Prince Claus Fund announce the 2015 Prince Claus Laureates

03 May 2015
Magazine C& Magazine
2 min read
This year’s Principal Prince Claus Award goes to Iranian photographer Newsha Tavakolian. Among the other 10 Laureates are Nigerian performance artist Jelili Atiku, Amakhosi , a theatre and cultural organization from Zimbabwe, Cameroonian filmmaker Jean-Pierre Bekolo , and Y’en a Marre , a collective of hip-hop musicians and journalists from Senegal. All 2015 Laureates will receive their Award at a ceremony held in the …
This year's Principal Prince Claus Award goes to Iranian photographer Newsha Tavakolian. Among the other 10 Laureates are Nigerian performance artistJelili Atiku, Amakhosi , a theatre and cultural organization from Zimbabwe, Cameroonian filmmaker Jean-Pierre Bekolo , and Y’en a Marre , a collective of hip-hop musicians and journalists from Senegal. All 2015 Laureates will receive their Award at a ceremony held in the presence of members of the Dutch Royal Family at the Royal Palace Amsterdam on 2 December. The Prince Claus Fund Gallery in Amsterdam will exhibit works by Principal Laureate Newsha Tavakolian 27 November 2015 – 4 March 2016. 2015 Prince Claus Laureates Newsha Tavakolian (1981, Iran), photojournalist and artist Latif Al-Ani (1932, Iraq), photographer Amakhosi (1980, Zimbabwe), theatre and cultural organisation Jelili Atiku (1968, Nigeria), performance artist Jean-Pierre Bekolo (1966, Cameroon) filmmaker Grupo Etcétera (1997, Argentina/Chile), public-art collective Perhat Khaliq (1982, China), musician and singer-songwriter Fatos Lubonja (1951, Albania), writer, editor & public intellectual Ossama Mohammed (1954, Syria), filmmaker Oksana Shatalova (1972, Kazakhstan), visual artist, critic and curator Y’en a Marre (2011, Senegal), collective of hip-hop musicians and journalistswww.princeclausfund.org/
Read more from

Emmanuel Aggrey Tieku Wins 2025 Ellipse Prize Focused on Ghana’s Emerging Art Scene

Lindokuhle Sobekwa Wins the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize 2025

Kapwani Kiwanga Wins the 2025 Joan Miró Prize
Read more from

Jesús Hilário-Reyes: Dissolving Notions of Group and Individual

A Biennial that relates sound to space and bodies

