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Maureen - T Neal
Maureen - T Neal

Guernsey Students Prize

Established in 2015, The Guernsey Students Prize is open to all enrolled secondary school students in the Bailiwick of Guernsey.

 

Entry is closed.

 

How To Participate

01

Nomination

Participating students must be nominated by their teacher. Teachers can nominate up to 10 students to enter. Upon entry, students will be asked to enter the name of their nominating teacher.

Click here for T&Cs.

 

02

Artwork Submission

Nominated students can submit up to three artworks online before the submission deadline. Please follow the entry instructions in the T&Cs.

Our panel of judges will then select 20 student artists for the shortlist.

03

The Prizes

The Judges Prize of £800 is awarded to the student artist with the highest score from the judges. £2,000 is awarded to the school of the Judges Prize winner.

The Public Vote Prize of £400 is awarded to the student artist with the most votes from the public. £1,000 is awarded to the school of the Public Vote Prize Winner.

Shortlist

Meave Carre
Agraphobia  image
Agraphobia
Isla de la Mare
Burger, Chicken and Fries image
Burger, Chicken and Fries
Faye Crowson
Deep Waters image
Deep Waters
Lexi Boyde
Five Stages of Grief image
Five Stages of Grief
Cait Le Noury
Flowers of Joy image
Judges’ Prize Winner
Flowers of Joy
Holly Hobbs
Forgotten image
Forgotten
Lily Parkes
Guernsey Now and Then image
Public Vote Winner
Guernsey Now and Then
Genevieve Swainston
Guernsey Seafront image
Guernsey Seafront
Lydia Haddow
Looking Through image
Looking Through
Madeleine Gallager
Head of James image
Head of James
Sophie Robilliard
Nature is Wonderful image
Nature is Wonderful
Aurora Bougourd
Nature's Healing image
Nature’s Healing
Lily Le Tocq
Otis image
Otis
Jess De la Haye
Raindrops image
Raindrops
Hannah Wright
Reality image
Reality
Eva Drew
Self-Portrait in Grey image
Self-Portrait in Grey
Alexia Nour Ratl
The Creation in Colour image
The Creation in Colour
Amy Mahy
Through The Looking Glass image
Through The Looking Glass
Megan O’Hanlon
Untitled  image
Untitled
Katie Le Cheminant
Wild Stare image
Wild Stare
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01 / 20

Meave Carre

Agraphobia  image

Meave Carre

Agraphobia
School: Les Beaucamps High School
Dimension: 60 x 80 x 2
Medium: Oil on canvas
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

A self portrait exploring the emotions behind trauma, inspired by the examination theme “Our World”.

02 / 20

Isla de la Mare

Burger, Chicken and Fries image

Isla de la Mare

Burger, Chicken and Fries
School: Les Beaucamps High School
Dimension: 50 x 40 x 4
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Age: 15
Country: Guernsey

This painting is based on the topic of everyday objects. I painted it with acrylic paint and spent multiple months completing it. I love food and wanted to create a bright eye catching piece with tons of fine details.

03 / 20

Faye Crowson

Deep Waters image

Faye Crowson

Deep Waters
School: La Mare De Carteret High School
Dimension: 21 x 29
Medium: Oil paint on board
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

Fascinated by the colours of the jellyfish swimming in deep waters, I wanted to capture the brightness of this creature against the darkness of the water.

04 / 20

Lexi Boyde

Five Stages of Grief image

Lexi Boyde

Five Stages of Grief
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 80 x 80 x 2
Medium: Acrylic paint
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

A representation of the five stages of grief in five portraits. Each stage is expressed through emotion and the underlining colour that shows feeling. The portraits get smaller showing how acceptance (the last stage) is further away mentally and seems hard to get to. Stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.

05 / 20

Cait Le Noury

Flowers of Joy image

Cait Le Noury

Flowers of Joy
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 100 x 200 x 2
Medium: Acrylic paint
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

I wanted to capture the explosion of colours you see in a field. The colours represent different celebratory emotions to make the viewer feel positive.

06 / 20

Holly Hobbs

Forgotten image

Holly Hobbs

Forgotten
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 60 x 42 x 1
Medium: Graphite
Age: 17
Country: Guernsey

My aim for this graphite piece was to capture the atmospherical absence of human presence. I wanted to focus on how a scene can seem so lifeless and bleak despite the historical energy that it would have undoubtedly previously captured within the same architectural walls. Nature physically engorges these memories and the nostalgia that this greenhouse once contained. The result is a cold, almost eerie scene as the landscape waits for life to enlighten it once again.

