South Australian Ruby Awards Australian art award
The South Australian Ruby Awards , also known as the Ruby Awards , are annual awards which recognise outstanding achievement in South Australia ’s arts and culture sector. They were named in honour of arts champion Dame Ruby Litchfield (1912–2001) DBE .
History and description
The Ruby Awards were introduced in 2006 by the Government of South Australia ,[ 1] named in honour of the late arts patron Dame Ruby Litchfield.[ 2] [ 3] She was the first woman appointed to the Board of the Adelaide Festival Centre Trust , a founder member of Festival City Broadcasters, and a board member of numerous other organisations, including the Adelaide Festival of Arts , the South Australian Housing Trust and the Carclew Youth Performing Arts Centre .[ 4]
The Awards were managed by Arts South Australia (formerly Arts SA) until 2018, when they were transferred to the Arts and Culture unit within the Department of the Premier and Cabinet .[ 5]
Since the year of inception, they have grown in number from eight to twelve.
Winners
2006–2009
Winners
2006
2007
2008
2009
Best Work or Event
Honk If You Are Jesus , State Theatre Company South Australia
Ikara – The Meeting Place, Tony Rosella, sculptor
When the Rain Stops Falling , Brink Productions
2008 OzAsia Festival
Community Impact (Under $100,000)
SALA Festival
(2006 Award program included one single award for Community Impact regardless of budget)
South Australian History Week
OzAsia Moon Lantern Festival
Seniors on Screen , Media Resource Centre
Community Impact (Over $100,000)
Bundaleer Forest Weekend
2007 Feast Festival
Port Augusta Re-Imagines
Innovation
Devolution , Australian Dance Theatre
Electro Acoustic Project , Zephyr Quartet
Trouble on Planet Earth , The Border Project
3xperimentia: Live Cut
Leadership in Arts Enterprise
Special projects under development, Craig Andrae
Fringe Benefits
Adelaide Festival Centre – Scenery and Engineering Workshops
The Tragical Life of Cheeseboy 2009 World Tour, Slingsby
Sustained Contribution by an Organisation
JamFactory Craft and Design
State Theatre Company South Australia
Adelaide Repertory Theatre
Patch Theatre Company
Sustained Contribution by an Individual
N/A
Leigh Warren
Timothy Sexton
Jane Hylton
Premier's Award for Lifetime Achievement
Frank Ford AM
Anthony Steel AM
Kym Bonython AO DFC AFC
Fiona Hall
2010–2013
The Geoff Crowhurst Memorial Award was introduced in honour of actor and director Geoff Crowhurst (23 March 1951 – 4 July 2009).
Winners 2010 – 2013
2010
2011
2012
2013
Best Event
Soundstream: Adelaide New Music Festival 2009
The Adelaide International Cello Festival 2011
Barrio , Adelaide Festival
Turner from the tate: The Making of a Master , Art Gallery of South Australia
Best Work
Man Covets Bird, Slingsby
Life in Movement , Closer Productions
School Dance , Windmill Theatre
Pinocchio , Windmill Theatre and State Theatre Company South Australia
Community Impact (Under $100,000)
Out of the Glass Case: The APY Lands Road Show
Out Blak Adventures
About Time: South Australia's History Festival , History SA
Auburn Courthouse Cultural Centre, HATS Inc (Heritage, Arts and Traditions)
Community Impact (Over $100,000)
Windmill Theatre and Mimili Anangu Partnership
COME OUT Festival 2011 Opening Parade
The Spirit Festival , Tandanya
Just Add Water: 2012 Regional Centre of Culture, Country Arts SA and Alexandrina Council
Innovation
The Mystery of Flying Kicks, Closer Productions
CACSA Contemporary 2010: The New New
I Am Not an Animal , The Border Project
If There Was a Colour Darker Than Black I'd Wear It , by Caleb Lewis , with Rising Damp, Illuminart and Country Arts SA [ 6] [ 7] [ 8]
Arts Enterprise
Format Festival 2010
Gray Street Workshop
Tuxedo Cat Theatre, Cassandra Tombs and Bryan Lynagh
Illuminart Productions Pty Ltd
