South African Photographer Zanele Muholi Wins 2026 Hasselblad Award and $218,000

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Three black-and-white portraits of a dark-skinned person with elaborate, sculptural headpieces and bold, artistic styling; each headpiece is unique, made from abstract shapes, foam rollers, and clothespins.

The Hasselblad Foundation has named South African photographer Zanele Muholi the 2026 Hasselblad Award laureate, the world’s largest pictures award. Muholi has gained SEK 2,000,000 (over $217,000 at present alternate charges), a gold medal, a Hasselblad digital camera, and a prolonged solo exhibition on the Hasselblad Center on the Gothenburg Museum of Art in Sweden.

“Zanele Muholi stands as one of the most influential contemporary photographers, with an impact that reaches far beyond the art world. They use portraiture to articulate and celebrate the presence, depth, and dignity of the Black LGBTQIA+ community in South Africa and the rest of the world,” the Hasselblad Foundation explains.

A person with long dreadlocks, wearing a black hat, white eyeglasses, and a black-and-white geometric patterned jacket, looks calmly at the camera against a neutral background.
Portrait of Zanele Muholi | Photo by Ikram Abdulkadir

Muholi was born in 1972 throughout apartheid in South Africa. Throughout Muholi’s profession, they’ve been very cognizant of the facility of narrative, storytelling, and imagery within the face of systemic oppression and violence.

The acclaimed photographer’s work embraces highly effective, dynamic composition, thrilling use of tone, and a robust visible language.

Black and white portrait of a person with white lipstick, wearing earrings and a headpiece made of clothespins, draped in a striped garment, looking directly at the camera against a mottled background.
Bester I, Mayotte, 2015 | © Zanele Muholi
A person with short hair wearing a striped button-up shirt stands in front of a stack of plastic crates. They look directly at the camera with a neutral expression. The photo is in black and white.
Lerato Dumse, KwaThema, Springs, Johannesburg, 2010 | © Zanele Muholi
A person wearing a striped beanie, jacket, and sweater stands outdoors with tall grass and a small, weathered building in the background. The image is in black and white.
Busi Sigasa, Braamfontein, Johannesburg, 2006 | © Zanele Muholi

“Activism and community work is an integral part of their practice, which combines political urgency and formal mastery, making Muholi a central figure in global queer visual culture,” the Hasselblad Foundation continues.

“This prize is not mine alone. I carry it with the many faces, names, and histories that have trusted me with their stories. From Umlazi to every space where Black LGBTQIA+ people continue to fight to exist freely, this recognition affirms that our lives are worthy of being seen — not as statistics, not as shadows, but as full human beings,” the photographer says.

“For years, my work has been about visibility and resistance. It has been about creating an archive so that no one can say, ‘We did not know.’ When this honor comes, I receive it on behalf of my community; those who have been erased, those who are still here, and those who are yet to see themselves reflected with dignity,” Muholi concludes.

A Black woman gazes slightly upward, wearing a sculptural headpiece made of rounded shapes and a draped, textured garment. The photo is in black and white with a plain background.
Ntozakhe II, Parktown, 2016 | © Zanele Muholi
A person poses confidently wearing a short skirt and a crisscrossed crop top made of sheer plastic wrap. They have short, styled hair and a choker necklace, standing against a plain light background.
Yaya Mavundla I, Parktown, Johannesburg, 2017 | © Zanele Muholi
A Black person in profile with hair styled upward, adorned with multiple white Afro picks. They wear a comb-shaped earring and a textured top, set against a plain, textured background.
Qiniso, The Sails, Durban, 2019 | © Zanele Muholi

Over their profession, Muholi has finished many influential, long-term tasks, together with Faces and Places (2006-), Only half the Picture (2003-2004), Brave Beauties (2014-), and a self-portrait sequence, Somnyama Ngonyama (Hail the Dark Lioness) (2018-). The longest-running challenge, Faces and Places, is taken into account among the many most influential works in modern pictures.

“It is with great pleasure that we award Zanele Muholi the 46th Hasselblad Award,” says Kalle Sanner, CEO of the Hasselblad Foundation. “In their artistic practice, Muholi combines photography with activism, creating powerful and significant works in which human rights are central. We look forward to presenting an extensive selection of their work this autumn at the Hasselblad Center.”

Muholi, represented by Yancey Richardson Gallery in New York and Southern Guild Gallery in Cape Town and New York, has had their work proven around the globe at illustrious galleries and museums, together with the Venice Biennale, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Maison Européenne de la Photographie Paris, Tate Modern, and lots of extra.

Muholi’s solo exhibition on the Hasselblad Center, as a part of this award, will open on October 10, 2026, and run by means of April 4, 2027. More of Muholi’s pictures can be found on the Hasselblad Foundation website.


Image credit: © Zanele Muholi, Courtesy Yancey Richardson, New York, and Southern Guild, Cape Town


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