07 / 20

Lily Parkes

Guernsey Now and Then image

Lily Parkes

Guernsey Now and Then
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 60 x 40 x 1
Medium: Acrylic paint, plaster of paris, perspex, ink
Age: 18
Country: Guernsey

This piece was part of my “Guernsey Occupation” art unit, for which I looked into differences between Guernsey now (2023) and then (1940s). This topic has fascinated me from a young age and I find it inspiring how the island has worked to preserve bunkers and Martello towers as a stark reminder of such difficult times. I believe this preserves our island’s history whilst highlighting the struggles of the islanders who stayed during the occupation. I have used black and white acrylic and the infamous photo of Nazi soldiers marching down the high street to try to capture the evocative juxtaposition of these themes, and prompt emotions about our beautiful island home.

08 / 20

Genevieve Swainston

Guernsey Seafront image

Genevieve Swainston

Guernsey Seafront
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 80 x 36 x 1
Medium: Watercolour, ink, fine-liner on watercolour paper
Age: 15
Country: Guernsey

From the theme title of “Exits and Entrances”. The concept is that for centuries, the Guernsey harbor was the main entrance to the island. I focused on key buildings in town.

09 / 20

Lydia Haddow

Looking Through image

Lydia Haddow

Looking Through
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 60 x 84 x 4
Medium: Acrylic paint, printed acetate, gold leaf
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

The progression of a pomegranate rolling down the page and breaking open, so that you can look through the layers of the fruit.

10 / 20

Madeleine Gallager

Head of James image

Madeleine Gallager

Head of James
School: Ladies’ College
Dimension: 30 x 30 x 30
Medium: Air-dry clay, Modroc and acrylic paint
Age: 17
Country: Guernsey

I was studying portraiture, caricatures in particular and decided to bring a chalk pastel and colour pencil caricature drawing of my stepdad James to life. James plays the piano and organ and I did it in the grotesque style, emphasising certain facial features and colours.

11 / 20

Sophie Robilliard

Nature is Wonderful image

Sophie Robilliard

Nature is Wonderful
School: La Mare De Carteret High School
Dimension: 41 x 59
Medium: Acrylic paint on board
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

I chose the combination of Koi Carp fish and mushrooms as I felt that the wings of the fish and the underside of the mushrooms have similarities. Nature has a habit of doing this which I find fascinating.

12 / 20

Aurora Bougourd

Nature's Healing image

Aurora Bougourd

Nature’s Healing
School: Les Beaucamps High School
Dimension: 84 x 58 x 4
Medium: Painting on canvas, with dried flowers attached
Age: 15
Country: Guernsey
13 / 20

Lily Le Tocq

Otis image

Lily Le Tocq

Otis
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 100 x 100 x 4
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

A portrait of my dog painted during my year 12 exam. I wasn’t sure where to take my project but knew I wanted to look at animals, so I painted a face I was familiar with.

14 / 20

Jess De la Haye

Raindrops image

Jess De la Haye

Raindrops
School: Les Beaucamps High School
Dimension: 45 x 41 x 2
Medium: Gouache on card
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

This painting was a challenge to see if I could capture raindrops on the window pane on a grey day.

15 / 20

Hannah Wright

Reality image

Hannah Wright

Reality
School: Ladies College
Dimension: 29 x 42 x 1
Medium: Acrylic paint on scrap cardboard
Age: 17
Country: Guernsey

My work aims to portray and signify the isolation of homelessness. Painting onto cardboard represents a material often used by homeless people to keep warm and create comfort. I have also painted from the angle which means you can’t see the subject’s face, really isolating her from the world: she’s given up and this is now her reality.

16 / 20

Eva Drew

Self-Portrait in Grey image

Eva Drew

Self-Portrait in Grey
School: Elizabeth College
Dimension: 42 x 59 x 5
Medium: Ink on paper
Age: 18
Country: Guernsey

I struggle a lot with anxiety. Whether it’s over small spaces, large crowds, or just what’s going on within my relationships. I know it’s all in my head but pulling myself out of that space sometimes feels impossible. I tend to think of it like I’m floating out in the ocean with nothing around me as if I’m not real. I have not a care in the world, but every so often a wave pushes me down under the surface of the water. That reminds me I can drown. I know everyone gets like this sometimes, but it always makes me feel alone and I end up pushing people away. Despite these feelings I am still trying, I am still here. For this project, I made a series of portraits informed by research into the work of Marlene Dumas and Rea Klein.

