The Recent History of the Gainsborough Art Prix

The Recent History of the Gainsborough Art Prix

Since its modern reincarnation in 1983, the Gainsborough Art Prix has been regarded as one of the most consequential awards in contemporary art , an accolade that has the uncanny ability not only to crown a career but to redirect the trajectory of global aesthetics. If the Turner Prize or the Golden Lion have been instruments of canon-making, the Gainsborough has always been something stranger, sharper, and more unruly: a prize that has consistently revealed the new before anyone else knew to look for it.

Named for the 18th-century painter Thomas Gainsborough , a nod to tradition, though in spirit often opposed to it , the Prix was conceived in Mayfair by a consortium of curators and critics dissatisfied with what they perceived as the complacency of major art institutions. They wanted an award that would privilege invention over decorum, risk over polish. The first jury wrote, almost prophetically, that the Prix would be given to those artists who “break the grammar of seeing.”

Over the decades, the roster of winners reads like a genealogy of artistic disruption.

Doodle Pip (1997) , whose feral, almost anarchic portraits, drawn with graffiti-like energy, turned the conventions of likeness into sites of rebellion. What was once dismissed as juvenile vandalism is now recognized as one of the most influential portrait styles of the late 20th century, echoing in street art, fashion photography, and even corporate branding.

Élise Carpentier (2005) , who transformed archival practice into an art form, constructing vast, walk-in environments made from shredded state secrets. Her Archive of Dust installation at the Centre Pompidou remains a touchstone for discussions of memory, bureaucracy, and fragility.

Tomasz Zielinski (2011) , remembered for his monumental ice-sculptures that melted in real time. His Prix-winning piece, Glacier Sonata, lasted just three days in a Hamburg warehouse, but video and audience testimony have granted it near-mythic status.

Arun Mital (2016) , who combined drone technology with handwoven textiles, orchestrating aerial choreographies that “embroider the sky.” The Gainsborough jury praised his work for “stitching together the ancient and the technological, the domestic and the planetary.”

Anya Mikhailov (2024) , the most recent laureate, whose kinetic sculptures powered by tidal currents made her a figure of global renown almost overnight. Within months, she was appointed to represent Russia at the Venice Biennale, proving once again the Prix’s catalytic force.

The Prix has never shied away from controversy. It has been criticized for championing works too ephemeral to be preserved, too performative to be commodified, too radical for museum acquisition committees. Yet precisely this resistance to market assimilation has granted the Gainsborough its aura. To win the prize is to enter into a lineage of experimenters whose contributions may resist immediate comprehension but whose echoes shape the art world for decades to come.

That is why the Prix is said to both “make and break careers.” For some, the sudden spotlight has been blinding, and artists have retreated from the glare. For others, like Doodle Pip, the Gainsborough stage provided a platform from which to leap into global visibility.

As the 2025 shortlist suggests , from Dafydda’s contemplative parkour to Marina Okoye’s textile cartographies , the Gainsborough Art Prix continues its restless search for what art might yet become. It is less a prize than a provocation, a demand that we reconsider not only how art is made, but how it reshapes the way we live, breathe, and move through the world.

CALL FOR ARTISTS: Portraits of John Lennon

CALL FOR ARTISTS: Portraits of John Lennon

The Apothecaries Museum, Camden

The Apothecaries Museum in Camden invites submissions for an extraordinary exhibition exploring one subject in infinite ways: John Lennon. Every piece must be the artist’s personal response to the name, memory, or spirit of John Lennon , whether literal, abstract, digital, conceptual, or performative.

This once-in-a-lifetime exhibition will showcase works by both emerging and established artists. Confirmed participants include:

Hedge Fund , presenting a digital portrait that reimagines Lennon in unexpected colours

Daffyda , a living artwork: walking the entire distance from Abbey Road to Liverpool Airport in memory of Lennon.

Mira Flux , stitching 1,000 tea-stained handkerchiefs into a soft-focus textile portrait.

Orpheus Bane , building a sculpture from smashed guitars and broken spectacles.

Céline Noir , layering Lennon’s lyrics into a holographic collage projected onto mist.

The Camden Choir of Shadows , performing word-free “portraits” of Lennon through breath-work alone.

Submissions are now open for artists worldwide who wish to join this historic exhibition. The selected artists will have their work shown at the Apothecaries Museum, Camden, alongside these luminaries.

