The identity of the Turner Prize is deeply associated with
conceptual art. For two of its first editions,
Art & Language was nominated in 1986, and
Terry Atkinson, one of the founders and historical member of Art & Language, was nominated in 1985. In 2000, Tillmans was the first photographer and first non-British artist to receive the Turner Prize.
1984 Malcolm Morley was awarded the inaugural Turner Prize for his installation of two oil-on-canvas paintings inspired by a trip to Greece. Morley's win sparked controversy because he had been living in New York for the previous 20 years. Other nominees included
Richard Long,
Richard Deacon and
Gilbert & George, all of whom went on to win the Turner Prize themselves. The prize was awarded by
Lord Gowrie, Minister for the Arts at the time.
1985 Howard Hodgkin was awarded the Turner Prize for
A Small Thing But My Own. Other nominees included
Terry Atkinson, sculptor
Tony Cragg,
Ian Hamilton Finlay,
Milena Kalinovska and painting/printing artist
John Walker. The prize was awarded by celebrity presenter Sir
Richard Attenborough.
1986 The controversial art duo
Gilbert & George were awarded the prize after a previous nomination in 1984. Other nominees included
Art & Language (collaborative group composed of Michael Baldwin and Mel Ramsden), sculpture/printing artist
Victor Burgin, painter
Derek Jarman, painter
Stephen McKenna and sculptor
Bill Woodrow.
1987 Sculpture artist
Richard Deacon was awarded the prize. Other nominees included graphic-style painter/printer
Patrick Caulfield,
Helen Chadwick,
Richard Long,
Declan McGonagle and
Thérèse Oulton. The prize was presented by
George Melly.
1988 Sculpture artist
Tony Cragg was awarded the prize by
Alan Yentob. Other nominees included figurative/portrait painter
Lucian Freud, Pop artist
Richard Hamilton,
Richard Long,
David Mach (graduate of
Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art), printer Boyd Webb, sculptor
Alison Wilding and
Richard Wilson. The appointment of Tate Director Nicholas Serota led to many changes such as the introduction of an annual rehang of the Collection and giving priority to modern and contemporary art. During this period the future of the Prize was uncertain. The Turner Prize was modified to be an artist-only prize without a published shortlist and a solo exhibition was awarded to the winner, Tony Cragg.
1989 Sculpture and installation artist
Richard Long was presented with the prize after three previous nominations. Controversially, Long was awarded for his lifetime body of work rather than an exhibition of work in 1989. Other nominees included painter
Gillian Ayres, figurative painter
Lucian Freud, sculptor
Giuseppe Penone, painter
Paula Rego, abstract painter
Sean Scully and Richard Wilson. Italian-born Giuseppe Penone became the first foreign artist to be nominated for the strength of his exhibitions in Britain.
1990 No prize was awarded due to lack of sponsorship. Under Tate Director and Turner Prize chairman Nicholas Serota, changes are made to involve the public in the viewing of the nominated artist such as a published shortlist, a nomination of four shortlisted artists and an individual exhibition of nominated work within the Tate.
1991 Anish Kapoor received the prize for an untitled piece in sandstone and pigment. Other nominees included abstract painters
Ian Davenport,
Fiona Rae and sculptor
Rachel Whiteread.
1992 Grenville Davey received the prize for
HAL, a work consisting of two abstract steel objects, each measuring . Other nominees included the Young British Artist (yBA) Damien Hirst for his installations, photographer
David Tremlett and sculptor Alison Wilding.
1993 Rachel Whiteread was the winner for
House, a concrete cast of the inside of a house on Grove Road, near Roman Road, London E3.
Jimmy Cauty and
Bill Drummond of the
K Foundation received media coverage for the award of the "
Anti-Turner Prize", £40,000 to be given to the "worst artist in Britain", voted from the real Turner Prize's short-list. Rachel Whiteread was awarded their prize. She refused to accept the money at first, but changed her mind when she heard the cash was to be burned instead, and gave £30,000 of it to artists in financial need and the other £10,000 to the housing charity,
Shelter. The K Foundation went on to make a film in which they burned £1 million of their own money (
Watch the K Foundation Burn a Million Quid). Other nominees included painter
Sean Scully, Laotian-born
Vong Phaophanit and printer
Hannah Collins.
1994 Popular sculptor
Antony Gormley was awarded the 1994 Turner Prize. Other nominees included video artist Northern Irish-born
Willie Doherty, whose work
The Only Good One Is A Dead One was the first video piece to be nominated for the prize, painter
Peter Doig and multi-media
Shirazeh Houshiary.
