Colombian artist Carlos Motta was awarded, along with Angolan artist Nástio Mosquito, the Main Prize of the third edition of the Future Generation Art Prize. The two artists will share the award purse of US$100,000.00, of which US$60,000.00 will be given in cash, while the remaining US$40,000.00 will be invested in the production of new work and a solo exhibition at the PinchukArtCenter in 2015. The jury panel included Francesco Bonami, curator and director of the 50th Venice Biennale in Italy; Colombian artist Doris Salcedo; Belgian artist Jan Fabre; Eckhard Schneider, director of the PinchukArtCentre, Ukraine; Bisi Silva, director of the Centre for Contemporary Art in Lagos, Nigeria; Adam Szymczyk, artistic director of Documenta14, Poland; and Philip Tinari, director of the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing, China. According to them "The works presented by Carlos Motta are successive, complex and contain clear ideas. They also showcase Motta's imagination and poetry through an inventive and yet real narrative that structures meditations on various current issues." Motta participated with the work entitled Breve Historia de la Represión Homosexual en Ucrania, (Brief History of Homosexual Repression in Ukraine, 2014), which is part of the first edition of a periodical published by the artist and Maxim Ivanukha. The work is currently exhibited at the PinchukArtCentre and it will remain on display there until January of 2015, as part of the group exhibition of the candidates that were pre-selected from over 5,500 young artists—from 148 countries—that participated in the 2014 edition of the Future Generation Art Prize. The jury was deeply impressed by the ingenuity of Motta's proposal. According to them, his work "combines formal precision, historical analysis and social commitment in a work that offers a new vision of how art can raise marginal and sensitive issues and defend their relevance." The Future Generation Art Prize is the first international award in contemporary art for young artists under 35 and was established by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation in December of 2009, with the objective of discovering, recognizing and providing long-term support for future generations of artists, regardless of their place of residence or work.