Ten years, ten prints. Every year, an outstanding British artist creates a print for the Government Art Collection, with the support of philanthropists Sybil Robson Orr and Matthew Orr.
The Robson Orr TenTen Award is a ten-year project that brings exciting new artwork to government buildings around the world. Each year, a renowned British artist is chosen to create a unique print for the Government Art Collection. Fifteen enter the Collection and a limited number of these prints are sold every year to raise funds to acquire works of art and support more UK artists to join the Government Art Collection.
The project runs for ten years, from 2018 to 2027. Each year, one British artist is selected, approved by the Advisory Committee, and commissioned to make a special, limited-edition print. These prints are displayed in UK government buildings worldwide.
The Robson Orr TenTen project showcases the best of British art to a global audience. At the same time, eleven prints are sold to raise money for the Government Art Collection to support UK-based artists through purchasing their art.Artists who have taken part in the project so far are Hurvin Anderson, Tacita Dean, Yinka Shonibare CBE, Lubaina Himid, Rachel Whiteread DBE, Michael Armitage and Denzil Forrester.
The Robson Orr TenTen Award began in 2018. Philanthropists Sybil Robson Orr and Matthew Orr took inspiration from an initiative by the Foundation for Arts and Preservation in Embassies; through the Foundation, some of America’s most celebrated artists have created prints for display in U.S. embassies.The ten-year project was originally conceived through a collaboration between the Government Art Collection and Outset Contemporary Art Fund.Over the years the project has generated funding for artworks by over thirty artists (see below) who were underrepresented in the Collection to join the Government Art Collection. The project has grown to include a schools programme, allowing Collection staff to take the TenTen prints into schools and engage students with real-life artworks.
"Empowering arts, education and global opportunity."
Sybil Robson Orr is an award-winning film and stage producer, philanthropist, and co-founder of the Robson Orr Foundation and the Robson Orr Ten Ten Award for the UK Government Art Collection. Her humanitarian work has ranged from combating child sex trafficking to supporting famine relief in sub-Saharan Africa. At Oxford University, she co-founded the UK’s first Chair of Women’s History and established a Visiting Fellowship in honour of Ann Ball Bodley, the often overlooked financier of the Bodleian Library founded by her husband, Sir Thomas Bodley. Sybil also serves on the International Advisory Board of Apne Aap Worldwide, is a member of the Council of the Serpentine Galleries, and supports leading arts, education, and humanitarian initiatives worldwide.
Matthew Orr is a financier, entrepreneur, and co-founder of Killik & Co, one of the UK's leading private investment firms. He has held several influential positions, including director of Debenhams Investment Services, where he opened and managed the UK's first shareshops, director at Quilter Goodison, and as a Governor of the IFS School of Finance. Additionally, Matthew chaired Proshare, an initiative dedicated to promoting wider share ownership across the UK. Matthew also co-founded the Orr Mackintosh Foundation, which runs ShareGift—a platform that converts small or leftover shareholdings into charitable donations. To date, ShareGift has given over $80 million to more than 4,000 charities in the UK. Currently, Matthew remains a founding partner at Killik & Co and now focuses on investing in innovative technologies and impact-driven ventures through OrrImpact.
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