Background
The inspiration for the Jacki Apple Award came from one of Apple’s longtime concerns. Although there is financial support for emerging artists, she found that for mid-career and mature artists there was very little available. Performance and other mid-career artists of proven and sustained excellence were left with an unhappy choice: to rely on themselves and keep their artistic integrity intact, or go commercial. The Advisory Committee for Jacki Apple’s legacy considered various options, some form financial award chief amongst them. A member recommended it be designed to support both the art and the artist: “artists also need to eat”. Jacki Apple would have been the first to agree, more generous parameters were considered, and the Award is now set at $10,000. It will be offered for a minimum of ten years.
Jacki Apple had deep roots in her native New York, a city then as today that breathes innovation. She played a seminal role in the early evolution of performance art there, a then-emergent art form that was often misunderstood. Apple’s close friend and associate, Marina LaPalma, edited Apple’s “Selected Essays” and in her Foreword to the collection offers a concise explanation of how performance art came about: “Innovators of new theatre and performance art replaced ‘acting’ as someone else with ‘performing’ as oneself.”
Apple pioneered feminist and eco-feminist performance art in the 70’s and 80’s. She played a leading role in the nascent Franklin Furnace artist’s archive and performance space, founded by Martha Wilson. It gave many emerging artists an opportunity to excel. When the Advisory Committee broached the idea of an Award it found an eager partner in the Franklin Furnace, not only in honoring one of its own but by adding a new dimension for its support for contemporary art in New York.
In the early 1980’s Jacki moved to Los Angeles, a city to which she became deeply committed. She played a key role in its development as a counterpart to New York through her own performances, leadership in multimedia arts, art critic, and as a highly regarded educator with the ArtCenter College of Design. She worked closely with Los Angeles Contemporary Art Exhibitions (LACE) over the years, which became the natural choice as the West coast partner institution for the Jacki Apple Award. Both LACE and Franklin Furnace warmly welcomed the initiative of creating the new award and the opportunity to serve as independent implementing agencies. Thus the Jacki Apple Award became a reality and was integrated into the award process of each institution according to their own established agendas and practices.
The first winner of the Award in Los Angeles was Marcus Kuiland-Nazario in January 2024, an interdisciplinary artist, performance curator and producer. He was followed by Jennifer Moon in January 2025, a performance artist and self-described “artist, adventurer and revolutionary”. The first Award winner in New York was Maria Bauman in early 2025, a choreographer, multi-disciplinary artist and community organizer. Detailed information on all three is available from LACE and Franklin Furnace respectively.