THE second-richest art prize in Britain, the #12,000 City of Glasgow

Lord Provost's Prize, has been won by the Glasgow-based artist Alison

Watt.

Miss Watt is best-known for her portrait of the Queen Mother, which

now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in London.

Her painting, Nude Adorned, was judged the best of more than 300

works, selected from 1100 entries, which will be shown from this Sunday

at the annual open exhibition of the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine

Arts in the McLellan Galleries.

The prize is second only in cash value to the Tate Gallery's #20,000

Turner Prize. The judges were the Lord Provost of Glasgow, Mr Robert

Innes, Scottish artist John Bellany, Glasgow museums' director Julian

Spalding, and the Glasgow museums' curator of art, Mr Hugh Stevenson.

The painting is a formal study of a female nude reclining on a couch

and partly draped with white sheets. Mr Bellany likened it to Manet's

Olympia seen in a Glasgow light.

Miss Watt, 27, was born in Greenock and studied at Glasgow School of

Art. She has made Glasgow her base for the past eight years, although

she has had a number of exhibitions in London and outside Britain.

She said: ''It is really special to me to receive something in Glasgow

because it is my adopted home town.

''The models that inspire me tend to have a very Celtic look. My

studio outlook is just trees and I do not think I would be able to

recreate that in London.''

Nude Adorned is the first in a series of nudes that Miss Watt plans to

show in an exhibition in Los Angeles in about three years.

Mr Spalding said after the announcement of the winner that the judges

were ''very impressed by the light in the painting''.

He said: ''It is very difficult to paint light and this appears to be

a Glasgow light.''

He added: ''This is one of the biggest prizes in Britain and we would

like to attract the major artists of Britain, not just Scotland. It

needs to have that to continue.''

Other awards announced yesterday were: the Teachers Whisky Travel

Scholarship of #2000 to Glasgow-based jeweller and craftsman Richard

Coley; Arthur Andersen Prize of #1000 to Keith Rand, a teacher at Duncan

of Jordanston; David Cargill Award and the Milly and Benno Schotz award

to Robin Hume, from Kirkoswald; NS Macfarlane Charitable Trust Award of

#2000 to Donald Clark, Edinburgh; James Torrance Memorial Award to

Christopher Wood, Edinburgh.

David Cargill Award for artists under 30, and the Cuthbert New Young

Artist Award to Mark I'Anson, 25, who graduated last year from the Gray

School of Art in Aberdeen; RGI Exhibitionship of #500 to Sarah McLaren,

a graduate of Edinburgh College of Art; Alexander Stone Foundation prize

of #1000 to Geoffrey Squire; Mabel Mackinlay Award of #1000 to Alex

Galt, Greenock; Armour Award to John Boyd; Royal College of Physicians

and Surgeons of Glasgow Award to Hamish MacDonald; Scottish Amicable

Prize of #1000 to Jim Pattison; Eastwood Publications Prize of #1000 to

Sheila Macmillan.