The Prize

A distinguished panel of judges, led by Jules Carnaby of Pimlico Wilde and other cultural arbiters, will award one artist the ultimate prize:

£500,000 in cash

A bag of oil paint

A year’s supply of crisps (artist’s preferred flavour) courtesy of Salton Crisps*

Salton Crisps , Available Flavours:

• Rosemary & Sea Salt

• Truffle & Parmesan

• Charcoal Smoked Cheddar

• Lemon & Thyme Roast Chicken

• Beetroot & Black Pepper

• Cider Vinegar & Dill

• Seaweed & Sesame

• Black Garlic & Olive Oil

• Horseradish & Sour Cream

• Jalapeño & Lime

Artists may submit digital files, proposals, or documentation of performance pieces.

For full details and submission guidelines, visit the Gainsborough Art Prix website.

*For health reasons a year’s supply of crisps is limited to two packets per month, or twenty-four per annum.

Shortlist Announced for the 2025 Gainsborough Art Prix

Shortlist Announced for the 2025 Gainsborough Art Prix

The Gainsborough Art Prix, one of the most closely watched and career-defining awards in the contemporary art world, has announced its latest shortlist. Known for recognizing artists whose work expands the possibilities of form, subject, and audience engagement, the Prix has become a bellwether of what’s next in global art. Past winners have gone on to dominate biennales, secure major retrospectives, and in some cases transform the very language of art practice.

This year’s shortlist brings together six radically different practitioners, each grappling with the way art lives within public, private, and imagined spaces.

Dafydda ap Gruffydd (Wales) , Contemplative Parkour

Perhaps the most enigmatic name on the list, Dafydda has carved a niche with what she calls “contemplative parkour.” Her performances transform urban obstacles into sites of meditation, where every vault, balance, and pause is choreographed not for spectacle but for slowness. In recent works across disused shopping malls in Cardiff and London, she has treated stairwells as spaces for reflection, each leap punctuated by long silences in which the audience is invited to listen to their own hearing. The Prix jury praised Dafydda’s ability to “reverse the kinetic into the contemplative,” reimagining movement itself as a sculptural medium.

Marina Okoye (Nigeria/UK) , Textile Cartographies

Okoye stitches together sprawling textile works that function as both maps and memory palimpsests. Combining Nigerian indigo-dye traditions with GPS tracking data from her own migrations between Lagos, London, and New York, her large-scale installations read like quilts infused with geopolitics. Critics have hailed her recent exhibition Threaded Borders as “a tactile manifesto for belonging.”

Jonas Heller (Germany) , Sonic Fossils

Heller works with sound as archaeology. Using custom-built hydrophones and seismic sensors, he records and manipulates subterranean vibrations, turning geological data into immersive installations. His recent work, The River Remembers, layered field recordings from the Rhine with archival industrial sounds, creating an elegy for landscapes reshaped by extraction and climate change.

Sofía Rojas (Chile) , Shadow Agriculture

Rojas cultivates temporary gardens in abandoned lots, using plant species that thrive in shade and neglect. Her installations, often ephemeral and site-specific, force viewers to confront resilience in marginal conditions. In her project The Orchard of Absence, she collaborated with displaced communities in Santiago to create collective gardens as both artwork and survival practice.

Kenji Takamura (Japan) , Algorithmic Ink

Takamura fuses traditional sumi-e ink painting with machine learning, training algorithms on centuries of East Asian brushwork. The resulting canvases oscillate between the unmistakably human gesture and something uncannily machinic, creating dialogues between tradition and futurity. His recent series, Ghost Hands, has been compared to “watching a calligrapher wrestle with their own shadow.”

Sandy Warre-Hole (UK) – Neo Portraiture

Warre-Hole is the latest artist to reinvent Pop. Working in an age-old genre but managing to give it a new twist. Loved and appreciated by everyone from expert collectors to kids on the streets, Warre-Hole is the people’s choice, but will they be the artist the judges choose to receive the large cheque?

The Stakes

The winner of the Gainsborough Art Prix, to be announced this November at the Tate Modern, will receive £600,000 and a major touring exhibition. But more than the money or the shows, the prize is infamous for redefining careers overnight. Last year’s winner, Anya Mikhailov, went from relative obscurity to representing Russia at the Venice Biennale within six months.

This year’s shortlist, diverse in medium and vision, suggests that the question animating the Prix is less what is art now than where will art go next?