Sustained Contribution by an Organisation
Restless Dance Theatre
Adelaide Chamber Singers
Carclew Youth Arts
Adelaide Cabaret Festival
Sustained Contribution by an Individual
Mary Moore
Stephen Phillips
Garry Stewart
Geoff Cobham
Geoff Crowhurst Memorial Award
Margie Fischer
Pat Rix
Cath Cantlon
Ollie Black
Premier's Award for Lifetime Achievement
Marjorie Fitz-Gerald OAM
Michael Morley
Robyn Archer
Milton Moon
2014–2017
Winners 2014 – 2017
2014
2015
2016 [ 9]
2017 [ 10]
Best Event
Dark Heart : 2014 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, Art Gallery of South Australia
Adelaide Film Festival /Adelaide Festival of Ideas
SALA Festival 2014
Tarnanthi : Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art, Art Gallery of South Australia
2017 Adelaide Festival
Best Work
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander War Memorial , Memorial artists Lee-Ann Buckskin, Tony Rosella and Michelle Nikou, sculptor Robert Hannaford and bronze caster Tim Thomson
The Philip Glass Trilogy , State Opera of South Australia
Girl Asleep, A Windmill Theatre Co and Soft Tread Enterprises’ film
Saul – Adelaide Festival
Community Impact (Under $100,000)
Sons & Mothers , No String Attached Theatre of Disability, written and directed by Alirio Zavarce
Barngarla Stories of Resilience , Nexus Arts
Desert Fringe, Adelaide Fringe
Creating Coonalpyn – Coorong District Council
Community Impact (Over $100,000)
Pom Pom: Children's Contemporary Art Space , Carclew and Playford Communities for Children Plus
Adelaide Writers' Week, Adelaide Festival
Gorgon : State Educational Regional Tour 2016, State Theatre Company South Australia
SALA Festival 2016
Innovation
ADHOCRACY , Vitalstatistix
Music for Strings and iThings , Zephyr Quartet
Girl Asleep , A Windmill Theatre Co and Soft Tread Enterprises’ film.
Intimate Space – Restless Dance Theatre
Arts Enterprise
Bowerbird – Adelaide's Design Market
Fifth Quarter, Carclew's business incubator
Adelaide Symphony Orchestra
N/A
Sustained Contribution by an Organisation
Helpmann Academy for the Visual and Performing Arts
Australian Dance Theatre
Adelaide Symphony Orchestra
Tutti Arts
Sustained Contribution by an Individual
Shane McNeil
Grant Hancock
Sally Chance
Margie Fischer
Geoff Crowhurst Memorial Award
Bob Daly and Kalyna Micenko
Edwin Kemp Attrill
Lee-Ann Buckskin
Alysha Herrmann
Premier's Award for Lifetime Achievement
Robert Hannaford
Yvonne Koolmatrie
Rob Brookman and Ulrike Klein ( Jointly awarded )
Ian Scobie AM
People's Choice Award
N/A
N/A
A Kid Like Me – True North Youth Theatre Ensemble
2017 UneARTh Festival Whyalla – City of Whyalla and Adelaide Fringe
2018–present
The 2018 South Australian Ruby Award significantly reshaped the award categories, including individual categories names in honour of the late Kaurna elder Stephen Goldsmith (the Stevie Gadlabarti Goldsmith Memorial Award for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artistic and cultural achievement) and local arts icon Frank Ford (the Frank Ford Memorial Young Achiever Award), both of whom who died in the same year.[ 11] [ 12]
2018 Finalists
(Winners in bold)[ 13] [ 14] [ 15]
2019 Finalists
(Winners in bold[ 16] )[ 17]
2021 Finalists[ 18]
(Winners in bold[ 19] [ 20] )
2023 Winners [ 21]
The Awards were held at the Queen's Theatre, Adelaide and the judging panel included eight key industry figures, including Heather Croall , Gavin Wanganeen and media personality Jane Doyle .[ 15]
The 2019 Ruby Awards will be held at Queens Theatre on Friday 29 November. All winners receive a bespoke, ruby-coloured glasswork designed and made at the JamFactory, and a new prize for Premier's Award for Lifetime Achievement was established: a gold nameplate on a seat in the Festival Theatre. The People's Choice Award established in 2017 was not offered.
