Deadline: 
Tuesday, October 15, 2013 - 00:00

To commemorate his long association with the Observer, the International Anthony Burgess Foundation have set up the Observer/Anthony Burgess Prize for Arts Journalism.

Beyond his prolific career as a novelist and composer, Anthony Burgess was an energetic journalist. In his lifetime he published two substantial collections of journalism, Urgent Copy (1968) and Homage to Qwert Yuiop (1986). Between 1962 and his death in 1993 he wrote many articles and reviews for the Observer, which he often spoke of as 'my paper'. Among his 'discoveries' as a reviewer were Joseph Heller, Sylvia Plath and Umberto Eco.

Established in 2012, the purpose of the prize is to encourage promising new arts journalists. The prize will be for the best writing on brand new work in the arts which has not previously been published, whether in print or on the internet. The winning essay might take the form of an interview or profile of a writer, artist or musician; a piece on a new artistic movement or venture; or a review of a book, film, a concert, a ballet or a stage play.

The prize will be judged by a panel including Jonathan Meades, Sarah Dunant and Jane Stevenson. The entry fee is £10. The deadline is 15 October 2013 - all details are available by following the link below.

When choosing the winner, the judges will be looking for imaginative, original, and thought-provoking arts journalism that would be suitable for publication in the Observer. They will be looking for emerging talent, innovative approaches and writing from outside the mainstream, and they are especially keen to read entries from those who have not previously had work published by major media organisations. They are also, as William Boyd commented while judging the 2012 entries, looking for 'some Burgessian fizz and crackle and a bit of well-displayed erudition.'

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