The Turner Prize is an annual prize presented to a British visual artist, organised by the Tate Gallery. Named after the painter J. M. W. Turner, it was first presented in 1984, and is one of the United Kingdom's most prestigious, [1] [2] [3] but controversial, art awards. [4] [5] [6] Initially, the prize was awarded to the individual who had "made the greatest contribution to art in Britain in the previous twelve months", but it now celebrates "a British artist under fifty for an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work in the twelve months preceding". [7] The winner is chosen by a panel of four independent judges invited by the Tate and chaired by the director of Tate Britain. The prize is accompanied by a monetary award of £25,000, [8] although the amount has varied depending on the sponsor. For example, between 2004 and 2007, while sponsored by Gordon's, the total prize fund was £40,000; £25,000 was awarded to the winner and £5,000 to the losing nominees. [7]
A shortlist of finalists is drawn up and usually published about six months before the prize is awarded in November or December each year, although shortlists were not made public in 1988 and 1990; in 1989, a list of seven "commended" artists was published. [7] Controversy surrounded the presentation of the inaugural prize to Malcolm Morley as some critics "questioned his relevance" to art in Britain; he had lived and worked in the United States for the previous 20 years. [9] Since its inception, the prize itself has received considerable criticism. [10] In 2002, after Culture Minister Kim Howells described the Turner Prize as "conceptual bullshit", Prince Charles wrote a letter of support to him, stating "It has contaminated the art establishment for so long". [11] Since 2000, the Stuckists art group have protested against the prize; [12] in 2008, they gave out leaflets with the message "The Turner Prize is Crap", to protest at the lack of figurative paintings amongst the nominees' exhibitions. [13]
Considerable media pressure is applied to nominees and winners of the Turner Prize. The 2003 winner Grayson Perry stated that "Such media storms can be traumatising for someone who has laboured away for years in a studio, making art not news." [14] Some artists, including Sarah Lucas and Julian Opie, have decided not to participate in the event, regarding a nomination as "a poisoned chalice". [15] Stephen Deuchar, Director of Tate Britain suggested "We want the artists to be comfortable with media pressure. We have to shield them". [16]
Several winners of the prize have won other notable awards such as the Venice Biennale, and continue to present their works at various international exhibitions. [17] Winners' reactions to the award range from Damien Hirst's "A media circus to raise money for the Tate and Channel 4" to Jeremy Deller's "It blew me away, people's hunger to see what I'd done". [18] Auction prices for works by previous winners have generally increased. [19] The award has also seen some unexpected results: Tracey Emin's My Bed , was overlooked in 1999 despite drawing large crowds to the Tate. [10] [20] The Chapman brothers and Willie Doherty lost out to Grayson Perry in 2003 – Perry accepted the award dressed as a girl while Jake Chapman described "losing the Turner prize to a grown man dressed as a small girl" as his "most embarrassing moment". [21]
Year | Winner | Format | Nominees | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | Malcolm Morley [9] | Painting | Richard Deacon Gilbert and George Howard Hodgkin Richard Long | Inaugural prize winner, awarded £10,000 [22] |
1985 | Howard Hodgkin [23] | Painting, printing | Terry Atkinson Tony Cragg Ian Hamilton Finlay Milena Kalinovska John Walker | — |
1986 | Gilbert and George [24] | Photomontage | Art & Language Victor Burgin Derek Jarman Stephen McKenna Bill Woodrow | Nicholas Serota (pictured), Matthew Collings and Robin Klassnik were all commended. Gilbert and George were nominees in 1984. [25] |
1987 | Richard Deacon [17] | Sculpture | Patrick Caulfield Helen Chadwick Richard Long Declan McGonagle Thérèse Oulton | Richard Long was also a nominee in 1984. |