1995 Damien Hirst was awarded the 1995 Turner Prize, which included his notorious sculpture
Mother and Child, Divided. Other nominees included Lebanese-born installation/video artist
Mona Hatoum, abstract painter
Callum Innes and multi-media artist
Mark Wallinger.
1996 Douglas Gordon became the first video artist to win the Turner Prize. Other nominees included photographer
Craigie Horsfield, painter
Gary Hume and installation artist
Simon Patterson.
1997 , debate controversy in 1997, nominee in 1999. The winner,
Gillian Wearing, showed a video
60 minutes of Silence (1996), where a group of actors were dressed in police uniforms and had to stand still for an hour (occasional surreptitious scratching could be observed). A drunken
Tracey Emin walked out of a live Channel 4 discussion programme, presented as part of the coverage of the award. The discussion was chaired by
Tim Marlow and also included
Roger Scruton,
Waldemar Januszczak,
Richard Cork,
David Sylvester and
Norman Rosenthal. Emin wrote about the incident in her 2005 book
Strangeland, describing her shock at reading
The Guardian writeup the following day. This was the only time in history with an all-female shortlist including sculptor
Christine Borland,
Angela Bulloch and sculptor
Cornelia Parker.
1998 The talking point was
Chris Ofili's use of balls of elephant dung attached to his mixed media images on canvas, as well as being used as supports on the floor to prop them up. An illustrator deposited dung on the steps in protest against his work. Ofili won the prize and it was the first time in twelve years that a painter had done so; it was presented by French fashion designer
agnès b. Ofili joked, "Oh man. Thank God! Where's my cheque?" and said: "I don't know what to say. I am just really happy. I can't believe it. It feels like a film and I will watch the tape when I get home."
1999 , September 2013 The Prize was given to
Steve McQueen for his video based on a
Buster Keaton film. Some media attention was given to
Tracey Emin's exhibit
My Bed, which was a double bed in a dishevelled state with stained sheets, surrounded by detritus such as soiled underwear, condoms, slippers and empty drink bottles. Two artists,
Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi, jumped onto the bed, stripped to their underwear, and had a pillow fight. Police detained the two, who called their performance ''Two Naked Men Jump into Tracey's Bed''. Other nominees included
Steven Pippin and collaborative sibling duo
Jane and Louise Wilson.
2000 , winner in 2000 The prize was won by
Wolfgang Tillmans. Other entries included a large painting by
Glenn Brown based very closely on a science fiction illustration published some years previously.
Michael Raedecker and
Tomoko Takahashi were also nominated. , 2000 The
Stuckist art group staged their
first demonstration against the prize, dressed as clowns, describing it as an "ongoing national joke" and "a state-funded advertising agency for
Charles Saatchi", adding "the only artist who wouldn't be in danger of winning the Turner Prize is Turner", and concluding that it "should be re-named The
Duchamp Award for the destruction of artistic integrity".
The Guardian announced the winner of Turner Prize with the headline "Turner Winner Riles the Stuckists".
2001 's entry. Controversy was caused by winner
Martin Creed's installation
Work No. 227: The lights going on and off consisting of an empty room whose lighting periodically came on and went off. Artist Jacqueline Crofton threw eggs at the walls of the room containing Creed's work as a protest. At the prize ceremony,
Madonna gave him the prize and said, "At a time when political correctness is valued over honesty I would also like to say "Right on, motherfuckers!". This was on live TV before the 9 pm
watershed and an attempt to
"bleep" it out was too late. Channel 4 were subsequently given an official rebuke by the Independent Television Commission. Other nominees included photographer
Richard Billingham, video/installation artist (and now film director)
Isaac Julien and installation artist
Mike Nelson.
2002 The media focused on a large display by
Fiona Banner whose wall-size text piece,
Arsewoman in Wonderland, described a
pornographic film in detail.
The Guardian asked, "It's art. But is it porn?" calling in "Britain's biggest porn star",
Ben Dover, to comment. Culture Minister
Kim Howells made a scathing criticism of the exhibits as "conceptual bullshit".
Prince Charles wrote to him: "It's good to hear your refreshing common sense about the dreaded Turner prize. It has contaminated the art establishment for so long." Graffiti artist
Banksy stencilled "Mind the crap" on the steps of the Tate, who called in emergency cleaners to remove it. Other nominees included
Willie Doherty (his second nomination since 1994) and
Anya Gallaccio.
