Congratulations Beth George & Emerald Wise (AUS)
Winners of the $10,000 Tapestry Design Prize for Architects 2023.

Solstice was designed by Beth George and Emerald Wise online from Naarm and Boorloo.

Compositionally, the design reflects the commingling of independent parts, with separation and union, and with the passage of time. It echoes the ever sharper need to consider ecology and connectedness in the Anthropocene, and with the spatial and emotional tensions entailed by the pandemic: we weathered it together, as together as you could be, and since have been separate.

Bright gold thread defines the edge of the circular landform, illuminating its rim like a lunar eclipse. Inside this form, detail and richness amass. The perimeter is dark and velvety-rich, producing a deep surface both tactile and reflected. Azure thread marks each swim: each river, pool, bath and bay. Bright, metallic thread connects these locales.
 
At Solstice,  
Halves meet, 
From different edges of the country, 
Country crossed many times, fast 
and slowly. 
Time shared by reflective streams and shimmering pools 
is held in our bodies, 
Water clear and water dark. 
Our threads weave together 
now and then.
 

Beth George is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Western Australia, and Honorary Senior Lecturer at the University of Newcastle. She has taught for more than 15 years across UWA, Curtin, UoN, and Notre Dame’s architecture schools, in urbanism, design, and drawing. George holds a PhD from RMIT focused on urban curation and cartography, and has undertaken research through book chapters, journal articles, papers, competitions, and exhibitions. George’s work is concerned with extending useful fictions from a close study of contexts.  George is a registered architect who has directed diverse practices in architecture and urban activation.

Emerald Wise is a doctoral candidate in architecture, her research explores the cultivation of an enactive practice engaging with perceptual life-worlds. Emerald has taught studios and elective programmes across many Australian universities, including UWA, Curtin, University of Melbourne and UoN. She is an architect, artist and maker with works spanning residential design, alterations and additions, small projects, installations, furniture, sculpture, and visual art.

Highly Commended
3RDRM | Glenn Russell (AUS)

The design of Mezcla blends and blurs imagery from within the valley to afar in an attempt to describe the sheer expansive depths of the Bundanon landscape; dappled light and the fogged atmosphere that blurs all definition between the composition of these elements that define the Bundanon landscape; blurred edges and undefined lines.

People’s Choice Award
Tasmin Vivian-Williams & Tonielle Dempers (AUS)

The Fox and The Lyrebird depicts a constructed narrative of the Bundanon region. Having never visited this landscape, all that can be done to understand its beauty and fragility is immerse ourselves in its context, environment and history of place. The Fox and The Lyrebird is reminiscent of the ancient tapestries which depicted mythological landscapes based upon legends from across the seas to captivate the viewer who may never see the scene first-hand.