Live Art Prize continues: the 2025 shortlist nominations are in!
News
The nominees for the 2025 ANTI Festival International Prize for Live Art are Chiara Bersani (Italy), Harold Offeh (United Kingdom) and SJ Norman (Australia).
Nominees for the longlist were collected from 14 experts from around the world. The three nominees on the shortlist were selected by a shortlisting committee consisting of ANTI Festival Curators Elisa Itkonen and Season Butler. The shortlisting committee invites the audience to celebrate the unique work of the three nominees:
“These artists create work that lingers and resonates through our imaginations, moving us in the moment of the encounter and long afterwards. We have been deeply impressed by the depth of their historical, social and political engagement through rigorous research and community praxes, which saturate and suffuse the ferocious beauty of their creations.“
Each nominee will perform one of their pieces as a part of the Shortlist LIVE! programme at the ANTI Festival in Kuopio between 9 and 14 September 2025. An international jury will select the winner. The performances, the international jury and the schedule for the Shortlist LIVE! programme will be published in spring 2025.
Collaboration with the Saastamoinen Foundation will continue
ANTI Festival International Prize for Live Art is the only international live art award in the world. The Prize, which will be awarded for the 11th time, presents, celebrates and supports live art and artists.
The Prize is funded by the Saastamoinen Foundation, which has granted extension funding for the period 2025–2029. In the future, the Prize will be awarded once every two years.
The total value of the International Prize for Live Art is EUR 30,000, which makes it one of the most significant prizes in the arts. The winning artist receives a cash prize of EUR 15,000 and the same amount in the form of a production grant for presenting a new commissioned piece at the ANTI Festival performed two years after receiving the award.
“The festival and the Prize for Live Art, one-of-a-kind on the international stage, brings art to the urban environment for us all to experience in the present moment and space, sometimes where you’d least expect it. It’s an experience that leaves a mark and takes a stand. Last year, the festival was awarded the State Prize for the Social Impact of Art for this very impact it makes in society. It is an internationally significant event in Finland. We are proud of our cooperation in Kuopio and our roots that lie deep in the North Savo region”, says Marja Karttunen, Member of the Board, Saastamoinen Foundation.