World of WearableArt™ 2022 award winners announced

Wanton Widow, Kate MacKenzie, New Zealand. Credit: Getty Images

WORLD OF WEARABLEART™ 2022 AWARD WINNERS ANNOUNCED INCLUDING SECOND-TIME SUPREME WOW AWARD WINNER

The 2022 World of WearableArt™ (WOW) Awards have been announced tonight at Wellington’s TSB Arena, with the Supreme WOW Award going to Hawke’s Bay artist Kate MacKenzie – the second time she has been bestowed the coveted top prize.

MacKenzie is among 21 award winners in the 2022 World of WearableArt Awards Competition, in which more than NZD$185,000 of prize money was on offer, across three recurring sections, Aotearoa, Avant-garde and Open, as well as three new sections in 2022: Architecture, Elizabethan Era and Monochromatic.

For the next three weeks, the TSB Arena stage will come alive with this year’s 88 finalist entries by 103 designers representing 20 countries and regions around the world.

WOW Competition Director Heather Palmer says, “We have been waiting for an incredibly long time to share the work of our 2022 finalist designers with the world and finally we can give each of the garments their moment to shine on the WOW stage. To see the passion, innovation and dedication of this year’s finalists is incredibly affirming and it is heartening to see the wearable art movement around the globe remains alive and well. We celebrate the achievement of this year’s finalists and also look ahead to the 2023 Competition with much anticipation!”

WOW is New Zealand’s most spectacular theatrical stage production. The 2022 Show includes over 100 dancers, kapa haka performers (Ngāti Pōneke) and aerialists, as well as spectacular headline performances by New Zealand musicians Estère, and Sharn Te Pou.

The first round of judging to select finalists took place in 2021 by a panel comprising WOW Founder and resident judge Dame Suzie Moncrieff, designer and co-founder of Zambesi Elisabeth Findlay, and acclaimed New Zealand sculptor Jeff Thomson. In addition, they have been joined by International Guest Judge – award-winning costume designer Alexandra Byrne; The Residency Experience Award Judge – Swedish-born fashion activist and celebrity stylist, B Åkerlund; and Wētā Workshop Emerging Designer Award Judge – Co-founder, CEO and Creative Director of Wētā Workshop, Sir Richard Taylor.

Of the Supreme WOW Award winner, the Judges said, “We are in awe of the designer’s resourcefulness in use of the vintage china cabinet and Singer sewing machine drawers. It perfectly captures what we mean when we say wearable art. It is refined, sculptural and tells a story.”

WOW 2022, which runs until 16 October, will attract over 60,000 to Wellington’s TSB arena, with around 35,000 travelling from out of town. WOW contributes nearly $28m to the local economy in Te Whanganui-a-Tara.

Tickets are still on sale now at www.worldofwearableart.com. The full list of winners is below.

 

CREATIVES

 

Executive Creative Director – Brian Burke

Show Director – Malia Johnston

AV Content Designers – Drop the Spoon

Production Designer – Robin Rawstorne

Lighting Designer – Trudy Dalgleish

Lighting Concept – Chris Petridis

Music Director – Paul McLaney

Composer – Eden Mulholland

Costume Designer – Gabrielle Stevenson

Choreographers – Andrew Cesan, Kayla Paige

Aerial Choreographer – Jenny Ritchie

Assistant to the Show Director – Anita Hunziker

Kaumātua & Advisor – Tānemahuta Gray

 

2022 World of WearableArt Award Competition Winners*

 

SUPREME WOW AWARD

Wanton Widow, Kate MacKenzie, New Zealand ($30,000)

Runner-up: Fera Dei, Fifi Colston and Bruce Mahalski, New Zealand ($15,000)

 

SECTION WINNERS

 

Aotearoa Section

Fera Dei, Fifi Colston and Bruce Mahalski, New Zealand ($6,000)

 

Avant-garde Section

Documental, Bethany Cordwell, Australia ($6,000)

 

Monochromatic Section

Life, Sun Ye, Ma Yuru and Zhou Honglei, China ($6,000)

 

Open Section

Wanton Widow, Kate MacKenzie, New Zealand ($6,000)

 

Architecture Section

Hidden Layers, Anna Weszelovszky, Hungary ($6,000)

 

Elizabethan Era Section

Madame Paon Doré, Veritée Hill, United States ($6,000)

 

OTHER AWARDS

 

Dame Suzie Moncrieff Award

Dark Alien Doctor, Cecilio Castrillo, Spain ($6,000)

 

First-time Entrant Award

Glistening Gothic Tracery, Colleen Muscha and Christina Marullo, United States ($5,000)

 

Student Innovation Award

Beneath, Agnes Olah, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, United Kingdom ($5,000)

 

Wearable Technology Award

Little Electric Dress (LED), Dinah Walker and Mark Walker, New Zealand ($5,000)

 

Sustainability Award

Haerenga (Journey), Christopher Davis, New Zealand ($5,000)

 

New Zealand Design Award

Aetatem Aureum: Elizabeth & Her Lady, Carolyn Gibson and Joelle Marsh, New Zealand ($5,000)

 

Absolutely Positively Wellington International Design Award: UK & Europe

Andromeda, Cecilio Castrillo, Spain

 

Absolutely Positively Wellington International Design Award: Asia

Neoru, Jayati Saraf, Pearl Academy, India ($5,000)

 

Absolutely Positively Wellington International Design Award: Americas

Elizabethan Jester, Miodrag Guberinic, United States ($5,000)

 

Absolutely Positively Wellington International Design Award: Australia & Pacific

Revolution, Hanna Smith, Australia ($5,000)

 

Absolutely Positively Wellington International Design Award: Overall Winner

Neoru, Jayati Saraf, Pearl Academy, India ($6,000)

 

Wētā Workshop Emerging Designer Award

The Giant Purse, Thao Nguyen, Vietnam ($6,000)

 

The Residency Experience Award

Documental, Bethany Cordwell, Australia ($5,000)

Siobhan Waterhouse