About
The Access ART X Prize awards early-career artists from Africa and its diaspora opportunities to develop their practices, with the intention of setting them up for the highest levels of success on the global stage.
Formerly only open to emerging Nigerian artists, in 2022 the Prize evolved to include an additional award for emerging artists from all of Africa and its diaspora.
In 2023, The Nigeria Prize Winner undertook a residency at Gasworks, London and the Africa/Diaspora Prize Winner undertook a residency at Yinka Shonibare's GAS Foundation in Lagos. Both artists were granted exhibitions at ART X Lagos in the subsequent year, supported by grants of $10,000 each towards their exhibitions.
The Access ART X Prize was created by ART X Lagos and is sponsored by Access Holdings (the parent company of Access Bank).
2023
2023
Retrospective exhibition
2023
2023
Alumni Impact Award
2023
WINNERS EXHIBITION
2023
JURY
EMEKA OGBOH
Artist
Gabi Ngcobo
ARTIST, EDUCATOR & CURATORIAL DIRECTOR, JAVETT ART CENTRE
Yesomi Umolu
DIRECTOR OF CURATORIAL & PUBLIC PRACTICE FOR THE SERPENTINE GALLERIES
Daudi Karungi
FOUNDER, AFRIART GALLERY
Barthélémy Toguo
ARTIST
Babajide Adeniyi-Jones
DOCUMENTARY PHOTOGRAPHER
2023
2023
NIGERIA WINNER
JULIUS AGBAJE
Julius Agbaje, a Nigerian artist (b. 1992) born in Agege, Lagos to a Pastor and a teacher, initially pursued Computer Science at the Polytechnic but transitioned to art. After graduating from Yaba College of Technology with a Higher National Diploma in Painting in 2017, he furthered his artistry through an art residency and internship.
Julius’s artworks are a reflection of his life's journey, exploring themes like racial discrimination, politics and spirituality. Employing satires, metaphors, and symbolism, he engages audiences in pertinent socio-political and spiritual issues. His art, threaded with personal experiences, leads him back to God and a discovery of his life's purpose.
Using diverse mediums like watercolours, oil, acrylic, and charcoal, and techniques such as stencilling typography, and screen-printing, he constantly evolves, now venturing into sculptures with clay, wood, metal, and fibreglass.
2023
AFRICA / DIASPORA WINNER
SHABU MWANGI
Shabu’s practice focuses on the effects of structural and historical violence, and different forms of marginalization on the individual and collective psyche.
Shabu’s paintings are considerations of societal and cultural fissures. His work has previously dealt with questions of collective suffering, and the effects that inequality, marginalization, and other forms of structural violence have on communities.
More recently, his work traces an ongoing personal journey of striving to understand the balance between the two things that drive us, love and pain, and how we react in different ways depending on which of the two is dominant. In this new body of work, he has turned his gaze inwards, focusing on an examination of the self. He asks himself questions about how he sees the people around him and his interactions with them.
Shabu has participated in workshops and residency programs both locally and internationally. His work most recently featured in Systems of Emptiness, a prelude to Documenta Fifteen, a group show with Wajukuu Art Collective and The Sources of Our Seas, a solo show at Circle Art Gallery in 2021; East African Encounters, a Circle Art Gallery group exhibition at Cromwell Place in London in 2021, and Self Addressed, an exhibition of self-portraiture by artists from Africa and its diaspora curated by Kehinde Wiley for Deitch Projects LA.
In 2022, Shabu and fellow members of the Wajukuu Art Project participated in Documenta Fifteen in Kassel, where they went on to win the Arnold Bode prize. Shabu participated in the 13a Biennial do Mercosul in Brazil in 2022 and his latest exhibition was Winters Memory at GravitArt Gallery 2022. He has had numerous other shows, participating in residencies in Kenya, Germany, and Italy.
2023
2023
AFRICA / DIASPORA WINNER
ASMAA JAMA (WITHDRAWN)
Asmaa Jama, a self-taught Somali multidisciplinary artist, writer, and filmmaker in Bristol, explores themes of myth, movement, and migration. Their film works, including "Before We Disappear" (2021) commissioned by BBC Arts and "Except this Time Nothing Returns from the Ashes" (2022) at Spike Island, showcase their interactive storytelling.Jama's art has reached international platforms like the Venice Architecture Biennale and film festivals such as Blackstar and Sharjah Film Platform.
Jama's theatrical involvement spans writing for productions like Dorothee Munyaneza’s "Mailles" and "Akal." Their impactful writing has been commissioned by respected entities like Jerwood Arts, Hayward Gallery, Arnolfini, and Ifa Gallery, with published works featured in notable publications like The Poetry Review and Nataal.
Jama was commended for the Brunel African Poetry Prize (2022); and shortlisted for the New Poets Prize (2022); Queen Mary Wasafiri Writing Prize (2021); James Berry Poetry Prize (2021); To Speak Europe in Other Languages Prize (2020), and longlisted for National Poetry Competition ( 2021) and is a Cave Canem Fellow. Their accolades include commendations for the Brunel African Poetry Prize and residencies at prestigious institutions like the School for Sonic Memory, and Mucem/Onassis Stegi.
Recently, Jama's solo exhibition at Spike Island culminated with a commissioned showcase across 25 billboard sites in Bristol, exhibiting their diverse artistic talent.
Honourable Mentions
Having faced a challenging task in selecting the winners, given the exceptional level of talent and creativity on display, the jury also selected Roanna Tella (Nigerian category) and Shabu Mwangi (African/Diaspora category) for honourable mentions. Both artists received prizes of $2,000 and tailored mentorship.