narrative flow is accompanied by high-quality audiovisual materials that thoughtfully complete the experience. The piece is a good example of an approach to exposition that prioritizes minimal complexity and clarity.

3rd place: Tobias Leibetseder, Thomas Grill, Almut Schilling, Till Bovermann

The exposition “Fragments in Time” represents a long-term collaborative research project. The exposition uses a non-linear design approach to artistic research in digital environments. It successfully explores different ways of reciprocity between the theme and content of the research – fragmentation – and the levels of the exposition. Due to the complexity of the subject, this exposition also explores shared circuits between the research catalogue and other documentation platforms.

2021 - Winner and Shortlist

1st place: Jacek Smolicki

The jury was impressed by the quality of the intimate and coherent dialogue between images, text, hypertext and sound in Jacek Smolicki’s exposition “Minuting. Rethinking the Ordinary Through the Ritual of Transversal Listening”. The togetherness of these elements makes the viewer feel like walking into a complex and well-structured landscape.The layout is attractive also in means of the integration of the sound bars as graphical elements. The mouse-over elements produce an extra layer that is nevertheless integrated into the aesthetic appearance of the exposition.Smolicki’s research is wide and deep with the collection of samples spanning years presenting a compelling premise in the research. The concepts and narrative threads are emergent through the design and activation of the exposition through the Research Catalogue platform.

2nd place: Alexandra Crouwers

The exposition “Plot, the Compositor, Mourning/Mistakes” by Alexandra Crowers represents a speculative and non-linear design approach to the concept of exhibition. It creates an intricate network between visual pieces of evidence of the ecological collapse of a forest and a reflexive review of the artist’s grief.Crouwers’s work thesis immediately resonated with the pandemic times experiencing virtual dislocation and complex mimeticism of nature in response to lockdowns. The work presented is timely as virtual workers and artists experience the technological takeover as physical communal spaces become increasingly rare. Alexandra’s background in virtual and technical art vibrates on the Research Catalogue platform as items that function to deliver information on the topic often also serve an aesthetic purpose supporting their thesis.

3rd place: Timo Menke

Timo Menke’s exposition DARK MATTER(S) combines different exhibitions on the same subject in an innovative way, offering the experience of different navigation modes as an analogue of thinking.Menke’s thoughtful intertwining of their exposition concepts and the Research Catalogue allows readers to accumulate concepts leading up to a wonderful collaborative performance.

2020 - Winner and Shortlist

Christoph Solstreif-Pirker

Christoph Solstreif-Pirker’s exposition presents a beautifully minimalistic use of the Research Catalogue, which effectively supports the journey of the author and his experiences during an intimate encounter with a traumatised part of our planet. The layout is simple, but elegant and effective, and the documentation within is conceptually rich and visually appealing. The layout of the exposition has clarity in the positioning of text and visual, and there is a subtle interplay and connectivity between the two because of this consideration.

Ernie Roby-Tomic

Ernie Roby-Tomic’s exposition presents a quirky and engaging critique of mining and the destruction of nature, which is cleverly underscored by taking the reader out of the usual and familiar notion of the Research Catalogue, into the experience and aesthetics of vintage computer games. The exposition deftly combines geopolitical history and artistic responses to coal mining in the Appalachia, and the layout, which includes often poetic narrative and the chattels of mining, takes advantage of the limitations of the Research Catalogue.

2019 - RC Prize Winner

1st place: Emma Cocker, Nikolaus Gansterer and Mariella Greil

The exposition “Choreo-graphic Figures: Scoring Aesthetic Encounters” (2019) stages an encounter between choreography, drawing, sound and writing in order to explore those knowledge forms through collaborative exchange. The exposition stages the different modes of practice as an actual dialogue and collision, and derives from the findings of the research project “Choreo-graphic Figures: Deviations from the Line” (2014-2017) by Emma Cocker, Nikolaus Gansterer and Mariella Greil. The researchers seek to extend their investigation in questioning how a digital archive can be created that is capable of reflecting the durational and relational aspects of the research process.
The outcome is a non-linear rhizomatic (using the artists term) encounter with artistic research, where the findings are activated as a choreo-graphic event. The artist and designer Simona Koch supported the transformation from an embodied, experiential enquiry into different publication formats, including a text- based book, alongside the online digital format of the RC exposition. The RC complements the shortcomings of printed material and utilizes the performative qualities of sound, image and film that cannot be expressed in the printed material. In this way in the project, the digital and printed material complement each other. The exposition can be encountered experientially through a section called “Playing the Score”, whilst the other section “Find Out More” contains contextual framing alongside conceptual-theoretical reflections on the ecology of practices and figures. The authors make an interesting use of the RC platform, communicating their research through rich and articulate interactions between text and multimedia materials. Once the user selects ‘Play the Score’, the exposition becomes an inhabited drawing where performance, documentation, notation and user agency are blurred, and their interconnections are explored in rich ways.
The complexity of the exposition is built through written and spoken word, video and sound recordings, photos and graphic elements that enable and encourage the user to literally re-enact the research process. Documentation of the performative elements of the research interplay with [e.g.] artistic writings, presented as animated text elements and reflections of notational forms that are embedded in the current discourse on [e.g.] aesthetics and the human nature. The delightful and enjoyable layout and design of the exposition helps how the reader understand the content. The exposition was published in Journal for Artistic Research – JAR 18. Ottersberg 15.03.20Gabriele Schmid, Prize Jury ChairThe Jury was comprised of Gabriele Schmid, Chair / Angela Bartram (substitute) from SAR Executive Board; Karst de Jong / Heidi Paatere Möller (substitute) from SAR Portal Partners and Matilde Meireles / Diogo Alvim (substitute) as previous prizewinners.

