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Press assets available HERE
Artist video available HERE
TRIBECA FESTIVAL AND CHANEL UNVEIL PARTICIPANTS FOR THE 2023 ARTIST AWARDS PROGRAM
The year’s curation of all women artists showcases the strength, beauty and diversity of female creatives
NEW YORK, NY– May 31, 2023 – Tribeca Festival and CHANEL today announced the artists selected as part of the 2023 Artist Awards Program. As in previous years, Tribeca and CHANEL bring together esteemed artists to generously donate an original work, which will be awarded to winning filmmakers of the Festival, which runs June 7-18.
This year, the remarkable, all women-cohort of 10 acclaimed artists invited by Tribeca and CHANEL to celebrate their fellow storytellers are Ana Benaroya, Beverly Fishman, Christie Neptune, Lisa Lebofsky, Natia Lemay, Patricia Encarnacion, Renee Cox, Sheree Hovsepian, Shinique Smith, and Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz. The selection of artists and their work has been led by curator Racquel Chevremont.
“Tribeca and CHANEL recognize the significance of representation and the undeniable impact women artists can have when their work and stories are in the spotlight,” said Tribeca Festival Co-Founder and Tribeca Enterprises CEO Jane Rosenthal. “We are dedicated to celebrating creativity and culture, fostering diverse voices, and encouraging the development of a new generation of visionaries. Our eighteen-year partnership with CHANEL underscores our joint commitment to honoring powerful storytelling, artistic excellence, and the spirit of artists supporting other artists. We invite audiences to join us in this celebration and discover the transformative power of women’s artistry, which reflects our reality and shapes our understanding of the world.”
This signature cultural event recognizes the intersection between creative fields and celebrates New York City’s continued spirit of cultural innovation. The tradition of supporting artistic creativity and vision goes back to the inception of the Tribeca Festival, which was founded with a mission to rebuild and regenerate the renowned artistic hub of New York City in the wake of September 11th. Since the Festival’s inception, studio artists witnessed the positive impact it was forming in the community and wanted to be involved to directly support and celebrate other storytellers. This solidarity and generosity has remained a core value of the Tribeca Festival and the Artist Awards is a yearly reminder of that.
“When I was approached to curate the Artist Awards for a second year, it was important that this iteration have a profound social impact, showcasing the strength, beauty and diversity of women. Our focus is on giving women in the arts their flowers and celebrating their trailblazing contributions to contemporary art,” said the 2023 Artist Awards curator Racquel Chevremont. “Throughout recorded history, from the cave painting to the camera, women have been driving forces in art around the world. Yet female creatives remain woefully underrepresented. It’s imperative that we continue to solicit and showcase the work of women artists.”
CHANEL is honored to continue its support of the annual Artist Awards Program, which celebrates the leading filmmakers and artists of our time. Art has been an integral role at the House of CHANEL throughout history. House founder and visionary Gabriel Chanel surrounded herself with the leading artists of her time, drawing inspiration and support from her fellow creative peers. CHANEL’s collaboration with the Tribeca Festival is a testament to the brand’s continuous commitment to creation and artistry in their varied forms.
This year’s art collection will be displayed at the Tribeca Festival Hub at Spring Studios throughout the Festival.
Following is a complete list of contributed artwork. Artwork images can be found HERE.
Ana Benaroya: Lady Luck, 2023. India ink and marker on bristol board. 7" x 6".
Given to Best Animated Short
Beverly Fishman: Untitled, 2018. Vinyl and paper collage on smooth acid free Bristol paper. 19 x 24 inches (48.3 x 61 cm). Signed and dated in pencil ‘Beverly Fishman 2018’ (lower right, recto).
Given to Student Visionary Award
Christie Neptune: Self Sitting on Stool Looking Yonder, 2017. Digital Chromogenic Print, 18 x 24 inches (45.72 x 60.96 cm). 1/10 editions + 2APS, Signed print. Given to Nora Ephron Award
Lisa Lebofsky: Wave Observation, 2022. Oil on paper. 9.5” x 12.5”.
Given to Founders Award For Best U.S. Narrative Feature
Natia Lemay: Nine Little Drums, 2023. Debossing on Paper. 15" x 21.5".
Given to Best International Narrative Feature
Patricia Encarnacion: No Regreso (I'm not coming back), Series: Abya Yala, 2021. Archival ink fine art paper. 8"x10".
Given to The Albert Maysles Award For Best New Documentary Director
Renee Cox: Black Leather Lace-Up, 2001. Archival digital inkjet print. 13” x 22”.
Given to Best Narrative Short
Sheree Hovsepian: Filmic, 2023. Mixed media collage. 20.5” x 15.5”.
Given to Best Documentary Short
Shinique Smith: Emergence, 2022. Image created during the filming of the artist's performance film Breathing Room: Moon' Marked Journey. Archival Pigment Print mounted on aluminum. 23” x 33”.