17 / 20

Alexia Nour Ratl

The Creation in Colour image

Alexia Nour Ratl

The Creation in Colour
School: Blanchelande College
Dimension: 70 x 60 x 1
Medium: Acrylic paint
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

Inspired by “The Creation of Adam” by Michelangelo. I have tried to symbolise parental love and the idea that parents are life-givers. I placed my hand on the left (instead of Adam’s hand) and my mother’s on the right (instead of God’s hand). The hands reaching for one another symbolise the mother-daughter bond that draws us together and the longing to be in the presence of one another. Finally, the splash of colour represents our relationship and how our energies work together creating a varied range of emotions hence the range of colour. The hands are deliberately painted in detail with a monochrome palette to contrast with the expressive mark-making with the more free-flowing coloured paint.

18 / 20

Amy Mahy

Through The Looking Glass image

Amy Mahy

Through The Looking Glass
School: La Mare De Carteret High School
Dimension: 30 x 41
Medium: Gouache paint on board
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

“Alice in Wonderland” was my inspiration for this painting. I took some photographs of the Mad Hatter’s tea party and reflected this in the mirror. I love the chaos of the image against the majestic feeling of the ornate looking glass.

19 / 20

Megan O’Hanlon

Untitled  image

Megan O’Hanlon

Untitled
School: Ladies’ College
Dimension: 60 x 85 x 1
Medium: Graphite and charcoal
Age: 16
Country: Guernsey

After studying life drawing for my A level art I continued to look into body language and how posture can convey emotion the arched back is a sign of anxiety stemming from in battle trying to protect internal organs. I found this posture fascinating as it could be seen as unnatural when looked at from this angle becoming hard to visualise how the body has been posed. I found reference for this image was really interesting in how the light flowed around the body highlighting muscles.

20 / 20

Katie Le Cheminant

Wild Stare image

Katie Le Cheminant

Wild Stare
School: La Mare De Carteret High School
Dimension: 42 x 60 x 5
Medium: Acrylic paint on canvas
Age: 15
Country: Guernsey

As part of my theme “A Sense of Place”; I love to look at the world of wild animals and in particular wild cats in their environment. The look of this tiger and the effect it has on the viewer inspired me to paint it.

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Thanks for voting!

Alumni Showcase

Giving a platform for previous finalists to showcase their continued artistic development.

Timothy Neal
A Goodbye to Childhood image
A Goodbye to Childhood
Matthew Graysmith
Brown Canal, Holding Back  image
Brown Canal, Holding Back
Catherine Lees
Pending image
Pending
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01 / 03

Timothy Neal

A Goodbye to Childhood image

Timothy Neal

A Goodbye to Childhood
School: Former student of Elizabeth College
Dimension: 84 x 59 x 2
Medium: Oil on canvas
Age: 19
Country: Guernsey

THIS PIECE IS FOR AUCTION ONLY

Alumni of the Guernsey Student Prize are invited to offer pieces for our print shop and charity auction. In continuing to join our exhibitions they are able to showcase their continued artistic development.

Now entering University, I’ve been frequently reminiscing about my childhood and all that in my life which can never be reclaimed. Having lived in the same place for the vast majority of my consciousness, the house I’ve grown up in makes up a large portion of my perceived universe making the thought of moving away being equivalent to the destruction of part of my world. As such, I created this painting to spend some final moments in appreciation of my home and to physically manifest a testimony to my youth. In producing the piece I was inspired by Monet and Renoir for the local significance of his work.

Tim has been shortlisted three times for our Student Prize finalist, winning an Art for Guernsey Scholarship in 2020, the Judges’ Prize in 2021 and achieving the highest price under the hammer in the 2022 charity auction. Tim was not considering pursuing Art further until he was nominated for the Students Prize competition. He has just started his Fine Art honors degree at Lancaster University.

02 / 03

Matthew Graysmith

Brown Canal, Holding Back  image

Matthew Graysmith

Brown Canal, Holding Back
School: Former student of the Sixth Form Centre
Dimension: 93 x 90 x 2cm
Medium: Oil on canvas with collage
Age: 23

Alumni of the Guernsey Student Prize are invited to offer pieces for our print shop and charity auction. In continuing to join our exhibitions they are able to showcase their continued artistic development.

