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Olympic Medal Design Competition Opens


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A gold-medal opportunity: Vancouver 2010 announces the search for the designer of the Olympic and Paralympic medals

VANOC NEWS RELEASE

December 13, 2007

Vancouver , BC—For the extraordinary athletes who will compete at the 2010 Winter Games, winning an Olympic or Paralympic medal will be one of the ultimate achievements of their athletic careers. To create the design of the medals which symbolize that achievement, the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) today announced it is seeking proposals from artists – both from Canada and around the world – interested in designing the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic medals. The official Request for Proposals (RFP) is available at www.vancouver2010.com.

“For an athlete, competing at the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games marks the pinnacle of a life’s work. The weight of an Olympic and Paralympic medal around their neck symbolizes the dreams not only of the athlete, but also their families and their communities and their achievement inspires so many. Standing on the podium to accept an Olympic or Paralympic medal is truly a moment without measure,” said Cathy Priestner Allinger, VANOC’s executive vice president of Sport, Paralympic Games and Venue Management, herself a Canadian silver medallist in speed skating at the Innsbruck 1976 Olympic Winter Games.

“The story we will tell through these medals will be uniquely Canadian and will, we hope, present a new opportunity to tell the story of Canada’s Games, igniting the Olympic and Paralympic spirit across the country and around the world,” continued Priestner Allinger.

Vancouver 2010 is seeking an artist(s), designer(s) or creative teams to work with VANOC to design inspiring, timeless medals for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games – medals that reflect the determination and heart of the athletes who will win those medals in 2010. An evaluation team will review submissions and successful applicants will be asked to provide concept designs. The design concepts will then be reviewed by VANOC and approved by the Board of Directors. VANOC will present the medal design to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) for review and final approval.

The Royal Canadian Mint , a Vancouver 2010 Official Supporter, will manufacture the medals. The Mint will be involved in the design process, providing production expertise and ensuring the medals can be produced at the highest level of quality.

Teck Cominco , also an Official Supporter of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, headquartered in British Columbia, Host Province of the Games, will supply the gold, silver, bronze and other metals used in the production of the Olympic and Paralympic medals.

The design process will involve five phases and is expected to take up to eight months. In addition to the medals, designs are also required for the accompanying ribbon and medal containers.

The Mint will produce a total of 867 competition medals for the 2010 Winter Games. Of these, 549 competition medals will be produced for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games, 183 each of gold, silver and bronze. For the Vancouver 2010 Paralympic Winter Games, 318 competition medals will be produced,106 each of gold, silver and bronze.

Although the IOC and the IPC do provide a number of technical requirements for the medals, the designs ultimately reflect the distinctive themes of each individual Games. Many Organizing Committees have chosen to incorporate materials unique to their country or region to spotlight a distinct design concept: Beijing 2008 (jade); Nagano 1998 (lacquer), Albertville 1992 (glass), Lillehammer 1994 (granite).

The Calgary 1988 Olympic Winter Games medals featured an athlete crowned with an olive wreath and an Aboriginal figure with a stylized headdress comprised of ski poles, bobsleigh, skis, skate blades, hockey stick, luge and a biathlon rifle. For the Montreal 1976 Olympic Summer Games, the medal design featured a stylized laurel crown (a symbol of victory since the Games of Antiquity) and the emblem of the Montreal Games.

The closing date for the submission of proposals is January 30, 2008. The design contract(s) are expected to be awarded in late February 2008.

Olympic and Paralympic Medal Facts (Source: IOC, IPC, COC, CPC)

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In the ancient Olympic Games, no medals were awarded. The first-place winner was given an olive wreath. Second- and third-place winners received nothing.

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When the Modern Olympic Games were revived in 1896, first-place winners received silver medals. At that time, gold was considered inferior to silver. Eight years later, at the 1904 Games in St. Louis, gold replaced silver for first place competitors.

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From 1928 to 1968 all medals for the Olympic Summer Games featured the same design by Italian artist Guiseppe Cassioli. On the obverse side, the design featured the seated Goddess Nike holding a laurel wreath and branch. A coliseum is set in the background, above which the Games’ host city and year are shown. The reverse featured a victorious athlete, palm branch held aloft by jubilant athletes and a stadium in the background.

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Since that time, the Cassioli design has continued to be incorporated, in varying degrees. The Athens 2004 medals corrected a long-standing inconsistency: the Cassioli design used a classic Italian coliseum on the obverse of the medal he created in 1928.The obverse of the Athens medal featured the 1896 Panathinaiko Stadium, focusing on the Greek nature of the original stadium.