Given to Best Documentary Feature
Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz: 'Hood Elegy #1, 2023. Handmade 100% cotton rag paper, hair extensions, beads, filigrees, gilded nail extensions, glitter. 9.5" x 13.5".
Given to Best New Narrative Director
About the Artists
Ana Benaroya:
Ana Benaroya’s (b. 1986, New York, NY) work centers substantial female subjects, whose extravagant musculatures upset more traditional expectations of femininity. Through her paintings and works on paper, Benaroya constructs a female gaze that recasts women in dominant roles, with an assertive, idiosyncratic presence. The muscles on Benaroya’s figures both distort and ornament her subject’s bodies and speak to female desire and a queer sensibility. Striking, offbeat colors dominate the compositions, and the artist’s intense, slightly macabre palette balances their figurative vigor and allure.
In her practice, Benaroya pulls from diverse sources to assemble a unique pictorial language. She cites gallery artist Peter Saul as a major inspiration, and her work often makes reference to graphic styles familiar from superhero comics. Her current exhibition at the gallery centers on images of women in relation to water, and through references to sources both art historical and contemporary, Benaroya explores the dynamics of queer desire, in which bodies are on display for themselves and on their own terms. In compositions animated by complex networks of attraction, Benaroya makes visible forms of lesbian desire that are typically rendered latent or invisible. As she told Stephanie Eckardt in W Magazine, “‘I want depictions of female nudes that have desire and passion, but because the women are the sex objects—because they see that in each other [...] I feel like not many examples of that exist, from the perspective of someone like me.’”
Ana Benaroya earned a Master of Fine Arts in Painting from Yale University in 2019. Benaroya’s work is part of numerous institutional collections, including The Hall Art Foundation (Reading, VT), the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection Bunker Art Space (West Palm Beach, FL), Alex Katz Foundation (New York, NY), Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art (New York, NY), Institute of Contemporary Art (Miami, FL), Bass Museum of Art (Miami Beach, FL), Pérez Art Museum Miami (Miami, FL), The High Museum (Atlanta, GA), and Zuzeum Art Center (Riga, Latvia).
Beverly Fishman:
From the outset of a four-decade career, Beverly Fishman has centered her work around the body, probing abstract investigations of disease, identity, and medicine.
Her current series focuses on the concept of polypharmacy—the prescription of multiple medicines to one individual. Compiled forms correspond to specific pills as Fishman expertly illustrates the measured precision of an individual’s unique prescription. The work provokes an interrogation surrounding Big Pharma and the promises of pharmaceuticals as the means for a cure.
Beverly Fishman (b. 1955, Philadelphia, PA) received her Master of Fine Arts in 1980 from Yale University and her Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Philadelphia College of Art in 1977. In 2020, Fishman was inducted as a National Academician of the National Academy of Design. She is the recipient of the Anonymous Was A Woman Award; the American Academy of Arts and Letters’ Purchase Award; a Guggenheim Fellowship in the Fine Arts; and a Fellowship Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Christie Neptune:
Christie Neptune lives between Brooklyn, New York, and Cambridge, Massachusetts. She received her B.A. in Visual Arts from Fordham University and is currently a masters candidate in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology program in Art, Culture, and Technology. Neptune's work has been exhibited at venues including: Gagosian, New York; We Buy Gold, New York; Martos Gallery, New York; and the Bronx Museum of the Arts among others. Her work is in the collection of the Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts. In 2021, she was awarded the Prix Medeos for the presentation of her work at Art-o-rama, Marseille, France. Neptune’s work has been widely discussed in publications such as 4 Columns, Artforum, Hyperallergic, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post. Her numerous awards and residencies include Cornell University’s \Art Award, Light Work Artist-in-Residence, NYFA Fellowship in Interdisciplinary Arts, and Smack Mellon Studio Residency among others.
Lisa Lebofsky:
Lisa Lebofsky is a nomadic plein air painter. She paints the restlessness of nature, correlating it with human vulnerabilities. Her direct participation with the landscape is vital to imbue a painting with the energy of a place. Lebofsky visits regions susceptible to climate change – including Antarctica, Newfoundland and Labrador, Greenland, and The Maldives – and meets with local residents to discuss how their community is impacted.
Lisa Lebofsky has her MFA in painting from New York Academy of Art. Her work has been exhibited in museums and universities such as Savannah College of Art and Design, GA; New Bedford Whaling Museum, MA; Shelburne Museum, VT; Lehman College, NY; Pima Air and Space Museum, AZ; El Museo de la Ciudad de Mexico. She is the recipient of residencies including: Terra Nova National Park, Newfoundland; Saltonstall, Ithaca, NY; Tilting Air, Fogo Island, Newfoundland; Jentel, WY; Shenandoah National Park, VA.
