HÂþ»­

 

Precedent setting

- June 30, 2009

Datamine by Mark Stebbins, acrylic ink on board, 16 by 16 inches.

A Dal law school grad who is pursing his art practice is the winner of the inaugural Mayor’s Award of Distinction, Contemporary Visual Art.

Mark Stebbins, who graduated from HÂþ»­ with his law degree last year, will use earnings from the $10,000 first prize to pay off student loans and purchase art supplies. His painting, entitled Datamine, will be included in the HRM’s permanent art collection and displayed in a public location.

“One thing I learned while doing my law degree that the most valuable thing is time,†says Mr. Stebbins, who works part-time as the education and outreach coordinator at HÂþ»­ Art Gallery. “This award is helpful in so many ways—it’s validation, financial support and gives me time to do what I love doing.â€

From Point Edward, Ont., Mr. Stebbins did his undergraduate degree in Fine Art from the University of Western Ontario. After a few years of art making and teaching, he decided to return to university to study law.

Mark Stebbins with his prize-winning painting at City Hall. (Danny Abriel Photo)

Ideally, he’d like to find a balance between his two interests, but hasn’t figured out how to do that yet, he says. “So I decided to take a year and focus exclusively on my art practice,†he adds.

His paintings are layered, dense and suggestive of many things, including hand-worked embroidery, crochet and quilting; cellular forms and micro-organisms; cartooning and pixellation. Small-scaled and incredibly detailed, his works— which take “an incredibly long time to put togetherâ€â€”evoke matter breaking apart and disintegrating.

Artists Jonathan Johnson and Daniel Hutchinson received honourable mentions in the competition, which was open to HRM-based, emerging and mid-career visual artists.

Short-listed works can be viewed on the .