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Albany Museum of Art

Albany Museum of Art essay contest winners

10/19/2021

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High school and college essayists win $1,000 in total awards in the AMA's 7th annual writing competition

​Both of the top winners in the 7th annual A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words essay contest were inspired by the same work of art--Still Life, a 1657 oil on oak panel painting by Dutch artist Pieter Claesz.
 
Aleesa Kruse, a student at Lee County High School, took first place in the High School Division with her essay The Feast. The same artwork inspired Tasmyn McCauley, a student at Georgia Southwestern State University in Americus, to write Sharp Edges, which won first place in the College Division.
PictureHigh School essay winner Aleesa Kruse and the AMA's Annie Vanoteghem
The top three essayists and three honorable mentions in each division were announced Thursday evening during an awards ceremony at the Albany Museum of Art. First-, second- and third-place winners in each category received cash prizes of $250, $150 and $100, respectively.

The top three essays in each division are available to read on the AMA website HERE.
 
“I am always so excited to look at our works of art through the eyes of the students through their creative writing,” AMA Director of Education and Public Programming Annie Vanoteghem said. “Having students come into the museum to spend time looking and using critical thinking skills to discern what a work of art means to them is such an important part of our role in the community. I am looking forward to watching this program continue to grow!”
 
Between Aug 30 and Oct 1, high school and college students in Southwest Georgia were able to view seven designated artworks on exhibition at the AMA and write essays of up to 1,000 words for the contest. Submissions could be from any point of view, and factual or fictional. Essays could be in prose or poetry form.

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Aleesa Kruse (third from left), a Lee County High School student, was the winner in the High School Division of the 7th annual A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words essay contest conducted by the Albany Museum of Art. Pictured at the awards ceremony Thursday night with McCauley are (from left) Albany Museum of Art Executive Director Andrew J. Wulf; honorable mention winner Sammy James, homeschool; second-place winner Sophia Scardino, Sherwood Christian Academy, honorable mention winner Shivani Yadavalli, Deerfield-Windsor School; third-place winner Clara Lee, Terrell Academy, and Annie Vanoteghem, AMA director of education and public programming. (Photo: Albany Museum of Art/Jim Hendricks)
PictureTasmyn McCauley reads her essay, which won the college division.
​All identifying information was scrubbed from the submissions before they were given to judges, who only saw a unique number for each essay. Judges selected first-, second- and third-place winners, as well as up to three honorable mentions. A numeric value was given to each essay depending on where the judge ranked it, with the highest value for first place and lowest for honorable mention. Scores were then tallied, with essays placing according to the total points they earned from judges’ combined scores.
 
In addition to Still Life, one of 29 works on display in European Splendors: Old Master Paintings from the Kress Collection, designated objects for the contest included the paintings A Bacchanal by Giulio Carpioni, Pulcinella Singing with His Many Children by Alessandro Magnasco and Virgin and Christ Child by Francesco Francia from that exhibition. Jockey Cigars and Saltville Virginia, two paintings by Cedric Smith in his Horse Power exhibition were designated for the contest, as was Sanaz Haghani’s screen-print Essay Topic: Write Down the Word WOMAN One Hundred Times from her exhibition of the same name.
 
Still Life proved to be the most popular source material for high school writers. It also inspired the essays by second-place winner Sophia Scardino, a student at Sherwood Christian Academy in Albany, and third-place winner Clara Lee, a student from Terrell Academy in Dawson who titled her submission The Fascinating Feast.

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Tasmyn McCauley (second from right), a Georgia Southwestern State University student, was the 2021 College Division winner in the 7th annual A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words essay contest conducted by the Albany Museum of Art. Pictured at the awards ceremony Thursday night with McCauley are, from left, Albany Museum of Art Executive Director Andrew J. Wulf; honorable mention winner Braylea Phillips, a GSW student; third-place winner Alexis Conley, a GSW student, and AMA Education & Public Programming Director Annie Vanoteghem. (Photo: Albany Museum of Art/Jim Hendricks)
PictureThe most popular subject for essayists in the 7th annual "A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words" essay contest was "Still Life," a 1657 oil painting on oak panel by Dutch artist Pieter Claesz. Still Life is part of the European Splendors: Old Master Paintings from the Kress Collection exhibition on view through Dec 23 in the Haley Gallery at the Albany Museum of Art. (Photo courtesy of the Columbia Museum of Art)
Two of the three high school honorable mention winners also were inspired by Still Life—Amelia Taylor, a student at Lee County High, and Shivani Yadavalli, a student at Deerfield-Windsor School who submitted a poem. Sammy James, a homeschool student, won honorable mention for his essay Wretches Alike, which was inspired by Pulcinella Singing with His Many Children.
 
Pulcinella Singing with His Many Children also inspired the second-place winner in the college division, Darnell Chen, an Albany State University student who wrote An Ugly Superstition. The third-place winner in the college division was Georgia Southwestern State student Alexis Conley, who found inspiration from Cedric Smith’s Jockey Cigars.
 
All three honorable mentions in the college division went to Georgia Southwestern State students—Braylea Phillips, whose essay The Crooked Ones was inspired by Still Life; Rachel Gilmer, whose untitled essay was inspired by Pulcinella Singing with His Many Children, and Maggie Cox, whose essay The Adventures of a Soldier was inspired by Smith’s Saltville Virginia.
 
“After having an online awards event last year because of the pandemic, I am thrilled that we were able to conduct it in-person again this year,” Vanoteghem said. “If anyone has missed seeing these beautiful works of art that these young students wrote about, all three exhibitions will continue through Dec 23. Come out and see what will inspire you!”
 
The Albany Museum of Art is open to the public 10 am-5 pm Tuesdays through Saturdays, and admission is free.

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