2004 The media focused on a large computer simulation of a former hideout of
Osama bin Laden by
Ben Langlands and Nikki Bell, as well as the fact that one of their exhibits, a film in a
Kabul courtroom was withdrawn as it related to an ongoing trial of a suspected Afghan warlord.
2006 The nominees were announced on 16 May 2006. The exhibition of nominees' work opened at Tate Britain on 3 October.
Yoko Ono, the celebrity announcer chosen for the year, declared
Tomma Abts the winner on 4 December during a live Channel 4 broadcast, although this was part of the evening news broadcast, rather than in a dedicated programme as in recent years. The total prize money was £40,000: £25,000 awarded to the winner and £5,000 to each of the other 3 nominees. The prize was sponsored by the makers of
Gordon's Gin. Under the
Freedom of Information Act,
The Sunday Telegraph obtained emails between the Tate and judge
Lynn Barber, which revealed that the judges had been sent a list of shows by artists too late to be able to see them and instead were being supplied with catalogues and photographs of work. More controversy ensued when Barber wrote in
The Observer about her troubles as a judge, even asking, "Is it all a fix?", The judges were: :Lynn Barber, journalist,
The Observer :Margot Heller, director,
South London Gallery :
Matthew Higgs, Director and Chief Curator, White Columns, New York :Andrew Renton, writer and Director of Curating,
Goldsmiths College :
Nicholas Serota, director, Tate and Chairman of the Jury
2007 The winner of the £25,000 Prize was
Mark Wallinger. His display at the Turner Prize show was
Sleeper, a film of him dressed in a bear costume wandering around an empty museum, but the prize was officially given for
State Britain, which recreated all the objects in
Brian Haw's anti-war display in
Parliament Square, London. :Fiona Bradley, Director of the
Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh :
Michael Bracewell, critic and writer :Thelma Golden, Director and Chief Curator of the
Studio Museum, Harlem :
Miranda Sawyer, writer and broadcaster :Christoph Grunenberg, Director of Tate Liverpool (Chairman of the Jury) The nominees were: :
Mark Wallinger for his Tate Britain installation,
State Britain :
Nathan Coley, a Glasgow artist, who makes installations based on buildings :
Zarina Bhimji, a Ugandan Asian photographer and filmmaker :
Mike Nelson, an installation artist Nelson and Wallinger had both previously been nominated for the prize. The
Stuckists announced that they were not
demonstrating for the first time since 2000, because of "the lameness of this year's show, which does not merit the accolade of the traditional demo". Instead, art group AAS re-enacted previous Stuckist demonstrations in protest against their own practice at the Royal Standard Turner Prize Extravaganza.
2008 Mark Leckey was the winner of the Turner Prize of 2008. For the second year running, Sir Nicholas Serota did not chair the Turner Prize jury; instead Stephen Deuchar, director of Tate Britain, was the chair. The other members were Jennifer Higgie, editor of
frieze, Daniel Birnbaum, rector of the
Städelschule international art academy, Frankfurt, architect
David Adjaye, and Suzanne Cotter, senior curator,
Modern Art Oxford. The prize winner received £25,000 and the other three nominees £5,000 each. In recent years the prize has attracted commercial sponsorship, but did not have any during the 2008 events.
2009 The winner of the £25,000 Prize was
Richard Wright. Stephen Deuchar again chaired the jury. The other shortlisted artists were
Enrico David,
Roger Hiorns and
Lucy Skaer.
2010 The winner was
Susan Philipsz who graduated from
Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design in Dundee. She was the first artist ever to win with a purely aural work, having made an installation under three bridges in
Glasgow in which she sang folklorised versions of the
sea shanty "Lowlands Away". For the Turner Prize, the work consisted simply of loudspeakers installed along the walls in a gallery room. The other artists nominated were
Dexter Dalwood,
Angela de la Cruz, and the
Otolith Group.
2011 The 2011 Turner Prize took place in
Gateshead at the
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, away from the Tate in London for the first time since 2007. The winner was
Martin Boyce. The other nominees were
Karla Black,
Hilary Lloyd and
George Shaw. The prize ceremony was interrupted by the international streaker
Mark Roberts who was hired by the artist Benedikt Dichgans. 149,770 people visited the exhibition in Gateshead making it the most visited Turner Prize exhibition ever.
