Fluxus Art Projects, Frieze London and the French Professional Committee of Art Galleries (CPGA) are delighted to announce that artist Daiga Grantina and Emalin gallery are the winners of the third Fluxus–CPGA Prize, awarded on Thursday 16 October 2025 in London.

The Fluxus–CPGA Prize aims to support talents of the French art scene and to promote its visibility and influence on the international stage. It also celebrates the relationship between the artist and their gallery. The endowment, amounting to £15,000, is shared between the artist and the gallery presenting them at the fair.

The jury declared about the artist: “The jury adored the contrast between the materiality and sensuality of the pieces, notably the wooden eggs. They liked the organic shape of the egg and how it clashed with the posthuman technological structure, implying a relationship between humanity and technology, themes that are reverberated in today’s society. Additionally, Emalin ambitiously displays works that are not easily sellable, as is this piece. They champion artists with huge installations. Here, the piece holding an important space within the stand embodies a statement of ambition.”

 

The jury, composed of seven members, included:

  • Alessio Antoniolli (Curator and Director of the Triangle Network),
  • Claude Bonnin (President of ADIAF),
  • Edward Gillman (Director of Chisenhale Gallery),
  • Nathalie Guiot (Collector and Patron, founder of the Fondation Thalie Brussels–Arles and Aleor Craft & Biodesign),
  • Hélène Nguyen-Ban (Chair of Fluxus Art Projects),
  • Véronique Parke (Collector and co-founder of the artists’ residency Launchpad LaB)
  • Catherine Wood (Director of Programme and Chief Curator at Tate Modern).

 

 

Daiga Grantina (b. 1985, Saldus, Latvia) lives and works in Paris, France. Grantina’s sculptures investigate the encounters between materials and their consequent relationships of dissonance and consonance, inducing an exercise in expanded vision. Her material gestures resonate with the structural shifts of organisms and environments, navigating relations of volume and form at the point where microscopic and macroscopic overlap and intersect. Her abstract vocabulary borrows from bodies and landscapes to explore indescribable matter, a plastic investigation of the formless and misshapen. Intuitively concocted forms self-consume and self-produce, at once a continuous development of a shared idea and a space of tension where the hierarchies of perception find themselves rearranged. Recent solo exhibitions include Emalin, London (2025); Kunstmuseum Appenzell (2024); Z33, Hasselt (2024); Art Museum Riga Bourse (2022); GAMeC, Bergamo, (2021); New Museum, New York (2020); the Latvian Pavilion, 58th Venice Biennale(2019); and Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2018).

Emalin is a London-based contemporary art gallery run by Leopold Thun and Angelina Volk. Since opening its doors in 2016, the gallery has grown a roster of sixteen international artists with a diverse focus on multi-disciplinary and critically engaged practices. The gallery’s artists work across a range of media with a commitment to conceptual engagement with material. Critically, politically and socially oriented, the gallery’s programme foregrounds a generation of artists paving paths for new areas of enquiry. The vast majority of the represented artists had their first UK solo exhibitions at Emalin, each of whom has gone on to exhibit at international institutions and biennials. Alongside its exhibition schedule, Emalin produces print publications, annual offsite projects and public programmes involving artists, curators and musicians. In 2024, Emalin opened its second location in London, restoring the 18th century Clerk’s House as a historical space for site-responsive exhibition making.

 

About the Comité Professionnel des Galeries d’Art (CPGA)

Since 1947, the Professional Committee of Art Galleries (CPGA) has represented galleries in France and defended their interests with policymakers, institutional representatives and administrative authorities. It takes part in shaping the regulations governing the art market and contributes to cultural policies that foster the development of the art sector. The Committee informs and advises its 340 member galleries, ranging from antique dealers to contemporary art galleries, on the specific aspects of their status and obligations, providing guidance on technical matters. For several years now, the CPGA has been actively involved in major cultural events in order to strengthen the visibility of art galleries, which are true partners in artistic creation. It also works to promote the development of the French art scene internationally.

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About Fluxus Art Projects

Fluxus Art Projects has become, in 15 years, an amazing talent booster, a prescriptive mechanism and an artists’ notoriety marker. Fluxus Art Projects and its Magnetic programme are supported by Institut français du Royaume-Uni, Institut français, French Ministry of Culture, French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, Arts Council England, Creative Scotland, Arts Council of Wales/Wales Arts International, Arts Council of Northern Ireland and the British Council. Fluxus benefits from the invaluable and unwavering commitment of its patrons and friends. This year, in collaboration with Art Basel Paris, Fluxus is organising a symmetrical prize to the FLUXUS-CPGA Prize, celebrating an artist from the British scene in France.

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About Frieze London

Frieze London was founded in 2003 by Amanda Sharp and Matthew Slotover. The fair is one of the world’s most influential contemporary art fairs, focusing only on contemporary art and living artists, and takes place each October in The Regent’s Park. The 2025 edition marks the 22nd anniversary of Frieze London, with a dynamic programme.

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  • Photo: : © Toan Vu-Huu / Courtesy of the artist and the gallery.

 
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