This 12 months, the Vilcek Basis doubled its prizes within the arts and humanities by bestowing awards in two classes: Visible Arts and Curatorial Work. Granting $250,000 to Visible Arts and $250,000 for Curatorial Work, these prizes acknowledge immigrant artwork professionals and curators whose work has a profound influence on their establishments, and on modern artwork historical past.
The recipients of the Vilcek Prizes in Curatorial Work examine Blackness within the historical past of images, world artwork historical past and approaches, the artwork of the Americas, and rising and radical artists from the World South.
Oluremi C. Onabanjo, 2025 Vilcek Prize in Curatorial Work
Born within the UK to Nigerian mother and father, Oluremi C. Onabanjo is an artwork historian and curator within the Division of Images on the Museum of Trendy Artwork (MoMA). Her work examines energy, place, and manufacturing of Blackness throughout the ongoing historical past of images.
Donna Honarpisheh, Artistic Promise Prize in Curatorial Work
Born in Canada to Iranian mother and father, Donna Honarpisheh is an affiliate curator of artwork and analysis on the Institute of Modern Artwork, Miami (ICA Miami). She makes use of a multidisciplinary strategy to handle the historic and ongoing omissions of worldwide artists and actions in Western artwork historical past and establishments.
Donna Honarpisheh (paintings by Naudline Pierre)Aimé Iglesias Lukin, Artistic Promise Prize in Curatorial Work
Aimé Iglesias Lukin is the chief curator of artwork on the Americas Society. The Argentinian immigrant has led initiatives selling the artwork of the Americas and traditionally underrepresented migrant and ladies artists.
Aimé Iglesias LukinBernardo Mosqueira, Artistic Promise Prize in Curatorial Work
Initially from Brazil, Bernardo Mosqueira is the chief curator for the Institute for Research on Latin American Artwork (ISLAA), dedicated to constructing establishments, frameworks, and platforms for rising and radical artists, particularly these from the World South, Latin America, and diasporic communities.
Bernardo Mosqueira
By rising the variety of awardees, the muse hopes to deliver consciousness to these whose work is commonly under-recognized regardless of being important to our lives.
To be taught extra, go to vilcek.org.