OTTAWA -- A sculptor whose best-known ceramics work was once rejected for display at a World Expo by the federal government is among the winners of this year's Governor General's Awards in Visual and Media Arts.
Glenn Lewis is one of eight laureates who will be honoured by the Canada Council for the Arts, the organization announced Wednesday.
The Vancouver artist shook the art scene with his 1970 piece "Artifact," which was commissioned by Canada for the World Expo in Osaka, Japan but rejected by the pavilion's commissioner Patrick Reid as too provocative.
Reid was concerned over the appearance of the work's white-glazed tiles, which looked like either salt-and-pepper shakers or damaged phalluses. After the debacle, the government refused to pay Lewis the final instalment for his work.
Lewis also joined the live performance art community with his synchronized swimming routines featuring shark-fin aquatic caps designed by artist Kate Craig.
Other recipients of the $25,000 honour include Montreal filmmaker Michele Cournoyer, whose career in the Quebec new wave movement of the 1970s led to experimental animation shorts like "Le chapeau," which won best Canadian short at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival.
Writer Philip Monk, both an exhibition curator and contemporary art critic for Maclean's magazine, is also being honoured.
The other laureates are Toronto filmmaker Mike Hoolboom, visual artist Shelagh Keeley, painter Landon Mackenzie, Halifax jewellery artist Pamela Ritchie, and Shelley Niro, a multimedia artist from the Six Nations Reserve near Brantford, Ont.
Gov. Gen. David Johnston will present the awards at a ceremony at Rideau Hall on March 1.
An exhibition of selected works from this year's winners will run at the Winnipeg Art Gallery from April 8 to Sept. 4.
The Canada Council funds and administers the awards, which recognize career achievements.