Nnena Kalu

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Nnena Kalu
Born1966 (age 5960)[1]
Glasgow, Scotland[2]
OccupationArtist
Years active1980s–present

Nnena Kalu (Igbo pronunciation;born 1966)[1] is a British artist who won the 2025 Turner Prize.[3][2]

Early life

Kalu was born in Glasgow to Nigerian parents in 1966, and moved to Wandsworth in London at a young age.[4] She is autistic and has limited verbal communication.[5]

She began making art in the 1980s[2] at Hill House day centre in Tooting, in south London.[3]

Work

Kalu began making sculptures around 2010, after making flat artworks for years. She begins with a bundle of paper, cloth, or another base structure, and then elaborates it - often compulsively - by wrapping, layering, and binding materials such as ropes, strips of fabric, unspooled VHS cassette tape, netting and rubbish.[6][7] Her sculptures are usually made of found materials.[8] In 2013, she began making distinctive drawings which have been compared to whirlpools, usually completed in pairs or trios,[6] sometimes fours or sixes, but not alone. Kalu creates the drawings together, often with her eyes closed.[9]

Critics have focused on the physicality of her work, comparing her sculptures to bodies[10] and "disembowelled organs".[7]

Career

In 1999, Kalu began working as an artist at ActionSpace in Clapham, an organization which assists artists with learning disabilities.[11]

In 2016, her works were shown in Belgium alongside artists such as Laure Prouvost, who won the Turner Prize in 2013;[3] at the 2018 Glasgow International;[12] Humber Street Gallery;[12][13] and at Studio Voltaire.[14] Her first commercial show was in 2024, at Arcadia Missa in London. The gallery is her official representative.[6]

Creations of Care,[9] Kalu's first major institutional show, was held in 2025 at the Kunsthall Stavanger in Norway.[3] Later in 2025, she won the Turner Prize, the most prominent British art award.[11] The jury nominated her for her work in Conversations at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, and Hanging Sculpture 1 to 10 at Manifesta 15 in Barcelona.[15] The BBC described her winning works as drawings of tornado-like swirls, and brightly coloured sculptures that are wrapped haphazardly with layers of materials such as ribbon, string, card and VHS tape.[11]

She was the first artist with a learning disability to win the prize,[11] and her facilitator and studio manager, Charlotte Hollinshead, made a speech on her behalf, in which she said that Kalu "has faced an incredible amount of discrimination" and hoped that award would help "smash the prejudice away."[3]

Kalu's works have been included as part of the Arts Council Collection[16] and the collection of The Tate.[17]

References

  1. Lawson-Tancred, Jo (9 December 2025). "Nnena Kalu Snags the U.K.'s Prestigious Turner Prize". artnet. Retrieved 9 December 2025.
  2. Marshall, Alex (9 December 2025). "With Colorful Sculptures, Artist With a Learning Disability Wins the Turner Prize". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 December 2025.
  3. Bakare, Lanre (9 December 2025). "Nnena Kalu becomes first artist with a learning disability to win Turner prize". Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  4. Frankel, Eddy (19 May 2025). "'Her need to make is off the scale': why Nnena Kalu's Turner prize nomination is a watershed moment for art". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 December 2025.
  5. "Nnena Kalu is first artist with a learning disability to win the prestigious Turner Prize". AP News. 10 December 2025. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  6. Holland, Oscar (9 December 2025). "Nnena Kalu 'makes history' by winning Turner Prize 2025". Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  7. Frankel, Eddy (2 May 2024). "Review: Nnena Kalu". Time Out.
  8. Lawson-Tancred, Jo (24 September 2025). "A Look at the 2025 Turner Prize Show—and the Artists Vying for the U.K.'s Top Art Award". Artnet. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
  9. Statz, Maike (24 April 2025). "Nnena Kalu: Creations of Care". Contemporary Art Stavanger. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  10. Searle, Adrian (9 December 2025). "Nnena Kalu's embodied, sensuous art makes her a worthy Turner prize winner". Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  11. Youngs, Ian (9 December 2025). "Artist Nnena Kalu earns 'historic' Turner Prize win". BBC News. Retrieved 9 December 2025.
  12. "Nnena Kalu — ActionSpace Artists". ActionSpace. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  13. "Turner Prize 2013: Laure Prouvost wins £25,000 prize". BBC. 3 December 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  14. Fleck, Ella (30 March 2020). "Nnena Kalu". Frieze.
  15. "Turner Prize 2025 shortlist announced". Tate. 23 April 2025. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
  16. "The Arts Council Collection Acquires Work by Nnena Kalu". ActionSpace. 28 June 2023. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
  17. "Nnena Kalu born 1966 | Tate". Tate. Retrieved 10 December 2025.