1988 | Tony Cragg [26] | Sculpture | Lucian Freud Richard Hamilton Richard Long David Mach Boyd Webb Alison Wilding Richard Wilson | Richard Long was also a nominee in 1984 and 1987. |
1989 | Richard Long [27] | Sculpture | Gillian Ayres Lucian Freud Giuseppe Penone Paula Rego Sean Scully Richard Wilson | There was no shortlist, but the losing nominees were "commended". Lucian Freud and Richard Wilson were nominees in 1988. |
1990 | — | — | — | Prize suspended due to lack of sponsor following the bankruptcy of Drexel Burnham Lambert [27] |
1991 | Anish Kapoor [28] | Sculpture | Ian Davenport Fiona Rae Rachel Whiteread | Prize was increased to £20,000 with sponsorship from Channel 4 [29] |
1992 | Grenville Davey [30] | Sculpture | Damien Hirst David Tremlett Alison Wilding | — |
1993 | Rachel Whiteread [31] | Sculpture | Hannah Collins Vong Phaophanit Sean Scully | First female winner; also won the £40,000 K Foundation art award presented to the "worst artist of the year" [32] |
1994 | Antony Gormley [33] | Sculpture | Willie Doherty Peter Doig Shirazeh Houshiary | — |
1995 | Damien Hirst [34] | Installation, painting | Mona Hatoum Callum Innes Mark Wallinger | Damien Hirst: his exhibit included a bisected cow and calf in formaldehyde in a vitrine – Mother and Child Divided. [35] He was a nominee in 1992. |
1996 | Douglas Gordon [36] | Video | Craigie Horsfield Gary Hume Simon Patterson | Douglas Gordon was the first winner to be based outside of London and also the first artist to win the prize with a moving image work. [37] |
1997 | Gillian Wearing [38] | Video | Christine Borland Angela Bulloch Cornelia Parker | The first all-female shortlist [39] |
1998 | Chris Ofili [40] | Multi-layered painting | Tacita Dean Cathy de Monchaux Sam Taylor-Wood | — |
1999 | Steve McQueen [41] | Video | Tracey Emin Steven Pippin Jane and Louise Wilson | Tracey Emin exhibited her bed, titled My Bed [42] |
2000 | Wolfgang Tillmans [43] | Photography | Glenn Brown Michael Raedecker Tomoko Takahashi | Wolfgang Tillmans is German, but is based in London. [44] |
2001 | Martin Creed [45] | Installation | Richard Billingham Isaac Julien Mike Nelson | The prize was presented by Madonna. [46] |
2002 | Keith Tyson [47] | Installation, painting | Fiona Banner Liam Gillick Catherine Yass | The prize was presented by architect Daniel Libeskind. [48] |
2003 | Grayson Perry [49] | Pottery | Jake and Dinos Chapman Willie Doherty Anya Gallaccio | Grayson Perry, a cross-dresser, accepted the prize wearing a dress. [50] The prize was presented by Sir Peter Blake. [51] |
2004 | Jeremy Deller [19] | Video, installation | Kutluğ Ataman Langlands and Bell Yinka Shonibare | Prize increased to £25,000; losing nominees awarded £5,000 each. The prize was presented by journalist Jon Snow. [52] |
2005 | Simon Starling [53] | Installation | Darren Almond Gillian Carnegie Jim Lambie | The prize was presented by then Culture Minister David Lammy. [54] |
2006 | Tomma Abts [55] | Painting | Phil Collins Mark Titchner Rebecca Warren | Tomma Abts is German, but works in the UK. The prize was presented by Yoko Ono. [56] |
2007 | Mark Wallinger [57] | Installation | Nathan Coley Zarina Bhimji Mike Nelson | Mark Wallinger (a nominee in 1995) won for State Britain . The award show and ceremony were held in Tate Liverpool, and the prize was sponsored by Milligan. [58] The prize was presented by Dennis Hopper. [59] |
2008 | Mark Leckey [60] [61] | Sculpture, film, sound, performance | Runa Islam Goshka Macuga Cathy Wilkes | No prize sponsor: funded by the Tate. [62] |
2009 | Richard Wright [8] | Site-specific painting | Enrico David Roger Hiorns Lucy Skaer | — |
2010 | Susan Philipsz [63] | Sound installation | Dexter Dalwood Angela de la Cruz The Otolith Group (Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun) [64] | Susan Philipsz is the first sound artist to be nominated and the first to win. [63] |
2011 | Martin Boyce [65] | Installation | Karla Black Hilary Lloyd George Shaw [66] | Exhibition at the Baltic Gallery in Gateshead from 21 October 2011 to 8 January 2012 [67] |
2012 | Elizabeth Price [68] | Video | Spartacus Chetwynd Luke Fowler Paul Noble | — |
2013 | Laure Prouvost | Installation, collage, film | Lynette Yiadom-Boakye David Shrigley Tino Sehgal [69] | — |
