The Open Call for the Social Art Award 2019 under the topic “We are the People – Peaceful Revolutions” was closed on December 15, 2019. We are very impressed by 558 submissions that were contributed by artists coming from 65 countries across all continents. 

The winners of The Social Art Award 2019 are Narcissa Gold (USA), Melinda Mouzannar (Lebanon) and Bogna Grazyna Jaroslawski (Poland/Germany). The Honorary Mention goes to Kingson Kin Sing Chan (Hong Kong/UK). 

Below you find the artworks, that passed the initial jury round. The public voting took place till 30 December and is a tool to give more public visibility to the topic and the artworks. It does not replace the final jury judgment. There were two wildcards for the most voted artworks that entered the final shortlist

The focus diversity of applications shows that artists are active in the multi-faceted fields of socially engaged art reflecting on wars, genocides, femicides, traumata, violence against refugees, children, women, men, disabled people, LGBTIQs, animals. They share feelings for the planet and its living species, but also showing hopelessness due to complex crises be it climate change (e.g. in regard to water pollution), capitalism, corruption, a violation against human rights, nature, protected national parks. Many of the artists are constantly trying to give a voice to the poorest or empower unheard social groups.

It’s not only about peaceful revolutions, but it’s also about feeling a deep connection and showing love and respect for each other.
Thank you all for sharing your great and inspirational work and look at all the great contributions!

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The Paper Monument for the Paperless
by Domenique Himmelsbach de Vries
Category: open category
745
Contest is finished!
https://social-art-award.org/award2019/?contest=photo-detail&photo_id=1187
119
745
Title:
The Paper Monument for the Paperless

Author:
Domenique Himmelsbach de Vries

Category:
open category

Description:
A Paper Monument for the Paperless’ is a guerilla-art monument in the making. It emerged from a series of workshops initiated in 2013 with refugee collective We Are Here. The monument comprises a growing series of woodcut portraits of undocumented refugees which aims to give the subjects more visibility in the public sphere. Since then, a large print-run of the series has enabled the monument to be distributed as a tool for activists around the world: from Krakow, to Sarajevo and Zanzibar, and even Boston in the U.S. How can art catalyze change? (Optional) For me art is about the exploration of new ways to percieve and aproach life's questions. Art can inspire new non-polarizing ways of activism.
Description:
A Paper Monument for the Paperless’ is a guerilla-art monument in the making. It emerged from a series of workshops initiated in 2013 with refugee collective We Are Here. The monument comprises a growing series of woodcut portraits of undocumented refugees which aims to give the subjects more visibility in the public sphere. Since then, a large print-run of the series has enabled the monument to be distributed as a tool for activists around the world: from Krakow, to Sarajevo and Zanzibar, and even Boston in the U.S. How can art catalyze change? (Optional) For me art is about the exploration of new ways to percieve and aproach life's questions. Art can inspire new non-polarizing ways of activism.