This painting is an exploration of the land and our relationship to it, especially in relation to Britishness and a certain kind of withdrawal or holding back. The pylons in my work are like bodies, reaching out trying to connect with each other. It’s from my series of paintings “Winter” where using this technique of collage and oil paint, a head is framed within the context of a landscape. I was exploring flatness at this time and looking at how to give things a feeling of an interior, like a sort of cosiness. I suppose there’s quite a dissonance between the subject – Nicholas Winton, painted in a moment of extreme emotion where the adults around him are revealed to be people he saved as children from the holocaust, and the kind of inability he has to really express it. I think I chose to paint him after seeing this moment and his complete inability to process what was going on and it made me think about the way we struggle to articulate ourselves, and trying to draw those feelings out within the context of this body of work.

ABOUT THE ARTIST: Matt was the recipient of the Sovereign Art Foundation Guernsey Art Bursary from 2020-2023 while studying at Camberwell College. Since graduating with a First Class Honours Degree in Fine Art, Matt has based himself in a studio in Woolwich and is building an impressive list of shows and galleries at which his work has been displayed. Matt’s talent has also been recognised on national television where he competed in the popular Portrait Artist of the Year (Sky Arts, season 10).  Matt’s work looks at subjects through the guise of their sense of place. His portfolio can be viewed at www.graysmith.art

03 / 03

Catherine Lees

Pending image

Catherine Lees

Pending
School: Former student of Blanchelande College
Dimension: 51 x 61 x 2
Medium: Acrylic Paint on Canvas
Age: 19
Country: Guernsey

THIS PIECE IS FOR AUCTION ONLY
Alumni of the Guernsey Student Prize are invited to offer pieces for our print shop and charity auction. In continuing to join our exhibitions they are able to showcase their continued artistic development.

This piece is based on the relationship between nature and technology- how they imitate each other. It is inspired by the loading screen of a computer, the circular motion that plays is mirrored by the ripples in the pond water and the motion of the fish swimming. I enjoy finding connections between natural systems, living organisms, and man-made mechanisms as most people view these as completely juxtaposing subjects.

ABOUT THE ARTIST: Cat is a local artist currently studying Fine Art for her second year at Arts University Bournemouth. She is currently centering her practice on the topics of vulnerability and human relationships and has previously focused on themes such as insecurity, growth, and self-reflection. She is also known for her seascape paintings and life drawings. Cat Typically works using mixed media such as ink, charcoal, textiles, and collage alongside her specialty- painting. In 2020 Cat Won the public vote prize in the Guernsey Sovereign Arts Competition and she is now the recipient of the Sovereign Art Foundation Guernsey Art Bursary.

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Thanks for voting!

Avocado - Isabel Carre Key Dates mobile image

Key Dates

Submission Period

15 May — 15 September

Shortlist Announcement

19 October —

Finalists Exhibition

19 October — 28 November

Awards Ceremony

29 November —

Judges

David Ummels image
David Ummels
Founder and Chairman of Art for Guernsey
David Ummels image

David Ummels

Founder and Chairman of Art for Guernsey

David Ummels is a multicultural entrepreneur and curator. He is a member of the Council of the Guernsey Chamber of Commerce and their cultural Ambassador and Head of the Creative Industry. He is also a board member and mentor of Arts for Impact. David is a huge advocate for Guernsey and, as a passionate art collector for more than 20 years, he has an in-depth understanding of the global art economy and key relationships in the art sector. He founded Art for Guernsey in 2016, a charitable organisation managed by a team of passionate professionals who share a belief in the power of art to achieve their goals. The team believes that Guernsey possesses a very special asset: integrity. It is this that motivates Art for Guernsey to work for the greater good to bring communities together, provide educational opportunities through multi-curriculum projects and life-changing scholarships, promote Cultural Diplomacy and create an artistic legacy for Guernsey. The team has a strong remit to bring art where it is most needed, to inspire people and try to make them happy. Art for Guernsey is driven by a strong desire to create opportunities for islanders to discover high quality art for free, and to create catalysts within the art, educational and charitable sectors.

Click here for more detail.

