2024 Finalists artworks
Congratulations to the 2024 Transurban Art Prize finalists.
Winners were announced an an awards presentation in November 2024.
Congratulations to the 2024 Transurban Art Prize finalists.
Winners were announced an an awards presentation in November 2024.
Riverside Girls High School have won the overall school prize for the most compelling entries from a single school. The students of Riverside Girls High School showed diverse talent across a wide range of categories to deliver some truly amazing artwork.
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The Transurban Public Art Program - Canal to Creek includes 21 signature artworks that have activated new and existing parklands between St Peters and Beverly Hills. Artworks include contemporary sculpture, artist-designed playgrounds, large-scale murals, a writers walk and an immersive lighting installation.
Named ‘Canal to Creek’ after the waterways that connect the art sites, each work is a site-specific exploration of the relationship between people and place.
Alexandra Canal defines the eastern end of the program and Wolli Creek, the western end. Both are part of the same water system that is linked by the Cooks River and Botany Bay. The role of the natural environment on our experience of place is a recurring theme for Canal to Creek artists. In some way, all of the eighteen artists pick up on a cultural thread that supports local identity and belonging.
Take a 360 degree tour by entering into the virtual platform now!
The WestConnex M4-M5 Link Tunnels project team (Acciona Samsung Bouygues Joint Venture) collaborated with Bidjigal artist Esme Timbery, one of Australia's most significant shell artists, and her daughter Marilyn Russell to design the façade of the ventilation facility to be built at St Peters. This is expected to be completed by 2023.
The design aims to create an educational piece for the local community; it presents a story of creativity and history. Through the use of colour and modern fabrication, a traditional expression is kept alive with a contemporary flair for future generations of Sydney to enjoy. The artwork celebrates the culturally significant shell making tradition that is unique to the Sydney Indigenous community of La Perouse.
The M5 Linear Park is comprised of parklands that border the M5 East corridor from King Georges Road Interchange to Bexley Road at Bexley North.
In February 2021 Transport for NSW completed the Linear Park Enhancement Project which delivered complimentary gym equipment and amenities to these existing parklands to develop the recreational needs of the community. Upgrades have included new transport links, outdoor play and fitness equipment, new seating, tables and drinking fountains as well as sporting fields and courts.
This program was run simultaneously to the WestConnex Public Art Program and the parklands now hosts several of the public art installations from Canal to Creek in the suburbs of Beverley Hills and Kingsgrove.
Read moreAs part of the WestConnex M8, a new above ground interchange has been built in St Peters. The site was transformed from a contaminated landfill into a future-proofed state-of-the-art above ground motorway network with important connections to future projects linking to the airport, southern Sydney and a second harbour tunnel crossing.
Building St Peters Interchange was the catalyst for the remediation of the contaminated Alexandria Landfill site which has now been transformed into accessible public space for the first time in decades. Approximately 400,000m³ of waste has been treated, capped, and safely retained on site allowing for the sustainable delivery of more than 6-hectares of accessible green space including 650,000 new trees, shrubs and bushes.
The new green space is also the home to many of the public art installations from the WestConnex Public Art Program – Canal to Creek.
Read moreThe WestConnex M8 is the longest continual tunnel in Australia and was opened to motorists on 5 July 2020. The M8 is stage two of the wider WestConnex network and will be linked with the M4 via the M4-M5 Link Tunnels, currently under construction.
Read moreEntries for the 2022 Canal to Creek Prize have now closed. To view entries please visit the gallery
Artworks must be original and respond to the Transurban Art Prize 2024 theme, ‘Connections’.
Read full terms and conditions
Your Transurban Art Prize entry will require at least one photo of your artwork. Here are some handy tips to best help capture your masterpiece.
There are fabulous prizes to be won for the first, second and third place in each Year group (Years 7 – 10), as well as an overall school winner. Prizes for each category will be as follows:
One school will be selected for the overall school Prize of a $5,000 Eckersley’s arts grant. This is based on the volume and calibre of entries received from the school.
Each winning artwork will be framed and displayed at one of Transurban’s motorway control centres or offices. To honour and congratulate the Prize winners, an awards ceremony will be held later in the year. The winners in each Year group will be invited to celebrate their award-winning artworks and will be congratulated with a decorative trophy on the day.
Entries open
11 June
Entries close
13 Sep
Winners announced
11 Oct
Entries to the Transurban Art Prize will be judged by a local Sydney artist, a representative from the Visual Arts and Design Educators Association and Transurban’s Group Executive of NSW. Meet them below!
Artworks will be judged based on artistic merit, creativity, and fit within the theme.
Aaron Landers is a senior Visual Arts and Design teacher and has held several executive positions at Visual Arts and Design Educators Association (VADEA). Aaron is currently the Co President at VADEA and is passionate about contemporary art, especially Photo-media, Public Art and Sculpture.
Carla Hananiah is a landscape painter who lives and works in Sydney. Carla holds a Master of Fine Arts through Research from the University of New South Wales. She has exhibited throughout Australia and is the recipient of multiple prizes including the Mosman Art Prize Viewer’s Choice Award (2012), the Hornsby Art Prize (2011), the Blake Prize Society’s John Coburn Emerging Artist Award (2011) and the Winsor & Newton Start your Studio Scholarship (2009).
Nicky Green has been with Transurban since 2022 and has recently been appointed as Group Executive, Australian Markets. She joined as Group General Counsel and has played an integral role in some of our biggest projects. Nicky has a passion for art and is excited to see the many ways the theme of connections is interpreted and the different approaches used to bring this theme to life.
Register your interest here to receive all the latest news and information on the Canal to Creek Prize competition.