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Each Olympic medal must be at least five millimetres thick and 70 millimetres in diameter.

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Each Paralympic medal must be a minimum of 70 millimetres and a maximum of 120 millimeters in diameter and between five and ten millimetres thick.

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The last Olympic gold medals made entirely of gold were awarded at the Stockholm 1912 Olympic Winter Games.

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The gold and silver Olympic and Paralympic medals must be made out of 92.5 per cent silver, with the gold medal covered in six grams (or .21 ounces) of gold.

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The Paralympic medals are required to include the name of the sport and/or discipline on the reverse side of the medal in both English and Braille.

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No specific shape is obligatory for the Olympic or Paralympic medals.

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The medals for the Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Winter Games included the Organizing Committee’s vision statement, “Light the Fire Within,” the first time an Organizing Committee’s vision statement had been incorporated into the design of an Olympic medal.

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The greatest number of Olympic Winter Games medals ever won by an athlete: 12 medals in cross-country skiing, by Bjorn Daehlie of Norway.

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The greatest number of Paralympic Winter Games medals ever won by a single athlete: 22 medals, in alpine skiing, biathlon and cross-country skiing, by Norway’s Ragnhild Myklebust.

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The greatest number of Olympic Winter Games medals won by a Canadian athlete: six, by Cindy Klassen (speed skating). The greatest number of Paralympic Winter Games medals won by a Canadian athlete: 12, by Lana Spreeman (alpine skiing). (alpine skiing).

As long as they actually don't look like rocks and stones.....or leafs.....

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I think they will be like Torino's medals, but with the hole filled with wood from some special tree in the area or something like that.

They could just get a few dozen doughnuts from Tim Horton's, and wrap them in gold, silver and bronze tin foil! :blink::lol:

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What i like of the winter medals is that they got more chances to create something innovating since (since the summer medals always have to show goddess Nike on the front part). Surely it will have some pattern related to the First Nations tribes or with Canada in general. Hope they make a good design

My fave winter medals are all from the 90's (Albertville, Lillehammer and Nagano). The Torino's donut was not bad, but i think the dimensions were over-exagerated.

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i already have a feeling what the medal ribbon will be. multiple shades of blue and green with touches of white. its going to be great.

On the subject of medal ribbons... the Image and Look of Vancouver’s venues ("the look of the games") will pretty much be released through the medal ribbons, as this has been the case since Sydney.

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Well

Albertville - metal and glass

Lillehammer - metal and granite

Nagano - metal and lacquer

Salt Lake - metal in change of stone

Torino - metal and negative space

Beijing - metal and jade

Maybe Vancouver could be metal and denim wood

Yeah, I really think wood will be included...Wasn't the bid book delievered in some sort of special wooden box or something?

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What is denim wood, Faster? Wood w/ metal might not give the medals the proper weight. I was thinking maybe metal and whale bone. But that's an endangered material, isn't it?

Yeah that is engangered material. Maybe they will use glass or crystal as Vancouver is the city of glass or something like that?

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What is denim wood, Faster? Wood w/ metal might not give the medals the proper weight. I was thinking maybe metal and whale bone. But that's an endangered material, isn't it?

Its denim pine is wood that has been stained a blue-ish colour because of mountain pine beetle infestation.

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Wasn't one of the Winter Olympics medal designs had crystal in them? Just curious. However, just imagine if diamond from the NWT mines was used as one of the materials for the Vancouver 2010 medals. NWT seems to have one of the best quality of such gems in the world underneath its permafrost soil.

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Wasn't one of the Winter Olympics medal designs had crystal in them? Just curious. However, just imagine if diamond from the NWT mines was used as one of the materials for the Vancouver 2010 medals. NWT seems to have one of the best quality of such gems in the world underneath its permafrost soil.

albertville_main_cropped.jpg

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However, just imagine if diamond from the NWT mines was used as one of the materials for the Vancouver 2010 medals.

The IOC would nix that. The Charter (and tradition) state gold, silver and bronze. What's to stop future editions from adding rubies, emeralds, sapphires, etc.? Pretty soon they'd look like cheap costume jewelry and no longer medals of distinction.

Edited by baron-pierreIV
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I really like Albertville's medal since its unique. Lillehammer's use of granite was unique. The colors of Nagano was simply wow and the weight and the rock shapes of the Salt Lake City medals are really unique. Torino's donut was a bold move. While Calgary's reverse side of the medal is a thing of beauty.

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