Skip to content

Massive Art Competition Turns This City Into a 45-Square-Mile Gallery 

by Amy "frankie" Felegy

A crowd of people at night in front of a lit-up building.
Photo Credit: Ellen Dziubek via ArtPrize
Since 2009, ArtPrize says it has given nearly $7 million to artists and garnered more than 4 million public votes. Pictured is the Closing Ceremony of 2024.

Over 1,100 artists from 18 countries will showcase their work at this year’s ArtPrize, Grand Rapids’ longstanding competition and celebration of all things creative.


September means the end of summer, the start of fall, and—in true Michigan tradition—the return of ArtPrize. It’s one of the largest art competitions in the world, founded in 2009. 

The two-plus-week festival spans across Grand Rapids (pop. 200,117) this year from September 18 to October 4. Galleries, breweries, and parks set the scene for open art crawls, renowned artist competitions, and creative events for the public.

This year, ArtPrize is awarding $600,000 in fundraising money to the winning artists, based on juried and community voting. The nonprofit says most of their budget comes from “corporate giving, followed by foundations, individuals, and government grants.”

Over 900 works will be on view, from artists across 39 states and 18 countries. 

ArtPrize 2025 is run by the City of Grand Rapids, Kendall College of Art and Design of Ferris State University, and Downtown Grand Rapids Inc. 

There’s installation art, live performances, sculptural work, architectural design, fashion, digital art, and more. Any artist over 18 can submit one piece to ArtPrize, where applicants must collaborate with host sites to be in the running.

Here are a couple of those artists involved, both from years past and upcoming. 

Teresa Dunn 

Teresa Dunn showed work at one of the very first ArtPrize competitions as well as last year. She says she’s first and foremost a Mexican American woman, before she’s a “visual storyteller.” 

“And that shapes a lot of who I am as an artist,” says Dunn, from East Lansing, Michigan.

Dunn’s piece “Brown Girl Club,” depicting her daughter’s math and science teachers, will be up at the city hall during this year’s ArtPrize. 

a large, colorful painting of various women doing different activities.
Teresa Dunn paints poetic stories from people of color and women; it’s clear in her winning 2024 ArtPrize piece “A Long Line of Women.”

“It’s a rare occasion where a city dedicates this timeframe to the arts in this way and it’s become an international phenomenon that that’s really exciting to be a part of,” she says. “Oftentimes, artists are making their work in isolation or in small groups . . . and you don’t know if it has impact or not until you get it out into the world.” 

For Dunn, ArtPrize “is a community building; it’s a celebration of artistic and creative practice.” 

a closeup of a bronze statue person's hand wrapped in fabric.
Photo Credit: Cameron Stalheim
“It’s asking to be more than itself, but it just has to let go of that fabric and then it’ll be free,” Cameron Stalheim says of “Persist.”

Cameron Stalheim

Sioux Falls, South Dakota, sculptor Cameron Stalheim works to capture bodily emotion, spirituality, and positivity with his pieces.

He was chosen to show one of his favorite sculptures “Persist” at Sixth Street Park for this year’s ArtPrize.

It’s a large, bronze piece depicting a figure holding down a fabric that’s binding it, arm outreached. Stalheim is currently working on transporting this 700-pound figure across the Midwest for his first ArtPrize showing.

To Stalheim—win or lose—ArtPrize shows the world how one artist can affect communities across the region and world.

“It’s just being able to step into one of the biggest conversations about art on an international level,” he says. “And we can do that, collectively, from the Midwest.”