2014 | Duncan Campbell | Video | Ciara Phillips James Richards Tris Vonna-Michell | — |
2015 | Assemble | Architecture and design | Bonnie Camplin Janice Kerbel Nicole Wermers [70] | — |
2016 | Helen Marten | Installation | Michael Dean Anthea Hamilton Josephine Pryde [71] | — |
2017 | Lubaina Himid [72] | Painting | Lubaina Himid Rosalind Nashashibi Hurvin Anderson Andrea Büttner [73] | The jury featured Dan Fox, Co-Editor at Frieze; Martin Herbert, art critic; Mason Leaver-Yap, Walker Art Center's Bentson Scholar of Moving Image in Minneapolis, and associate Curator at Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin; and Emily Pethick, Director, The Showroom, London. |
2018 | Charlotte Prodger [74] | Video | Forensic Architecture Naeem Mohaiemen Luke Willis Thompson [75] | The 2018 jury comprises Oliver Basciano, art critic and International Editor at ArtReview; Elena Filipovic, Director, Kunsthalle Basel; Lisa Le Feuvre, Executive Director, Holt-Smithson Foundation; and Tom McCarthy, novelist and writer. |
2019 | Lawrence Abu Hamdan Helen Cammock Tai Shani Oscar Murillo | Film, spoken word performance, and painting | Lawrence Abu Hamdan Helen Cammock Tai Shani Oscar Murillo. [76] | The prize was to be sponsored by Stagecoach South East but this was quickly dropped after criticism from the LGBT community. [77] The prize was shared by all nominees after they wrote a letter asking the judges not to choose a single winner. [78] The jury featured Alessio Antoniolli, Director, Gasworks & Triangle Network; Elvira Dyangani Ose, Director of The Showroom Gallery and Lecturer in Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths; Victoria Pomery, Director, Turner Contemporary, Margate and Charlie Porter, writer. |
2020 | Cancelled [79] | Bursaries: Oreet Ashery Liz Johnson Artur Shawanda Corbett Jamie Crewe Sean Edwards Sidsel Meineche Hansen Ima-Abasi Okon Imran Perretta Alberta Whittle Arika [80] | The 2020 prize was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom. Instead a £10,000 bursary was given to ten artists. | |
2021 | Array Collective [81] | Installation and theatre | B.O.S.S Cooking Sections Gentle/Radical Project Art Works | |
2022 | Veronica Ryan [82] | Sculpture | Heather Phillipson Ingrid Pollard Sin Wai Kin | |
2023 | Jesse Darling [83] | Sculpture | Ghislaine Leung Rory Pilgrim Barbara Walker [84] | The 2023 prize winner was announced on 5 December at Towner Eastbourne. |
2024 | TBA | TBA | Pio Abad Claudette Johnson Jasleen Kaur Delaine Le Bas | Jury is Rosie Cooper, Ekow Eshun, Sam Thorne, Lydia Yee |
The Mercury Prize, formerly called the Mercury Music Prize, is an annual music prize awarded for the best album released by a musical act from the United Kingdom or Ireland. It was created by Jon Webster and Robert Chandler in association with the British Phonographic Industry and British Association of Record Dealers in 1992 as an alternative to the Brit Awards.
The Turner Prize, named after the English painter J. M. W. Turner, is an annual prize presented to a British visual artist. Between 1991 and 2016, only artists under the age of 50 were eligible. The prize is awarded at Tate Britain every other year, with various venues outside of London being used in alternate years. Since its beginnings in 1984 it has become the UK's most publicised art award. The award represents all media.
Mark Wallinger is an English artist. Having previously been nominated for the Turner Prize in 1995, he won in 2007 for his installation State Britain. His work Ecce Homo (1999–2000) was the first piece to occupy the empty fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square. He represented Britain at the Venice Biennale in 2001. Labyrinth (2013), a permanent commission for Art on the Underground, was created to celebrate 150 years of the London Underground. In 2018, the permanent work Writ in Water was realized for the National Trust to celebrate where Magna Carta was signed at Runnymede.
Tate St Ives is an art gallery in St Ives, Cornwall, England, exhibiting work by modern British artists with links to the St Ives area. The Tate also took over management of another museum in the town, the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden, in 1980.