Natia Lemay:
Natia Lemay (b. 1985 in Toronto, Ontario) is an Afro-indigenous artist of Black, Mi'kmaw, and Settler descent, raised in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Natia received her BFA from Ontario College of Art and Design (2021) in drawing/painting with a minor in social sciences and an MFA from the Yale School of Art in Painting/Printmaking. Natia's Work is interdisciplinary to address the expansiveness of conditions under which IBPOC people live.
Drawing on childhood experiences, she explores semiotic, philosophical, and socio-psychological themes of identity, hypervisibility, orientation, and consciousness to untangle how the body and mind interact with space and shift through time. Through careful worldbuilding and storytelling, she aims to create a visual vocabulary that makes the invisible visible, articulates the indescribable, and creates space for reflection without prejudice.
Patricia Encarnación:
Patricia Encarnación (she/they) is an Afro-Dominican interdisciplinary activist and scholar. Her work explores Caribbean culture by challenging tropical aesthetics with an anti-colonial lens.
Encarnación participated in multiple residencies such as Smack Mellon as a Van Lier fellow, MuseumsQuartier Vienna, Kovent Catalonia, and Silver Arts Project residency at the World Trade Center. Her work has been selected twice in The Centro Leon Jiménez Biennial, obtaining the prize bestowed by the city of Cádiz (Spain) for cultural immersion and a fellowship in Martinique as part of a Tropiques Atrium Caribbean art program. She has exhibited in places such as Documenta 15th, Afro Syncretic at NYU, I am New Afro Latinx at MOLAA, CA, and Anthem X at Malin Gallery during Miami art week. Besides being an actively exhibiting artist, Encarnación has also delved into curatorial practices in spaces such as ChaShama and alternative gallery spaces in NYC and Miami, and the Dominican Republic.
Renee Cox:
Renee Cox (b. 1960, Colgate, Jamaica; lives in New York) makes photographs, collages, and installations that draw on art history, fashion photography and popular culture. Her work invokes a critical vision of female sexuality, beauty, power and heroism through nudity, religious imagery and symbolism that inform her interdisciplinary process. She is most noted for her larger than life photographs of female bodies. She reexaminations the black female figure in the context of structures of power. Inspired by critical epochs and artistic styles, her works are often reimaginations of art history, ranging from the Italian Renaissance such as Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci, to Cubism (Picasso), Modernism (Édouard Manet) to traditional West African Art (Dogon, Mali, Cross River section of Nigeria). Cox utilizes a mélange of photographic styles in the vein of fashion photographer Richard Avedon, German portrait photographer August Sander, as well as summoning Harlem Renaissance photographic practices, inspired by James Van Der Zee, Gordon Parks to the obscure ritualistic three-dimensional sculptural collages of Bettye Saar. Cox’s work is a celebration of the spectrum of the black female body. Her work challenges how women are seen respective to time, place and the intangible spaces between representation and reality.
Renee Cox received her BA from Syracuse University, (Syracuse, NY) and MFA from the School of Visual Arts, (New York, NY). She was a participant in the Whitney Museum of American Art, Independent Study Program, (New York, NY). Her work has been included in solo and group exhibitions at prominent institutions to include Hannah Traore Gallery (New York, NY), Columbia Museum of Art (Columbia, SC), Spelman College Museum of Fine Arts (Atlanta, GA), Mattress Factory (Pittsburgh, PA), Tate Liverpool (Liverpool, UK), The New Museum of Contemporary Art (New York, NY), Brooklyn Museum (Brooklyn, NY), and Harvard University (Cambridge, MA) and the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York, NY) to name a few. She received the Artists Fellowship Award, New York Foundations for the Arts, The MacDowell Colony, (Petersborough, NY) and the Aaron Matalon Award, The National Gallery of Jamaica (Kingston, Jamaica) among others. She is an associate professor at Columbia University and has lectured at Yale College of Art (New Haven, CT), New York University (New York, NY) and Parsons School of Design (New York, NY) to name a few. She lives and works in Manhattan and Amagansett with her husband,and their dog, Dogon.
Sheree Hovsepian:
Sheree Hovsepian (American b.Iran) earned an MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2002.
Her work highlights the physicality of the photograph and photography’s relationship to the human body. Coaxed into sculptural forms, layered with tactile materials, and assembled into larger compositions, Hovsepian’s pictures oscillate between object and image, creating a sensuous, bodily experience of the photographic document.
Hovsepian was included in the 59th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, The Milk of Dreams, curated by Cecilia Alemani, with a room dedicated to her work.
Recent solo exhibitions include exhibitions at Rachel Uffner Gallery, New York and Halsey McKay Gallery, East Hampton, NY; Recent group exhibitions include Affinities for Abstraction: Women Artists on Eastern Long Island, 1950-2020, Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, NY; There’s There There, Hauser & Wirth, Southampton, NY; Arches and Ink, Rachel Uffner Gallery, New York; Material Gestures, Stony Island Arts Bank, Chicago; and Where Do We Stand?, The Drawing Center, New York.
