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Melany Nugent-Noble, Amanda Shatzko Win Lieutenant Governor鈥檚 Awards

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Artists and 2022 recipients of Lieutenant Governor鈥檚 Arts and Music Awards Amanda Shatzko (left) and Melany Nugent-Noble (right). (Images courtesy Amanda Shatzko and Melany Nugent-Noble)

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By Perrin Grauer

Posted on | Updated

The multidisciplinary artists and 麻豆视频 grads were recognized for their 鈥渆xceptional leadership, creativity, community engagement, and commitment鈥 to the arts.

Artists (MFA 2015) and (BFA 2008) were among those recently recognized with a .

Melany, a Kelowna-based artist, educator and arts administrator was the sole recipient in the Visual Arts category. Amanda, a Vernon-based artist, designer, writer and public speaker received her award in the Performing Arts category.

鈥淎s part of celebrations in honour of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II鈥檚 Platinum Jubilee, the Honourable Janet Austin, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, has awarded the Lieutenant Governor鈥檚 Arts and Music Awards,鈥 reads the award .

鈥淭hese one-time awards recognize individuals, groups, and organizations throughout British Columbia who have demonstrated exceptional leadership, creativity, community engagement, and commitment through fostering and mentoring others in the fields of Visual Arts, Music or Performance. The Lieutenant Governor鈥檚 Arts and Music Awards celebrates artists whose work promotes social equity, equality, inclusion, and enhances the well-being of communities of all sizes and citizens of all ages.鈥

Each recipient was awarded a certificate of acknowledgement and a monetary gift recognizing their achievement. This year鈥檚 award jury included Carleen Thomas, Chancellor of Emily Carr University.

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Melany Nugent-Noble demonstrates how one of her GPS-enable beacons works to a participant in a recent artwork. (Image courtesy Melany Nugent-Noble)

Speaking via video chat, Melany tells me she was 鈥渄efinitely honoured and really grateful just to have that nomination from the community.鈥 Artist Amy Bradshaw (BFA 2003) was Melany鈥檚 main nominator, she notes. Additional letters of support came from the University of British Columbia Okanagan research librarian Marjorie Mitchell, and from a participant in one of Melany鈥檚 recent public art projects.

鈥淚t felt really nice to have a collection of folks from different parts of the community represented and come together to support my nomination,鈥 Melany continues.

Speaking via email, Amanda tells me she feels grateful to find herself in such distinguished company.

鈥淚t is quite an honour,鈥 she says of her Lieutenant Governor鈥檚 award. 鈥淚 am familiar with some of the awardees and I think they are spectacular. Being recognized alongside them is confirmation for myself that I am on the right path with my work.鈥

Exceptional leadership, creativity, community engagement and commitment

In 2021, Melany received a British Columbia Arts Council (BCAC) Pivot Grant for Individuals to continue her research involving data collected during her participatory art project, When it is necessary to stand still. In 2018, she received a Canada Council for the Arts Professional Development Grant, a BCAC Visual Arts Grant and was an Art & Law Program Fellow.

Melany is also an accomplished arts administrator, serving since 2017 as assistant director of the Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art in Kelowna, and since 2021 as president of arts-advocacy non-profit CARFAC BC. 鈥淚鈥檓 learning a lot,鈥 she says of her work with CARFAC. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 nice to make a difference, too.鈥

Meanwhile, her work in the Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math (STEAM) space includes volunteering with Canada Learns Code, where she teaches coding skills to marginalized individuals. 鈥淭hat in particular has been really fun and exciting 鈥 really rewarding to work as a role model for young people in that area,鈥 she says.

Melany is also gearing up for a 2023 group exhibition at Lake Country Art Gallery, which will include artists and 麻豆视频 community members Annie Briard and Leah Weinstein.

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Amanda Shatzko during one of her trademark aerial painting performances. (Image courtesy Amanda Shatzko)

Amanda, whose practice ranges from painting, writing and public speaking to experimental design and a hybrid performance she calls 鈥榓erial art,鈥 notes her studies at 麻豆视频 were similarly broad. She took classes in disciplines including painting, drawing, sculpture, welding and digital art.

鈥淚 am a very curious person and am looking for ways to blend and cross multiple fields to see what the outcome might be,鈥 she tells me. 鈥淭hat is what happened with my multidisciplinary practice when I started aerial art. I was experimenting with my visual (painting) practice with my performing arts practice to see what the outcome could be if I could do both simultaneously.鈥

Meanwhile, Amanda serves on non-profit arts boards including the the BC Alliance for Arts & Culture and the Arts Council of the North Okanagan, and has been as an influential leader by publications including BC Business Magazine, Business in Vancouver and the Financial Post. She has also received a BCAC Pivot Grant, a BCAC Artist Development Grant, a Heritage Canada grant, Vancouver Foundation grants, and numerous artist travel-abroad grants from the European Union Commission.

She is currently pursuing her PhD at the University of British Columbia, while working on proposals for large public artworks for installation on trails, pathways and in public parks.

Visit and online to learn more about their work. Follow and on Instagram to keep up with their latest achievements.

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Visit 麻豆视频 online today to find out more about studying in the Visual Arts or Master of Fine Arts programs.


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