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JACOB LOVE WINS THE CONCORD ART PRIZE

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CONCORD ART PRIZE 2021 WINNER ANNOUNCED

ALL 10 SHORTLISTED PIECES ARE BEING EXHIBITED AT 180 STRAND
10-11 SEPTEMBER 2021 | 12pm – 6pm | FREE ADMISSION
A NEW ART PRIZE ENCOURAGING VISUALS INSPIRED BY MUSIC INCLUDING PINK FLOYD, KREPT & KONAN, RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN, JOAN ARMATRADING CBE, STRAVINSKY, MARK RONSON AND MORE

Jacob Love wins the Concord Art Prize with his three-channel audio-visual installation, created in response to Rodgers & Hammerstein’s My Favorite Things. Of the ten finalists, his submission was deemed to be a cerebral, contemporary, and very successful interpretation of the song, by an illustrious panel of judges including world renowned British artist Mat Collishaw, representatives from the Royal College of Art, Central Saint Martins and Hiscox, alongside Julie Lomax (CEO of a-n The Artists Information Company), Robert Yates of The Observer, and songwriters Mark Ronson and Joan Armatrading CBE. At the heart of this prize, is the notion that great art makes great art, and this is certainly true of Love’s video piece.

JACOB LOVE WINS THE CONCORD ART PRIZE
Jacob Love

He was amongst strong company including artists Anna Kerman, Sam Tahmessabi, Angela
Fung, Michal Raz and Olly Fathers whose work can be viewed at the public exhibition, curated
by Ali Hillman of Friday Trampoline. His prize was presented at a Private View hosted by
Concord Music Publishing at 180 Strand on the 9th of September.

JACOB LOVE WINS THE CONCORD ART PRIZE
Jacob’s three-channel audio-visual installation

Curator Ali Hillman of Friday Trampoline comments, “We were delighted with all of the finalists’ work and felt their contribution to the inaugural Prize was exceptional. We will continue to follow their careers going forward. Jacob’s work proved subversive, thought provoking and timely. For us it stood out as a relevant and contemporary interpretation of this iconic piece of music.”


Sara Lord, SVP International Sync and Project Development at Concord Music Publishing comments, “From Concord’s perspective we were overwhelmed by the scope of all the entries, then we were blown away by the 10 final works, and now, the winning piece by Jacob is quite simply the icing on the cake – and we are so pleased that one of our most beloved songs has inspired his installation.”

JACOB LOVE WINS THE CONCORD ART PRIZE
Video still from Jacob Love’s artwork in response to Rodgers & Hammerstein’s
My Favorite Things

Jacob Love’s prize-winning work explores themes of trauma, the autonomic nervous system, human agency, and the sublime. It contains two main elements, a three-channel audio visual installation and an ‘oddly satisfying’ content farm style YouTube channel. His complex piece draws on his experience of somatic therapies such as EDMR and his ongoing research into visceral video content. He is interested in the way platforms such as YouTube and Tiktok interact with our psycho and physiological selves to provoke certain reactions, in particular catharsis.

He regards the song My Favorite Things as a description of sensory experiences that people are unconsciously drawn to for relief. He sees self-soothing in the way people have become addicted to screens. In many ways, for Love, platforms such as Tiktok, with their highly sensitive algorithms, construct new mobile lists of ‘our favourite things’. His final piece is an intense video exploration of these complex concepts at the basis of contemporary human experience.

Jacob Love received his Masters from Goldsmiths in 2008, where he has since taught for twelve years. He has exhibited consistently in the UK and globally, including a solo show at the Leslie Lohman Museum in 2013. In 2016 he was included in ‘Queering Hormones, Queering Love’, in conjunction with the British Film Institute, no.w.here lab and King’s College, funded by The Wellcome Trust. The project involved using 16mm film to make work related to queer love and the endocrine system. The films were screened at BFI Flair. His most recent solo show CONTENT: Learning About Pleasure (2018) was installed in a converted church space in South-East London.

He makes work exploring desire, trauma, addiction, and technology, inspired by personal experiences and his practice as an art educator. He has a particular interest in new media and its communicative potentials beyond language: “The autonomous nonconscious parts of who we are play a huge role in how we live. Moving images and sound can communicate with that part of us in a way that language never can.”

THE CONCORD ART PRIZE
This major new art prize encouraged visuals inspired by music. Over 700 submissions were received from artists aged 18-72, responding to a selection of songs from Concord Music Publishing’s expansive catalogue. Ten finalists were selected by the judging panel, and each received a £1000 bursary to create their final pieces, which are currently on display at 180 Strand. Jacob Love was selected as the winner from the ten finalists.

The Judges:
Alexander Schady, Central Saint Martins
Ali Hillman, Friday Trampoline
Joan Armatrading CBE, Songwriter
Julie Lomax, Artists Information Company
Mark Ronson, Songwriter/Producer
Mat Collishaw, Artist
Pamela Golden, Royal College of Art
Robert Yates, The Observer
Sara Lord, Concord Music Publishing
Whitney Hintz, Hiscox

The Finalists:
Angela Fung
Anna Kerman
Becky Hoghton
Deborah Hobson
Jacob Love
Michal Raz
Olivia Martin Snowsill
Olly Fathers
Sam Tahmassebi

For more on Jacob Love visit: www.jacoblove.net
For more information on the prize visit: www.concordartprize.com

©2021 Concord Art Prize, JACOB LOVE