Hovsepian is in the permanent collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Bronx Museum, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and the Everson Museum of Art, among others. She currently lives and works in New York City.
Shinique Smith:
Shinique Smith’s multifaceted practice includes painting, sculpture, installation, video, photography, and performance. Exploring ideas of transformation and ritual, through materials such as fabric, clothing, and collage, breath, bundling and calligraphic brushwork, Smith has built a complex visual language that resonates on intimate and social scales. Her totemic works bear the presence of her body and serve as containers that operate at the convergence of consumption, displacement, and spiritual sanctuary.
Smith’s work has been featured in over twenty solo exhibitions and is represented in the collections of many prestigious institutions including Brooklyn Museum, Guggenheim, Denver Art Museum, LACMA, Minneapolis Art Institute, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Baltimore Museum of Art, Whitney Museum and Studio Museum in Harlem. Smith has also been honored with awards from Joan Mitchell Foundation, New York Foundation for the Arts, Anonymous Was a Woman and the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz:
Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz is an interdisciplinary visual artist whose work pulls from 17th and 18th-century European portraiture, comic books, sketch comedy, folkloric dance, and installation to address race, bias, trauma, and healing. Her work has been exhibited in numerous venues such as The Momentary, the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, National Museum of Women in the Arts, Museum of Arts and Design, Garage Museum Moscow, Orlando Museum of Art, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Gyeongnam Art Museum, Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico; and at the Manifesta biennial, and the Performa biennial. Numerous media outlets, including Art in America ArtNews, PBS, NPR, The New York Times, and The Washington Post have covered her work. She earned her MFA from Rutgers University Mason Gross School of Art and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. She currently serves as a board member for the College Art Association where she’s committed to addressing invisible workloads on faculty of color
About the Artist Awards Video:
For the 18th year, the Tribeca Festival and CHANEL have brought together esteemed artists to generously donate original works, which will be presented to winning filmmakers of the Festival. This year, the cohort is comprised of 10 remarkable, acclaimed women artists who contribute their voices and works to the program in celebration of their fellow storytellers. They are Ana Benaroya, Beverly Fishman, Christie Neptune, Lisa Lebofsky, Natia Lemay, Patricia Encarnacion, Renee Cox, Sheree Hovsepian, Shinique Smith, and Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz. The selection of artists and their work has been led by curator Racquel Chevremont.
In a short film created exclusively for the Festival, the artists talk about what art is for each of them, different feedback they’ve each received, women’s progress and the Tribeca Festival itself.
The Artist Awards Program is a signature cultural event that marks the intersection between creative fields and celebrates New York City’s continued spirit of cultural innovation. Supporting artistic creativity and vision across mediums goes back to the inception of the Tribeca Festival and aligns with the same tradition started by Gabrielle Chanel—one that the brand has upheld for over a century.
VIDEO CREDIT: Courtesy of Tribeca
About the Tribeca Festival:
The Tribeca Festival, presented by OKX, brings artists and diverse audiences together to celebrate storytelling in all its forms, including film, TV, music, audio storytelling, games, and XR. With strong roots in independent film, Tribeca is synonymous with creative expression and entertainment. Tribeca champions emerging and established voices, discovers award-winning talent, curates innovative experiences, and introduces new ideas through exclusive premieres, exhibitions, conversations, and live performances.
The Festival was founded by Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, and Craig Hatkoff in 2001 to spur the economic and cultural revitalization of lower Manhattan following the attacks on the World Trade Center. The annual Tribeca Festival will celebrate its 22nd year from June 7–18, 2023 in New York City.
In 2019, James Murdoch’s Lupa Systems bought a majority stake in Tribeca Enterprises, bringing together Rosenthal, De Niro, and Murdoch to grow the enterprise.
About CHANEL:
Chanel is a private company and a world leader in creating, developing, manufacturing and distributing luxury products. Founded by Gabrielle Chanel at the beginning of the last century, Chanel offers a broad range of high-end creations, including Ready-to-Wear, Leather Goods, Fashion Accessories, Eyewear, Fragrances, Makeup, Skincare, Jewelry and Watches. Chanel is also renowned for its Haute Couture collections, presented twice yearly in Paris, and for having acquired a large number of specialized suppliers, collectively known as the Métiers d’Art. Chanel is dedicated to ultimate luxury and to the highest level of craftsmanship. It is a brand whose core values remain historically grounded on exceptional creation. As such, Chanel promotes culture, art, creativity and “savoir-faire” throughout the world, and invests significantly in people, R&D, sustainable development and innovation. At the end of 2022, Chanel employed more than 32,000 people worldwide.