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Serbian performance artist Marina Abramović among winners of Japan's Praemium Imperiale award

Strike a pose - Marina Abramović
Strike a pose - Marina Abramović Copyright  Laurence Jeanson Photographie
Copyright Laurence Jeanson Photographie
By Tokunbo Salako
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The Serbian performance artist Marina Abramović and the painter Peter Doig are among the laureates for this year's Praemium Imperiale, the prestigious Japanese award also known as the 'Nobel of the Arts'.

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The Japan Art Association has revealed its laureates for the Praemium Imperiale, the awards widely known as the "Noble of the Arts"

Serbian performance artist Marina Abramović has won the sculpture award for her long career of putting her life on the line and using her own body as a medium for her spectacular work.

She first grabbed worldwide attention in 1974 with Rhythm 0 by inviting audiences to interact with her using one of 72 objects on a table at a Naples gallery. While people started tamely - offering her a rose or a kiss - the six hour performance ended with a loaded gun held to her head.

Marina and me: A visitor participates in "The Artist is Present" exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art.
Marina and me: A visitor participates in "The Artist is Present" exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art. Mary Altaffer/AP2010

Painting

In the studio with Peter Doig
In the studio with Peter Doig The Japan Art Association/The Sankei Shimbun

Scotsman Peter Doig is regarded as one of the world's most important and expensive living painters. His modernist creations are celebrated for their colour, composition and perspectives, weaving together history and everyday life. Many of his most well known works stem from the 20 years he spent living in Trinidad and Tobago and the relationships and real-life encounters he had on the Caribbean island.

Peter Doig's 'Red House" goes on display before an auction in London
Peter Doig's 'Red House" goes on display before an auction in London Stefan Rousseau/AP/2012

His works often sell for several million euros and perhaps to add to their intrinsic value, he only produces up to six paintings a year

Architecture

Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura meets the press after winning the Pritzker Prize.
Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura meets the press after winning the Pritzker Prize. Miguel Manso/AP2011

Eduardo Souto de Moura is known throughout Portugal and beyond for his minimalist approach to gaining maximum impact.

The city of Braga's municipal stadium was designed by Eduardo Souto de Moura
The city of Braga's municipal stadium was designed by Eduardo Souto de Moura Christian Richters/Pritzker Architecture Prize

His buildings have been widely praised for their functionality, careful use of natural materials and their unexpected dashes of colour. The 58-year-old also won the prestigious Pritzker Prize for architecture in 2011.

Cinema and performing arts

Choreographer and dancer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker has the added distinction of becoming the first Belgian to win the award for cinema and the performing arts. She's devised more than 60 pieces over her forty year career

In 1982, she found fame with Fase: Four movements to the Music of Steve Reich; a ballet based on the music of Reich, himself a Praemium Imperiale winner in 2006.

Anne Teresa De Keersaeker's Rosas danst Rosas at Metz Pompidou Centre

Music

Sir Andras Schiff collects Royal College of Music award from Prince Charles in 2018
Sir Andras Schiff collects Royal College of Music award from Prince Charles in 2018 Kirsty Wigglesworth/Copyright 2018 The AP. All rights reserved.

Hungarian-born pianist András Schiff is one of the world's leading interpreters of Bach and his music. Over the years he's also gained a reputation for using his platform to protest over politics, describing it as a moral duty. He lived in Austria for more than a decade and courted controversy for refusing to perform in 2007 to demonstrate against the formation of a government that included the far-right party of Joerg Haider. He's also voiced extreme concern over Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and his combative and critical stance towards the European Union.

Encouraging result

Britain's NYT performs Much Ado About Nothing
Britain's NYT performs Much Ado About Nothing Helen Murray/National Youth Theatre

Britain's National Youth Theatre won this year's Encouragement Prize for Young Artists.

Founded in 1956 by teachers from a south London school, it's the world's first theatre for young people and a well-established home for experimentation that offers theatrical training by staging productions for actors from diverse backgrounds. It's past members include some of Britain's finest acting talents, including Helen Mirren and Chiwetel Ejiofor. The NYT will receive a €28,000 honorarium.

Paul Roseby, CEO & Artistic Director of the National Youth Theatre said: ‘We are honoured to receive this prestigious award at a time when the need for Cultural Diplomacy has never been greater. Young people can overcome barriers when sharing stories with one another and give us all hope.

Each laureate will receive 15 million yen, or approximately €92,000 at a ceremony to be held in Tokyo on October 22, 2025.

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