Museum of Particularly Bad Art

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The logo for Museum of Particularly Bad Art. (Picture of Elvis and Priscilla.)
The logo for Museum of Particularly Bad Art. (Picture of Elvis and Priscilla.)

The Museum of Particularly Bad Art Exhibition (MOPBA) is an annual event held on Chapel Street, Melbourne, Australia celebrating poor art forms, primarily in the forms of paintings and sketches. MOPBA relies on a core group of art pieces owned by Helen Round but the public are invited to enter pieces that are their own or that have been found that are considered poor.

The event primarily is a charity event that funds three charities within the Stonnington area.

Its coordination is undertaken by Streets Ahead, Windsor’s Traders, the local community, and the MOPBA Committee.

The motto and goal of MOPBA is “To celebrate mediocrity whilst helping folks with broken hearts, homeless kiddies, little puppies and fluffy pussies!”

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[edit] Criteria

The entries from the public are judged by meeting one point on the selection criteria. Selection points for entry of an art piece into MOPBA are:

  • Completely devoid of technical skill (Colour, tone, perspective and shading);
  • Unusual, poor or tasteless subject matters;
  • Passion of the artist but is driven by an uneducated hand;
  • An instinctual feeling that the art piece is poor.


[edit] History

"No one Wants to Touch Him There." (Gary Glitter). Materials: Crushed velvet, Acrylic and Glitter.
"No one Wants to Touch Him There." (Gary Glitter). Materials: Crushed velvet, Acrylic and Glitter.
"Windsor Junkie circa 1896" - Itchiball Prize Winner 2005.
"Windsor Junkie circa 1896" - Itchiball Prize Winner 2005.

The founder of MOPBA is Helen Round. Round in the early 1990s saw on Foreign Correspondent, an Australian current affairs television programme, a story concerning the Museum of Bad Art, Boston. At this point of her life, Round was in the process of establishing a retail shop named "Fat Helen’s Bric a Brac shop", that was to specialise in the kitsch, inane and tasteless. It was also a hobby of Round's to peruse op shops, garage sales and markets. She was inspired by what she came across in these places and commenced her pursuit of collecting and preserving the mediocre. Round started collecting in 1993.

Since then, Round has collected 200 examples of original art of poor taste. Of notable fame is the original portrait of actor Scott Baio that Round located in an op shop in the suburb of Windsor in 1996.

From 2005, the Exhibition commenced awarding the Itchiball Prize to the submitted art piece that is considered by the public to be the poorest. The name is a mockery of the 'Archibald Prize', Australia's most important portraiture painting award.

In 2006, the event will be held from 4 to 13 August.

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