Howard Bilton image
Howard Bilton
Founder and Chairman  
Howard Bilton image

Howard Bilton

Founder and Chairman  

Howard Bilton is Chairman and founder of The Sovereign Group. Howard holds a joint honours BA degree in classics and law from the University of Keele and is qualified as a Barrister and called to the Bars of England/Wales and Gibraltar.  

He is a visiting non-resident professor at Texas A and M University where he assists with their LLM and Masters degrees in International Tax and Offshore Centres.  

In 2003 he formed The Sovereign Art Foundation (SAF) which runs a range of art prizes designed to increase the exposure of artists in the region, while raising money to help disadvantaged children.  

SAF has raised over US$11 million which has been used to help thousands of disadvantaged children using expressive arts as a means of education and rehabilitation.  

Howard has a personal art collection comprising around 420 pieces made by a wide range of artists from students to internationally famous artists.   

He has acted as a judge on various Sovereign sponsored art prizes in Hong Kong, Bahrain, Gibraltar, Guernsey, the Isle of Man, London, Malta, Mauritius, Portugal and Singapore.  He has also acted as a nominator for the Sovereign professional prizes in Africa and Portugal. 

Howard is the Founder and Chairman of Howard’s Folly Wines, Portugal. All wines use art on the labels and often feature work by finalists of the various Sovereign art prizes or children taught by SAF. A proportion of the revenue from wine sales goes to support SAF. 

 

James Colmer image
James Colmer
Local Artist
James Colmer image

James Colmer

Local Artist

“It’s fair to say I’m obsessed about the sea and its changing moods are an overriding influence on my art… Tranquility, drama, ferocity, all I try to reflect in my studies.

In the people and places I paint, I try to bring out their personalities and emotions to create something deeper and more colourful than just a straight landscape or portrait. Sometimes adding my own poetry to bring more dimension the piece.

I’ve been a scribbler ever since I could pick up a pencil so I was always destined to be an artist somehow. After schooling in Guernsey I went off to Falmouth College of Arts to study an Arts foundation, then a BA honours in illustration. After some time in Cornwall I moved back to Guernsey combining work as a graphic designer, illustrator and artist.”

www.jamescolmer.com/

John Hodgson image
John Hodgson
Solicitor
John Hodgson image

John Hodgson

Solicitor

John qualified as a solicitor in England in 1983. He has lived and worked in South East Asia since 1988 and in 1992 his former employer was one of the first foreign law firms to open a branch office in Beijing. John has worked as a solicitor and notary public in both Hong Kong and Gibraltar where he established his own legal practices. He also serves as an adjunct professor of the Texas A & M University. After serving as group legal director for over 20 years John is now retired but he remains on the Sovereign Group board as non-executive director and as a keen collector of art has been a passionate supporter of the Sovereign Art Foundation since its inception.

Nicola Swash Hardie image
Nicola Swash Hardie
Arts Administrator
Nicola Swash Hardie image

Nicola Swash Hardie

Arts Administrator

Nicola Swash Hardie’s love of the arts began early on as a child actor with The Royal Shakespeare Company where she spent several years juggling textbooks with the excitement and thrill of appearing on the professional stage.

Graduating from Brunel University with First Class Honours in Art History she gained a post graduate diploma in Arts and Television production from Sheffield Hallam and moved her allegiance from performance to the visual arts.

With a long-held desire to work in the industry, Nicola took up a graduate post as a lecturer and guide at Historic Royal Palaces and taught part-time courses in Art History and Cultural Studies at her old university.

She was later invited to join The Royal Household as Administrator for a new high-tech Royal Collection Trust Paintings Conservation studio based in the Home Park, Windsor Castle.

Nicola remained with the RCT for 15 years, assisting the organisation and schedule of restoration works for the oil paintings department – a collection of some 8000 works – and preparing and overseeing the transportation and hanging of paintings within the Royal Houses and to galleries worldwide.

Her specialist work in early digital infrared reflectography supported and assisted leading curators and conservators to identify unattributed paintings in the Collection; a number of these images feature in Royal Collection catalogues and major art publications.

Nicola’s love and appreciation of the arts continues; despite having worked primarily with Old Masters, she is also hugely enthusiastic about the continued development and motivation of young people to create modern, original and illuminating works of art.