2012 The nominees for the 2012 prize were
Spartacus Chetwynd,
Luke Fowler (graduate of
Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art),
Paul Noble and
Elizabeth Price. Former
Talulah Gosh member Elizabeth Price was awarded the £25,000 prize.
2013 The 2013 Turner Prize were held at
Ebrington Square in
Derry, the first-time the prize was awarded outside England, as part of the
UK City of Culture celebrations. The prize jury was chaired by
Penelope Curtis, Director of Tate Britain. The nominees for the 2013 award were
Laure Prouvost,
Tino Sehgal,
David Shrigley, and
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye. The winner of the 2013 prize was
Laure Prouvost.
2014 The nominees for the 2014 award were
Duncan Campbell,
Ciara Phillips,
James Richards and
Tris Vonna-Michell. The winner of the 2014 prize was
Duncan Campbell.
2015 The nominees for the 2015 award were
Bonnie Camplin,
Janice Kerbel,
Nicole Wermers, and
Assemble. The winner of the 2015 prize was Assemble. The exhibition was held in Glasgow, Scotland, in the Tramway, a contemporary art, theatre and dance space.
2016 The nominees for the 2016 award were
Michael Dean,
Anthea Hamilton,
Helen Marten, and
Josephine Pryde. The winner was
Helen Marten.
2017 The nominees for the 2017 award were
Lubaina Himid,
Rosalind Nashashibi,
Hurvin Anderson, and
Andrea Büttner. The exhibition was held in Hull, at the
Ferens Art Gallery, as part of
Hull UK City of Culture 2017. The winner was
Lubaina Himid.
2018 The nominees for the 2018 award were
Forensic Architecture,
Naeem Mohaiemen,
Charlotte Prodger, and
Luke Willis Thompson. All four were video artists. The shortlist was drawn up by writer and critic Oliver Basciano, Elena Filipovic, director,
Kunsthalle Basel; Lisa Le Feuvre, executive director of Holt/Smithson Foundation; and novelist
Tom McCarthy. The winner was
Charlotte Prodger.
2019 The 2019 award was hosted at the
Turner Contemporary in Margate, Kent. The shortlisted artists were
Lawrence Abu Hamdan,
Helen Cammock,
Oscar Murillo and
Tai Shani, who were jointly awarded the prize as a collective following their request to be considered as a single group.
2020 It was announced in May, at a late stage in judging, that this year's award would be replaced by a
bursary for 10 artists who would be announced in July due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom. The 10 artists to receive bursaries were:
Oreet Ashery,
Liz Johnson Artur,
Shawanda Corbett, Jamie Crewe, Sean Edwards,
Sidsel Meineche Hansen, Ima-Abasi Okon, Imran Perretta,
Alberta Whittle, and the political arts organisation Arika.
2021 Hosted in Coventry, the 2021 nominees were
Array Collective, Black Obsidian Sound System, Cooking Sections, Gentle/Radical, and Project Art Works. Array Collective were announced as the winners on 1 December 2021.
2022 On 12 April 2022, it was announced that the nominees for the prize were
Heather Phillipson,
Ingrid Pollard,
Veronica Ryan, and
Sin Wai Kin. Veronica Ryan was announced as the winner.
2023 Jesse Darling won the award in 2023, hosted in Eastbourne. Nominees were Jesse Darling,
Ghislaine Leung,
Rory Pilgrim and
Barbara Walker 2024 On 24 April 2024, it was announced that the nominees for the prize were
Jasleen Kaur,
Pio Abad,
Claudette Johnson, and
Delaine Le Bas. On 3 December, Kaur was announced as the winner, for her animations of everyday objects. She won £25,000. The 2024 Turner Prize ceremony was held at the Tate Britain. In her winner's speech, Kaur voiced her supported for protestors outside the venue, called for a ceasefire in the Middle East, and referenced a letter signed by "over 1,200 artists and art workers" in November 2024, which called on "Tate to sever ties with two of its funding partners,
Outset Contemporary Art Fund and
Zabludowicz Art Trust". The Delaine Le Bas installation at the 2024 Turner Prize came under scrutiny for suspected plagiarism of an earlier work by Edgeworth Johnstone, who was protesting outside Tate Britain on the day of the award ceremony.
2025 On 23 April 2025, the four artists shortlisted for the 2025 Turner Prize were announced:
Nnena Kalu,
Rene Matić, Mohammed Sami, and
Zadie Xa. On 9 December 2025, the winner was announced as Nnena Kalu. ==Public perception==