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Anina Major

She // Her // Hers

Artist

Los Angeles, California

The artist stands in a studio space. She has medium-dark skin with curly hair and is wearing a white v-neck t-shirt layered under dark denim overalls. The wall behind her is covered with photos, sketches, and notes conveying the artist’s workspace.

Photo courtesy of the artist and Rene van der Hulst. 

Often taking form as sculpture or installation, my work unpacks the emotional complexities inherent to the transcultural exchanges that surface when mapping traditions versus foreign influences.”

Anina Major is a visual artist from the Bahamas. Major’s decision to establish a home contrary to the location in which she was born and raised motivates her to investigate the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation. By utilizing the vernacular of craft to reclaim experiences and relocate displaced objects, her practice exists at the intersection of nostalgia, and identity. She holds an MFA from Rhode Island School of Design and is the recipient of numerous awards and residencies, including being a finalist in the 2025 Loewe Craft Prize, winner of the Armory Show 2024 Pommery Prize, the 2023 Joan Mitchell Fellowship, and the EKWC Center of Excellence for ceramics international artist-in-residency. Her work has been exhibited in The Bahamas, Europe, and across the United States, with a permanent display at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, DC. Her work is included in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of The Bahamas, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Carnegie Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design Museum and Perez Art Museum of Miami, among others. Major’s work has also been featured in The New York Times, Forbes Magazine, and published in Phaidon Press’ Great Women Sculptors. Recent exhibitions include shows at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, the Pommery Experience #18 in Reims, France, and The Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, in Madrid, Spain.

Donor -This award was generously supported by Rockefeller Brothers Fund.

This artist page was last updated on: 01.14.2026

A large sculptural form made of interwoven, looped clay pieces stands on a wooden platform in a softly lit space. The textured, cylindrical structure resembles an architectural column, with warm, earthy tones highlighting the tactile surfaces and light filters through the gaps.

Sand Castle by Anina Major, 2023.

Photo courtesy of the artist and the Loewe Foundation.

An installation set in a dimly lit tunnel features woven ceramic sculptures displayed on wooden platforms. Above them, a glowing neon sign in turquoise cursive reads, “All us come across water.” The textured walls and simple wooden structures contrast with the luminous text and organic forms.

The Landing by Anina Major, 2024.

Photo courtesy of the artist and Mathilde Giron for Pommery Experience #18.

A sculptural vessel composed from woven ceramic loops has layered textures in shades of deep blue, gray, and white. The piece transitions from a dark blue basket-like base to a lightly colored, organic-form top with cracked stone surface.

Hybrid No. 00105042021 by Anina Major, 2021.

Photo courtesy of the artist and Andrew T. White.