Artist Jasleen Kaur wins Turner Prize for work exploring her Scottish Sikh identity

(3 Dec 2024)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
London, UK – 24 September 2024
1. Wide of ‘Sociomobile’ by Jasleen Kaur, a red Ford Escort covered in a giant cotton doily, part of the artist’s entry to the Turner Prize, exhibited at Tate Britain
2. Various of ‘Sociomobile’
3. Tilt up to ceiling of room displaying work by Jasleen Kaur
4. Close of Irn Bru bottles, a popular Scottish carbonated drink that reflects the artist Jasleen Kaur’s Glaswegian upbringing
5. Various of ‘Untitled’ by Kaur, a harmonium moving by automation, on an image of men standing at the future site of a mosque in Moga, India
STORYLINE:
An artist whose work exploring her Scottish Sikh identity includes a vintage Ford car draped in a crocheted doily won the U.K.’s prestigious Turner Prize on Tuesday.

Jasleen Kaur was awarded the 25,000-pound ($32,000) prize by actor James Norton during a ceremony at the Tate Britain gallery in London, where works by the four finalists are on display until February.

A jury led by Tate Britain director Alex Farquhar praised the way 38-year-old Kaur “weaves together the personal, political and spiritual” through “unexpected and playful combinations of material.”

Her winning exhibition mixes sculpture, print, everyday items – including family photos, a Ford Escort car and the popular Scottish soda Irn Bru — and immersive music to reflect on her upbringing in Glasgow’s Sikh community.

Three other finalists – Pio Abad, Claudette Johnson and Delaine Le Bas – received 10,000 pounds ($12,670) each.

Named for 19th-century landscape painter J.M.W. Turner and founded in 1984 to reward young artists, the prize helped make stars of shark-pickling artist Damien Hirst, potter Grayson Perry, sculptor Anish Kapoor and filmmaker Steve McQueen.

But it has also been criticized for rewarding impenetrable conceptual work and often sparks debate about the value of modern art, with winners such as Hirst’s “Mother and Child Divided,” which consists of two cows, bisected and preserved in formaldehyde, and Martin Creed’s “Lights On and Off” — a room with a light blinking on and off – drawing scorn from sections of the media.

In 2019, all four finalists were declared winners after they refused to compete against one another, “to make a collective statement in the name of commonality, multiplicity and solidarity.”

In 2021, all five finalists were collectives rather than individual artists.

The award was initially open to artists under 50 but now has no upper age limit.

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