2018 - Winner and Shortlist

1st place: Barbara Macek

The Prize for Excellent RC Exposition 2018 was announced for the 10th International Conference on Artistic Research in Zurich on March 21st. The prize went to Investigations into the Meaning of Pain by Barbara Macek... https://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/308804/470238 ... The Executive Board of SAR nominated a jury for the prize that included Karst de Jong (The Hague/Barcelona), Leena Rouhiainen, chair (Helsinki) and Michael Schwab (London).
The committee members all familiarized themselves with the submitted eleven eligible proposals. They separately shortlisted the three best. The committee members unanimously agreed that exposition Between Agony and Ecstasy: Investigations into the Meaning of Pain was the best submission. The criteria on which the committee members based their assessment were those mentioned in the announcement of the launch of the SAR annual prize. They related to the chosen exposition being an example of innovative and experimental formats of publication and making visible internationally qualities of artistic research artefacts.
More closely the prize committee commented upon the exposition in the following manner: Between Agony and Ecstasy is a systematic development from page to page of a fascinating subject. It moves through various layers of ‘cut-ups’ to this very complex page that brings together different voices both in text and image. The exposition is very clear in how it is made and what’s achieved – an alternative order that sits on the back of literature/philosophy not afraid of venturing into a visual territory that may in a different context look like kitsch, but which as the reader engages with the exposition starts to work affectively as well as conceptually. The resolutely developing progression of the elaborate exposition make it distinct. It is rich in content and offers new avenues into the existential qualities of pain. It likewise makes use of the RC platform in simple but productive ways.

2017 - Winner and Shortlist

1st place: Diogo Alves and Matilde Meireles

The first Prize for Excellent RC Exposition was announced for the first time at the SAR General Assembly in Plymouth on April 13th 2017. The prize for year 2017 went to Trigger Place – A Game of Sound and Architecture by Diogo Alves and Matilde Meireles: ... www.researchcatalogue.net/view/309117/309118 ... The Executive Board of SAR nominated a jury for the prize that included Karst de Jong (The Hague/Barcelona), Leena Rouhiainen, chair (Helsinki) and Michael Schwab (London). All in all, eleven submissions were offered for evaluation, out of which nine were fulfilled the criteria of having been published in 2017.
The members of the jury all familiarized themselves with the nine eligible proposals sent in for the annual prize. They separately shortlisted the three best. The committee members unanimously agreed that exposition Trigger Place – A Game of Sound and Architecture was the best. The criteria on which the committee members based their assessment were those mentioned in the announcement of the launch of the SAR annual prize. They related to the chosen exposition being an example of innovative and experimental formats of publication and making visible qualities of artistic research artefacts in an original manner.
More closely the prize committee commented upon the exposition in the following manner::: Trigger Place is a very convincing, attractive and playful exposition that oversteps dimensions. The exposition presents an artistic undertaking that addresses the context of an existing building, a sports hall, as well as a past musical performance by Alvin Lucier and creates an ambitious and original new cross-artistic performance piece on their basis, enriching both of them. The exposition is based on a complex but clear grid that is informed by themes involved in the performance: the line, architectonics and sound. This it does in a manner that the performance seems to continue and gain further layers in the exposition. All in all, the Research Catalogue is used attractively. The visual elements (the line) are strong, audio is used effectively. The constellations of materials – either along a line, side-by-side or in a two-dimensional “network” – allows for complex relationship to become intelligible. The choice of the line is a strong connector – lines are used in the squash court, they have been applied during the performance and they are extended into the space of RC. Very clever and effective! The exposition is an artistic entity in its own right.

ABOUT THE ANNUAL CONFERENCE

SAR organises annual international conferences and a variety of meeting formats that bring together leading practitioners, early career researchers, established scholars, distinguished academics, institutional representatives, funding bodies and policy makers.

SAR's international meetings aim to

  • Articulating the needs and representing the interests of artistic researchers and their institutions.

  • Providing opportunities for exchange, dialogue and debate at annual conferences, in person and remotely.

  • Engaging with policy makers at local, regional and international levels.

UPCOMING CONFERENCE

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