The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Oldest Turner Prize winner celebrates black creativity
Judges praise ‘relevance’ of Lubaina Himid’s work
A series of “outstanding” shows and serious, thought-provoking works celebrating black creativity secured Lubaina Himid the coveted 2017 Turner Prize.
Himid, 63, became the oldest artist ever to win the best-known accolade in British art, which was opened to over fifties this year for the first time in more than 25 years.
The £25,000 award was announced by the musician and artist Goldie at Hull Minster, as Hull continued to celebrate its year as UK City of Culture 2017.
Born in Zanzibar in 1954, Himid is Professor of Contemporary Art at the University of Central Lancashire in Preston.
The jury said they awarded the prize to Himid for a trio of “outstanding” shows in Oxford, Bristol and Nottingham, while judges praised the artist for “her expansive and exuberant approach to painting” and combination of “satire and a sense of theatre”.
But Alex Farquharson, director of Tate Britain, who chaired the jury, warned the award should not be seen as the Turner Prize becoming a “lifetime achievement award”.
Mr Farquharson said: “The jury was really impressed both the current vitality of Lubaina’s work – as shown by these three exhibitions – as well as the current relevance of three decades of her practice and her importance as a curator and an educator in that time.
“She has made – especially back in the ’80s – work by black and Asian women visible through exhibitions she has made.
“And they were impressed by the seriousness of themes she addressed. They feel they have a lot of resonance in the present – the legacy of colonialism and the different forms racism continues to take – but also the weird and visual exuberance with which she conveys them.”
Himid said she would use the prize money to continue to help artists struggling for funding to put on shows.
Mr Farquharson said he believed Himid’s selection vindicated the decision to lift the restriction on older artists.
The Turner Prize was first awarded in 1984 and the 50-year-old age limit for nominees was introduced in 1991 to encourage emerging artists.
Since then it has been won by figures who are now the best known names in British art, including Damien Hirst in 1995; Anthony Gormley in 1994; Anish Kapoor in 1991; Grayson Perry in 2003 and Steve McQueen in 1999.
Before the 1991 age limit, the first two winners – Malcolm Morley in 1984 and Howard Hodgkin in 1985 – were both in their fifties.