Gallery Collective
Contemporary Art

2025 Sobey Art Award shortlist revealed


Six finalists announced for Canada’s most established contemporary visual arts prize

OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ – Six of Canada’s most compelling contemporary visual artists have been shortlisted for the 2025 Sobey Art Award, Canada’s most established contemporary visual arts prize since 2002. Today, the National Gallery of Canada (NGC) and the Sobey Art Foundation (SAF) are excited to unveil their names. They are:

Six of Canada’s most compelling contemporary visual artists have been shortlisted for the 2025 Sobey Art Award, Canada’s most established contemporary visual arts prize since 2002. (CNW Group/National Gallery of Canada)
Six of Canada’s most compelling contemporary visual artists have been shortlisted for the 2025 Sobey Art Award, Canada’s most established contemporary visual arts prize since 2002. (CNW Group/National Gallery of Canada)

Tarralik Duffy for the Circumpolar region. A multidisciplinary artist and designer from Salliq, Nunavut, Duffy uses various mediums like drawing, photography, sculpture, textiles, printmaking, and salvaged materials to explore contemporary Inuit culture and pop culture.

Tania Willard for the Pacific region. Willard, a mixed Secwépemc and settler artist, uses land-based art to promote Indigenous resurgence through collaborative projects like BUSH Gallery and language revitalization in Secwépemc communities.

Chukwudubem Ukaigwe for the Prairies region. Born in Nigeria, Ukaigwe is an artist, curator, and writer influenced by experimental music, literature, history, and futurism. His work aims to create immersive audiovisual environments, examining subject-object divides and fracturing time and relativity.

Sandra Brewster for the Ontario region. The child of Guyanese parents, Brewster is a Toronto-based Canadian artist. Her practice reflects a multilayered sense of identity, born of a collision between place and time.

Swapnaa Tamhane for the Quebec region. Tamhane’s practice is dedicated to materials such as cotton and jute, leading to the making of handmade paper, archival research, and textile installations. She also collaborates closely with artisans in Gujarat, India, in a skill-sharing process.

Hangama Amiri for the Atlantic region. Amiri works predominantly in textiles, examining notions of home, and how gender, social norms, and geopolitical conflict affect the daily lives of women in Afghanistan and the diaspora. The figurative tendency in her work reflects her interest in the power of representation, especially through everyday objects such as passports, vases, and celebrity postcards.

“On behalf of the Sobey Art Foundation, I extend our warmest congratulations to the six exceptional artists who have been named to this year’s Sobey Art Award shortlist. We are incredibly proud to support their remarkable achievements and look forward to celebrating their ongoing contributions to the Canadian contemporary visual arts landscape in the months ahead,” said Rob Sobey, Chair, Sobey Art Foundation.



Source link

Related posts

Leave a Comment