The Art Gallery of South Australia has announced Jack Ball as the winner of the $100,000 Ramsay Art Prize, the nation’s most generous prize for Australian artists under forty.
Ball’s winning work, a large-scale photographic and sculptural installation, Heavy Grit, will be displayed in the Ramsay Art Prize 2025 exhibition which opens on Saturday 31 May 2025.
“The Ramsay Art Prize sets out to elevate and accelerate careers for contemporary Australian artists. From a record number of entries in 2025, Heavy Grit by Jack Ball perfectly captures what the Ramsay Art Prize aims to offer artists – a platform to present their most ambitious work, unrestrained in scale and medium,” said AGSA Director, Jason Smith.
The Perth-born, Sydney-based artist explores themes of queer intimacy and desire in their winning work. Heavy Grit was developed in response to a collection of scrapbooks held by the Australian Queer Archives, including press clippings from the 1950s to 1970s that referenced trans lives.
Ball’s work reveals fragments and glimpses of queer histories, layering archival materials with personal images and soft form sculptures, and creating an interplay between the past and the present.
In a prize with no material boundaries, this year’s winning work is comprised of diverse mediums including inkjet prints, textured stained glass, beeswax, charcoal, copper pipe, fabric, paint, sand and rope.
Resisting a particular artform, Ball’s work is fluid, embracing multiple forms to create a large-scale immersive installation where viewers can trace their own connections and interpretations of the work.
The installation alludes to the body and transformative processes through beeswax sculptures, sand-filled fabric forms and photographs, while other elements incorporate textured stained glass to distort and bring awareness to notions of the gaze.
A record number of entries were received for this year’s prize, with more than 500 artists from around the country submitting their best work created over the past year.
In 2025, the judging panel was comprised of leading Australian artist Michael Zavros; 2025 Archibald Prize winner and recipient of the 2017 Ramsay Art Prize’s People’s Choice Prize, Julie Fragar; and Emma Fey, Deputy Director, AGSA. The judges were unanimous in their decision.
“Jack Ball’s Heavy Grit impressed us with its experimental processes and sophisticated creative resolve. The work evokes a sensual response to the substance and aesthetics of the Australian Queer Archives to which the work refers, while proposing new possibilities for how we understand those archives in relation to contemporary culture and experience,” they said.
“We were particularly struck by the installation’s restless, kinetic quality that refuses definition and creates an open opportunity to connect individually with the materials, forms and images the work deploys.”
Established in the name of South Australia’s leading cultural philanthropists James Ramsay AO and Diana Ramsay AO, the Ramsay Art Prize is an acquisitive art prize for contemporary Australian artists.
Presented by AGSA and supported in perpetuity by the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation, the Ramsay Art Prize is held every two years with the winning work being acquired into AGSA’s collection.
“The Ramsay Art Prize has gone from strength to strength since its inception in 2017, presenting the work of Australia’s most talented artists under forty. We are thrilled to see Jack Ball receive the 2025 Ramsay Art Prize and look forward to witnessing their future success,” said Chair of the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation, Nicholas Ross.
“Congratulations to Jack Ball on winning this prestigious prize. The Ramsay Art Prize provides artists a life-changing opportunity at a critical point in artists’ careers. It is thanks to the vision of leading South Australian philanthropists James and Diana Ramsay that our state is home to this extraordinary Australian art prize of national significance,” said South Australian Minister for the Arts, The Hon. Andrea Michaels MP.
All works selected as finalists will be exhibited in a major exhibition at AGSA from 31 May until 31 August 2025. Ball’s work will now be acquired into AGSA’s collection, joining works by past recipients Sarah Contos (2017), Vincent Namatjira (2019), Kate Bohunnis (2021) and Ida Sophia (2023).
Jack Ball will speak as part of a series of artist talks at AGSA on Saturday 31 May 2025.
For more information about the Ramsay Art Prize and exhibition, visit: www.agsa.sa.gov.au for details.
Image: Jack Ball with Heavy Grit in Ramsay Art Prize 2025, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide – photo by Saul Steed