Outstanding Community Event or Project
-
-
-
Wild Dog , Jacob Boehme
Best Festival
Adelaide Film Festival
-
Best Work or Event Within a Festival
Hamlet – Adelaide Festival and Glyndebourne Festival Opera (Adelaide Festival 2018)
In the Club – State Theatre Company South Australia (Adelaide Festival 2018)
Waqt al-tagheer: Time of Change – ACE Open (Adelaide Festival 2018)
Place des Anges – WOMADelaide and Gratte Ciel (Adelaide Festival 2018)
Counting and Cracking – Adelaide Festival
Hotel Mumbai (Adelaide Film Festival 2018) – Producer Julie Ryan and Director/Co-writer Anthony Maras (South Australian key creatives)
John Mawurndjul: I am the old and the new – Art Gallery of South Australia
The Beginning of Nature – Australian Dance Theatre
Yabarra - Gathering of Light – Adelaide Fringe
Talk to Me , Danny Philippou and Michael Philippou, Adelaide Film Festival 2022
Best Work or Event Outside a Festival
Beep – Windmill Theatre Co
Colours of Impressionism: Masterpieces from the Musée d'Orsay – Art Gallery of South Australia
Impersonal Space – Company AT and Tutti Arts
On the Terrace – Chamber Music Adelaide
Absence Embodied by Chiharu Shiota – Art Gallery of South Australia
Amphibian – Windmill Theatre Co
The Gods of Strangers – State Theatre Company
The Young King National Tour – Slingsby Theatre Company
Beep and Mort – Series One , Windmill Pictures
Best Work, Event or Project for Young People
AREA 53 – D'Faces of Youth Arts Inc.
Beep – Windmill Theatre Co
Neo – Art Gallery of South Australia
Ngarrindjeri Yanun (Aboriginal Artist Development Initiative) – Carclew Youth Arts
Baba Yaga – Windmill Theatre Company
DreamBig Festival 2019 – Adelaide Festival Centre Trust
Drop Out – Directed and Devised by Alirio Zavarce and True North Youth Theatre Ensemble
Neo – Art Gallery of South Australia
the Boy & the Ball , Stephen Noonan
Best Regional or Community Event or Project
AREA 53 – D'Faces of Youth Arts Inc.
Collectors/Collections: Waikerie Films – Waikerie District Historical Society and OSCA – Open Space Contemporary Arts
Mi:Wi 3027 – Country Arts SA
SCC Fringe 2018 – Art Engineers (Julianne Pierce), Ashley Sierp and Southern Cross Care
Marungka Tjalatjunu (Dipped in Black) , Derik Lynch and Matthew Thorne with Switch Productions
Award for Outstanding Contribution by an Organisation or Group
The Mill Adelaide
Made in Adelaide Award (for outstanding artistic or cultural achievement outside of SA by a local show; not to be confused with the Adelaide Fringe Made in Australia Award )
Memorial Brisbane Festival and the Barbican – Brink Productions
Out of Chaos – Gravity and Other Myths
Rumpelstiltskin – Windmill Theatre Co and State Theatre Company
Slingsby Goes Global 2018 - 19 touring – Slingsby Theatre Company
The Spinners Edinburgh Fringe Festival and Edinburgh Showcase – Lina Limosani
-
-
Best Collaboration
-
-
Floods of Fire, Adelaide Symphony Orchestra with Brink Productions, Tutti Arts, Nexus Arts, Julian Ferraretto, Adam Page, Hilary Kleinig, Zhao Liang, Jakub Jankowski, Grayson Rotumah, Luke Harrald and Lab Adelaide
The Boy Who Talked to Dogs, Slingsby Theatre Company and State Theatre Company South Australia in association with Adelaide Festival and Draiocht
Decameron 2.0 , State Theatre Company South Australia and ActNow Theatre
Adelaide Film Festival EXPAND Lab 2022 , Adelaide Film Festival, Samstag Museum of Art, Art Gallery of South Australia, Illuminate Adelaide, The Balnaves Foundation.
