Serpentine x FLAG Art Foundation Prize

Serpentine and The FLAG Art Foundation are honored to announce the creation of a new prize dedicated to supporting artists worldwide. Over the next decade, a total of £1 million will be awarded biennially—£200,000 to each recipient—to five artists, providing unmatched support at a pivotal moment in their careers. This will be the UK’s largest contemporary art prize given to a single artist. Each recipient will stage a solo exhibition that debuts at either Serpentine or The FLAG Art Foundation and is then reimagined for the partner institution, creating an ongoing artistic dialogue between the two.

This partnership will establish a decade-long collaboration, awarding five prizes to five outstanding artists. The first artist to be awarded funds will be selected in 2026, with the inaugural exhibition set to open at Serpentine in London in Autumn 2027, before traveling to FLAG in New York in Spring 2028. Each presentation will be accompanied by a dedicated catalogue and a dynamic live program, developed and produced collaboratively by both institutions.

This long-term partnership reflects the shared commitment between Serpentine and FLAG to support artistic experimentation and exchange across borders. The Serpentine x FLAG Art Foundation Prize underscores both organizations’ belief in the power of collaboration to shape the future of contemporary art. Artists will be considered for the award through a nomination process, with a rotating jury of internationally renowned curators, art historians and artists selecting the final recipients. Details of the jury to be announced in due time. The prize is intended to provide artists, at a significant stage in their careers, with the freedom and time to develop a substantial new body of work, exhibit them, and explore new ideas.

Bettina Korek, CEO of Serpentine said: “This partnership deepens our shared mission to forge new connections between artists and audiences while nurturing transatlantic dialogue. The alliance provides global artists with the space and support to expand their practice, inspired by Zaha Hadid’s enduring spirit of experimentation. We couldn’t be more delighted to collaborate with The FLAG Art Foundation on this shared vision for the future.”

Hans Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director said: “We are delighted to launch the largest contemporary art prize in the UK. What makes this prize so significant is its focus on artists who have not yet received the visibility or recognition they deserve. This has long been central to Serpentine’s programme: from presenting the first UK monographic exhibitions for emerging artists to championing overlooked voices whose contributions merit greater acknowledgment. Serpentine + FLAG Art Foundation equals 11, and we look forward to this new adventure."

Glenn Fuhrman, Founder of The FLAG Art Foundation said: “This partnership marks FLAG’s most significant commitment to artists beyond the United States and we could not be happier to do so with Serpentine. By collaborating with Serpentine to create this prize, we are reaffirming our institutional commitment to champion contemporary artists and to continue providing new opportunities for those artists to share their work with art-lovers everywhere. We look forward to unveiling the forthcoming program of exhibitions and announcing the jury in the months ahead.”

Artists selected for the prize will be of any generation or age, from all geographies, will have been exhibiting professionally for less than 10 years and will be actively working to grow and sustain a strong record of international museum and gallery exhibitions, including gallery representation, honors, awards, art critic reviews, grants and publications.

Over the last six years, the Suzanne Deal Booth / FLAG Art Foundation Prize, co-organized with The Contemporary Austin, has seen FLAG support a number of artists with direct funds, along with an exhibition and corresponding publication. Artists include Nicole Eisenman (2020), Tarek Atoui (2022), Lubaina Himid (2024) and Sable Elyse Smith (2026).

About:
Serpentine
Building new connections between artists and audiences, Serpentine presents pioneering contemporary art exhibitions and cultural events with a legacy that stretches back over half a century, from a wide range of emerging practitioners to the most internationally recognized artists, writers, scientists, thinkers, and cultural thought leaders of our time. Based in London’s Kensington Gardens, across two sites, Serpentine North and Serpentine South, Serpentine features a year-round, free program of exhibitions, architectural showcases, education, live events, and technological activations, in the park and beyond the gallery walls. The Serpentine Pavilion is a yearly pioneering commission, which began in 2000 with Dame Zaha Hadid. It features the first UK structures by some of the biggest names in international architecture.

Public art has emerged as a central strand of Serpentine’s program. Major presentations include a collection of Eduardo Paolozzi’s sculptures (1987), Anish Kapoor’s Turning the World Upside Down (2010), Lee Ufan’s Relatum – Stage (2018-19), Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s London Mastaba in the Serpentine Lake (2018), I LOVE YOU EARTH by Yoko Ono (2021), Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster’s In remembrance of the coming alien (Alienor) (2022), Atta Kwami's DzidzƆ kple amenuveve (Joy and Grace) (2021-22), Gerhard Richter’s STRIP-TOWER (2023), Yayoi Kusama’s Pumpkin (2024), Esther Mahlangu’s mural Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu (2024) and Giuseppe Penone’s Albero folgorato (Thunderstruck Tree) (2012) and Idee di pietra (Ideas of Stone) (2010-2024) in 2025-2026. Proud to maintain free access for all visitors, Serpentine reaches an exceptionally broad audience and maintains a profound connection with its local community.