Jeremy Deller is an English conceptual, video and installation artist. Much of Deller's work is collaborative; it has a strong political aspect, in the subjects dealt with and also the devaluation of artistic ego through the involvement of other people in the creative process. He won the Turner Prize in 2004 and represented Great Britain at the Venice Biennale in 2013.
The Museum of the Year Award, formerly known as the Gulbenkian Prize and the Art Fund Prize, is an annual prize awarded to a museum or gallery in the United Kingdom for a "track record of imagination, innovation and excellence". The award of £100,000 is Britain's biggest single art prize, and the largest single museum arts prize in the world. The prize and is presented to a museum or gallery, large or small, anywhere in the UK, whose entry, in the opinion of the judges, best demonstrates a track record of imagination, innovation and excellence through work mainly undertaken during the previous calendar year.
Tomma Abts is a German-born visual artist known for her abstract oil paintings. Abts won the Turner Prize in 2006. She currently lives and works in London, England.
Charlotte Higgins, is a British writer and journalist.
The 2007 Turner Prize for modern British art was awarded on 3 December 2007. It was the 22nd Turner Prize competition. There were four nominees for the 2007 prize and the winner was Mark Wallinger.
Richard Wright is an English artist and musician. Wright was born in London. His family moved to Scotland when he was young. He attended Edinburgh College of Art from 1978 to 1982 and studied at Glasgow School of Art between 1993 and 1995 studying for a Master of Fine Art. He lives in Glasgow. and Norfolk.
Susan Mary Philipsz OBE is a Scottish artist who won the 2010 Turner Prize. Originally a sculptor, she is best known for her sound installations. She records herself singing a cappella versions of songs which are replayed over a public address system in the gallery or other installation. She currently lives and works in Berlin.
The four nominees for the Tate gallery's 2009 Turner Prize were Enrico David, Roger Hiorns, Lucy Skaer and Richard Wright. The award went to Richard Wright on 7 December 2009 winning him the £25,000 prize. The Turner jury said in a statement that they "admired the profound originality and beauty of Wright's work." The other shortlisted nominees each won £5,000.
The four nominees for the Tate Gallery's 2010 Turner Prize were Dexter Dalwood, Angela de la Cruz, Susan Philipsz and The Otolith Group
Lubaina Himid is a British artist and curator. She is a professor of contemporary art at the University of Central Lancashire. Her art focuses on themes of cultural history and reclaiming identities.
The prize exhibition was held at the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art in Gateshead from 21 October 2011 to 8 January 2012, the first to be held outside London since the 2007 Turner Prize exhibition was held at Tate Liverpool, and the first time the exhibition has ever been held at a non-Tate venue.
Laure Prouvost is a French artist living and working in Brussels, Belgium. She won the 2013 Turner Prize. In 2019, she represented France at the Venice Biennale with the multi-media installation Deep See Blue Surrounding You .
Heather Phillipson is a British artist working in a variety of media including video, sculpture, electronic music, large-scale installations, online works, text and drawing. She was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2022. Her work has been presented at major venues internationally and she has received multiple awards for her artwork, videos and poetry, including the Film London Jarman Award in 2016. She is also an acclaimed poet whose writing has appeared widely online, in print and broadcast.
The 2013 Turner Prize was won by the French artist Laure Prouvost. The prize exhibition was held at Building 80/81, Ebrington Square in Derry~Londonderry, from 23 October 2013 to 5 January 2014, as part of the UK City of Culture celebrations. The building, a former army barracks converted into offices, was transformed into a temporary art gallery for the Turner show, and returned to offices afterwards The awards ceremony was held at Ebrington on 2 December 2013. It was the first-time the exhibition and prize ceremony were held outside England.
Helen Elizabeth Marten is an English artist based in London who works in sculpture, video, and installation art. Marten studied at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art at the University of Oxford (2005–2008) and Central Saint Martins (2004). Her work has been included in the 56th Venice Biennale and the 20th Biennale of Sydney. She has won the 2012 LUMA Award, the Prix Lafayette in 2011, the inaugural Hepworth Prize and the Turner Prize, both in 2016. Marten is represented by Greene Naftali Gallery in New York, and Sadie Coles HQ.
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