Albany Museum of Art to host annual essay contest

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By Carlton Fletcher
[email protected]

ALBANY — The ninth annual “A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words” essay competition gets underway on Thursday. The top three essayists in each of two divisions — high school and college — will earn cash awards for their work at a reception in March at the AMA.

“This competition recognizes talented young writers through a combination of the visual and literary arts,” AMA Executive Director Andrew J. Wulf said. “It is another example of how the arts reach across disciplines to spark the creativity that resides inside us.”

The submission period opens Thursday and ends at midnight on Feb. 29. Total prize money for the contest is $1,000. The first-place writer in each division will win a $250 award, with $150 for second place and $100 for third place. The winners will be announced at an awards reception scheduled for 6 p.m. on March 7 at the museum. The recognized essayists will be invited to read their essays at the event.

To participate, a student must visit the AMA at 311 Meadowlark Drive, where six works of art are designated for the competition. The students will view the designated artworks and write an essay inspired by one of the works. There is no contest fee, and the AMA has free admission, so there is no cost to participate. The museum is open 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays.

“The contest is open to all high school and college students attending southwest Georgia schools, colleges and universities, as well as students from southwest Georgia who are attending schools outside the region,” AMA Director of Education and Public Programming Annie Vanoteghem said. “The only limits are one essay may be submitted by a student, and it cannot exceed 1,000 words in length.”

The essay may be factual or fictional and may be written as prose or poetry.

“It should be based on what the art object the writer selects brings to mind, whether that’s a memory about an experience or a thought that sparks the imagination,” Vanoteghem said.

Each essay will be assigned a numeric ID, and all identifying information regarding the writer will be removed before the essays are submitted to a panel of judges. The judges will read and rank the essays, with the combined scores determining the winners.

For the ninth annual contest, the six art objects will include two from “Gold Soundz” in the Haley Gallery, two from “Educators as Artists” in the McCormack Gallery, and one each from “Andy Warhol: Hand-Colored Flowers” in the East Gallery and “Old Master Drawings from the Shaffer Collection” in the Hodges Gallery. The artworks will have labels showing that they are designated for the competition.

The competition is open to any college student who lives in southwest Georgia and to any student, regardless of hometown, who is currently enrolled at Albany State University, Albany Technical College, Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College, Georgia Southwestern State University, Valdosta State University, Thomas University or Andrew College.

The high school division is open to public and private high school students in Baker, Calhoun, Colquitt, Crisp, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Grady, Lee, Miller, Mitchell, Seminole, Sumter, Terrell, Thomas, and Worth counties.

Dually enrolled students, who take both high school and college-credit classes, compete in the college division.

“We also are encouraging middle school students to participate,” Vanoteghem said. “There are no cash prices for middle school students, but we will give certificates to the top essayists.”

Entries must be emailed to [email protected] by midnight on Feb. 29. Guidelines and frequently asked questions may be found at www.albanymuseum.com/ama_programs/essay-contest.

Special Photo: Albany Museum of Art/Jim Hendricks

Author

Except for a brief period, Albany Herald Editor Carlton Fletcher has been a newspaperman, working as Sports Writer/Columnist for the weekly Ocilla Star, as Sports Writer/Sports Editor with The Tifton Gazette, and as Sports Writer/Copy Editor/News Reporter/Features Editor and Editor of the paper. He has won numerous awards for sports, news, business and column writing, including a first-place Business Writing award in last year’s Georgia Press Association awards competition.

Read Carlton’s stories.

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