Sally Ede-Golightly image
Sally Ede-Golightly
Local Artist
Sally Ede-Golightly image

Sally Ede-Golightly

Local Artist

Guernsey and London-based figurative artist, Sally Ede-Golightly, paints with oils on linen. Her work has a loose yet realistic feel. She is drawn to quiet and calm compositions, yet often offsetting ‘calm’ against chaotic themes. Having trained as a portrait painter at London Fine Art Studios and Heatherleys School of Fine Art, her technique is founded on traditional atelier methods but uses a palette and language that she has developed over time.

Sally was awarded the Heatherleys Portrait Prize in 2019 by Daphne Todd OBE. She has exhibited in several prestigious group exhibitions in London including with the Society of Women Artists (SWA), the Royal Society of Portrait Painters (RP) and ING Discerning Eye. She had her first solo exhibition in 2019 at the Gate House Gallery, Guernsey, and has completed notable commissions for private and public collections, including commissions from the Royal Society of Portrait Painters in London. In the Channel Islands she has painted Dr. Nicola Brink MBE for lePassage Gallery in Alderney and WWII Czech-RAF pilot, Jaroslav Novak, for Art for Guernsey, which has been exhibited both in Guernsey and at the Czech Embassy in London.

Stephen Hare image
Stephen Hare
Managing Director of Sovereign Trust (Channel Islands) Limited
Stephen Hare image

Stephen Hare

Managing Director of Sovereign Trust (Channel Islands) Limited

Stephen is the managing director of Sovereign Trust (Channel Islands) Limited and has been with the Sovereign Group since 2004. Prior to moving to Guernsey in 2010, Stephen was a director and senior legal counsel in the Group’s Gibraltar office. He qualified as a lawyer in England in 1998 and specialised in advising on estate planning, trusts and private client matters. “My parents would probably describe me as being artistically challenged at school! My grandfather was an amateur painter and took up marquetry in his retirement and receiving some of his pieces began my love of collecting art. The talent in the youth of Guernsey is truly remarkable and I feel extremely privileged that the Sovereign Art Foundation is able to give them a platform to exhibit that talent.”

Tiffany Matthews image
Tiffany Matthews
Local Artist
Tiffany Matthews image

Tiffany Matthews

Local Artist

Tiffany has been an independent artist ever since launching her first pieces in 2020, and has achieved astounding success representing herself in the art world.

Tiffany Anna is a Guernsey born artist whose vivid and vibrant use of color is signature to her acrylic masterpieces. This bright palette is complemented beautifully by her use of pigmented spray paint, gemstones, and pure gold leaf. Painting with a bold and powerful brush onto large scale canvases, her main focus is wild animals. Tiffany’s secondary inspiration comes from the cosmos, as she aims to take her audience on a journey through space and time with her unique and spectral fusions of bright colors. Ultimately, she aims to transcend the ordinary. Tiffany’s artistic ethic is that ‘Art doesn’t need to be serious…it just needs to make you smile’. With this in mind, she strives to bring her audience into the radiant and euphoric happiness of her art, cultivated through her bright and ballsy use of color.

Tiffany launched her brand through multiple pop-up shops and exhibitions on the island in 2021, and later branched out to open displays in UK social capitals including Chelsea and Central London. After featuring on Sky News’ Big Ideas broadcast in 2021, Tiffany was invited to display two consecutive exhibitions to mark the reopening of the inaugural Battersea power station during their Festival of Power. Tiffany has since ventured into the NFT digital art world, selling her one-off physically backed NFT collections with sensational success. Most recently, Tiffany’s acrylic masterpieces were unveiled in the famed Raffles nightclub in London to mark the re-opening of the club’s famed VIP section. This May, Tiffany travelled to New York to showcase at the Clio Art Fair, making her US debut!

Over the past six months the international reach of Tiffany’s work has astronomically increased. She has a strong following of 173k+ on Instagram, and has reached over 8.8 million people on Instagram and a further 3.3 million on Facebook in the past 90 days alone.

Events and Exhibitions

Art For Guernsey Venue
The Guernsey Students Prize Finalists Exhibition

Art for Guernsey
Tuesday – Saturday | 10am – 5pm
19 October – 2 November
Admission: Free

Beau Sejour Venue
The Guernsey Students Prize Finalists Exhibition

Beau Sejour
Monday – Sunday | 8am – 6:45pm
6 – 11 November
Admission: Free

Royal Court Venue
The Guernsey Students Prize Finalists Exhibition

Royal Court
Monday – Friday | 9am – 5pm
15 – 28 November
Admission: Free

Sponsors and Supporters

Prize Winners and Previous Finalists