Stevie Gadlabarti Goldsmith Memorial Award
Major Moogy Sumner (founder of Tal-Kin-Jeri Dance Group)
Nici Cumpston
Lee-Ann Tjunypa Buckskin
Natasha Wanganeen
Frank Ford Memorial Young Achiever Award
Nicholas Carter (Principal Conductor, Adelaide Symphony Orchestra )
Winner: Tilda Cobham-Hervey
Highly Commended: Anton Andreacchio
Grace Coy
Alexander Flood
Geoff Crowhurst Memorial Award
Nick O’Connor, Director, Northern Sound System
Winner: Kunmanara (Mumu Mike) Williams
Highly Commended: Ann Newmarch
Nick Hughes
Tony Hannan
People's Choice Award
True North Youth Theatre Ensemble
-
-
-
Premier's Award for Lifetime Achievement
Alison Milyika Carroll , Indigenous artist and community leader at Ernabella/Pukatja
Paul Blackwell and David Gulpilil
Pat Rix and Garry Stewart (joint winners)
Diana Harris and Nigel Levings
References
^ Lenny, Barry (12 September 2011). "The Ruby Awards 2011" . Glam Adelaide . Retrieved 22 August 2019 .
^ "Adelaidenow.com.au | Subscribe to The Advertiser for exclusive stories" . www.adelaidenow.com.au . Retrieved 2018-11-27 .
^ "2015 Ruby Awards celebrate the best of SA art – InDaily" . InDaily . 2015-12-12. Retrieved 2018-11-27 .
^ "Dame Ruby Litchfield, DBE" . SA History Hub .
^ "Awards and events" . South Australia. Dept of the Premier and Cabinet . Retrieved 27 July 2019 .
^ "If There Was A Colour Darker Than Black I'd Wear It" . Caleb Lewis . Retrieved 9 June 2022 .
^ "If There Was a Colour Darker Than Black I'd Wear It" . Country Arts SA . 6 December 2012. Retrieved 9 June 2022 .
^ "Caleb Lewis" . Mollison Keightley Management . Retrieved 9 June 2022 .
^ Cabinet, Department of the Premier and (2019-06-26). "Ruby Awards 2016" . Department of the Premier and Cabinet . Retrieved 2019-09-10 .
^ Cabinet, Department of the Premier and (2019-06-26). "Ruby Awards 2017" . Department of the Premier and Cabinet . Retrieved 2019-09-10 .
^ PEDDIE, Clare (3 November 2018). "Introducing the Stevie "Gadlabarti" Goldsmith Memorial Award, new to the Ruby Awards 2018" . The Advertiser .
^ "New categories announced for 2018 Ruby Awards as nominations open | Arts South Australia" . arts.sa.gov.au . Retrieved 2018-11-27 .
^ Marsh, Walter (3 November 2018). "Meet the finalists for the 2018 Ruby Awards winners" . Adelaide Review . Retrieved 22 August 2019 .
^ Knight, David (4 December 2018). "2018 Ruby Awards winners" . Adelaide Review . Retrieved 22 August 2019 .
^ a b "Ruby Awards 2018" . Government of South Australia. Dept Premier & Cabinet . 26 June 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2019 .
^ Cabinet, Department of the Premier and (2019-12-02). "Ruby Awards" . Department of the Premier and Cabinet . Retrieved 2019-12-04 .
^ Cabinet, Department of the Premier and (2019-11-15). "Ruby Awards" . Department of the Premier and Cabinet . Retrieved 2019-11-26 .
^ "The Ruby Awards | Department of the Premier and Cabinet" . 2021-11-30. Archived from the original on 2021-11-30. Retrieved 2021-12-04 .
^ "2021 Ruby Awards celebrate SA arts sector's resilience" . InDaily . 2021-12-03. Retrieved 2021-12-04 .
^ Cabinet, Department of the Premier and (2020-12-21). "The Ruby Awards" . Department of the Premier and Cabinet . Retrieved 2021-12-04 .
^ Cabinet, Department of the Premier and (2024-06-21). "2023 Ruby Awards" . Department of the Premier and Cabinet . Retrieved 2024-08-19 .
External links