Previous Miami posts
Approaching Untitled from Ocean Drive
This was the second year for Untitled, a splendid upstart
located in a tent on South
Beach . Planted as it is so close to the water’s
edge there's potential for disaster, but on a clear day it’s as close to heaven
as you can get. From the Art Deco stretch on Ocean Drive , it’s a short walk on metal mesh
pathways into the tent. Feeling “faired out”? Go sit in the café and take in
the view through the enormous windows. Better still, walk out onto the deck for
a 180-degree view of sky, sea and sand.
.
Entering the tent: Cordy Ryman construction, one of the fair's 12 "Projects." Ryman was presented by Dodge Gallery, New York City, which represents him
Untitled is a curated fair. Unlike other fairs where galleries
apply, independent curator Omar Lopez-Chahoud was hired to develop a curatorial
vision for this fair. He not only invited selected fairs but worked with the gallery
directors to select specific artists from within each gallery’s program. The
result is an event with diverse offerings but a strong sense of materiality that combines the provisional
character of the Lower East Side galleries,
the relaxed atmosphere of Aqua, and the elegance of the big venues discussed in
the previous post.
.
.
I liked it from the moment I walked in last year, and I was
not disappointed this time around. Chahoud selected 100 galleries from numerous countries, and he also placed 12 solo projects throughout the fair. Although conventional painting is in shorter supply here, there was enough for me to feel visually satisfied—and certainly invigorated by the rest of what I saw.
Above and below: views of the fair
The round piece in the center of the wall, by Kathleen Kucka at Gallery Geran Mayeh, New York City, is too good to not post a detail:
How many tents have this kind of view?
Below: View from the deck
If ABMB and Art Miami are can be characterized by high heels and expensive Italian shoes, then Untitled has a distinctly different sartorial standard
Above: the artist and gallerist Jennifer Dalton from Auxiliary Projects
Below: Ed Winkleman and Jay Grimm sitting in the Winkleman Gallery booth (more on the work from both galleries coming)
Below: Ed Winkleman and Jay Grimm sitting in the Winkleman Gallery booth (more on the work from both galleries coming)
Heels, but not corporate. These fabulous feet belong to Cindy Rucker, owner of the gallery that bears her name. Oh, to have a picture of the rest of her! I don't, but I can offer you the next best thing: a shot of her booth, below
At Cindy Rucker Gallery, New York City: Adrian Esparza construction, made from threads taken from a serape, the artist's cultural touchstone
Detail below
At Blackston Gallery, New York City: Rachel Beach sculptures
Opposite view detail, below
At Alejandra Von Hartz Gallery, Miami: Matthew Deleget deconstructed paintings
At Vigo Gallery, London: Ayan Farah paintings
Installation view below
At Frederieke Taylor Gallery, New York City: Kirsten Nelson sculptures
Closeup of one below
At Site Lab, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Alois Kronschlaeger's vertiginous grid
Below: the sculpture cuts through the tent's sprung floor to anchor into the sand
The open booth at Auxiliary Projects, Brooklyn
Below: Arielle Falk's installation, Breathe in, with fans that don't blow air, and 3-D-printed plants that don't produce oxygen
Below: Arielle Falk's installation, Breathe in, with fans that don't blow air, and 3-D-printed plants that don't produce oxygen
At Luis De Jesus, Los Angeles: Margie Livingston sculptures, above and below, made from layers of acrylic paint. I'll show you more when I get to the Painting post
At Asya Geisberg Gallery, New York City: Julie Schenkelberg sculpture
At Winkleman Gallery, New York City: Leslie Thornton videos in which the artist pairs a video with a kaleidoscope version of the same image. (I'm not a video watcher, but I watched these!)
Above: Too matchy matchy? I couldn't resist shooting Murat Orozobekov, gallery partner and cofounder of The Moving Image fair, in front of Thornton's flamingo video
Above: Too matchy matchy? I couldn't resist shooting Murat Orozobekov, gallery partner and cofounder of The Moving Image fair, in front of Thornton's flamingo video
At last, painting! I'll show you more in the Painting post, coming next week
Above: Melissa Brown at Fred Giampietro, New Haven
Claire Sherman, DC Moore Gallery, New York City
Richard Hull at Western Exhibitions, Chicago
. . . . . . . .
Miami Project
Moving now to another tent, this time in Wynwood, we come to
Miami Project. This is the second year for this fair, too. And like Untitled,
it’s one of my favorites. Many galleries that formerly exhibited in Pulse have resettled
here, where the light is brighter—thanks to the white tent roof—and the aisles
wider.
.
.
“The fair organizers could easily have crammed more booths into the
space here, but they didn’t,” said one appreciative gallerist. Dealers who were
not showing this year were out reconnoitering, and this was the fair they all seemed
to like the best, so let’s hope that the space will not be compromised with the addition of more booths next
year. (Still there’s a dance. While some dealers are stepping up from Pulse—as many did this year— others are likely to make the step up to ABMB next year.)
Views, above and below, into Miami Project showing comfortable seating, bright light and wide aisles
Installation at Pavel Zoubok Gallery, New York City
Too matchy matchy? The ever-stylish Zoubok seems to have coordinated with Charles McGill's assemblage of reconstructed golf bag parts
Fair view with DC Moore booth in center (yes, the gallery had booths at both Untitled and here)
Below: Barbara Takenaga paintings. Her work is also on the outside wall of the booth, shown above center
Also at DC Moore, which I fully expect to see at ABMB next year: Joyce Kosloff
Detail of painting, below
At Thatcher Projects, New York City: Matthias van Arkel, Bill Thompson, Robert Sagerman, Nan Swid
At Eli Ridgeway Contemporary, San Francisco: Amy Ellingson
Works on paper and paintings in this fabulous solo installation of small works on paper and large-scale paintings
Another fair view, here into the booth of Steven Zevitas Gallery, Boston
Booth view of Loretta Howard Gallery, New York City, with painings by Friedel Dzubas, Cleve Gray and Norman Bluhm
These are the fair views I live for: Paintings in what could be museum installations
In distance, David Row and Darby Bannard at Loretta Howard Gallery; Paul Feeley at Garth Greenan Gallery, New York City
Below: Another Feeley with a view to Row and Bannard
At Lesley Heller Workspace, New York City: Sara Sosnowy painting and Ken Buhler watercolor
Love this installation at Jack Fischer Gallery, San Francisco, with Marlon Mullen and others
At Eric Firestone Gallery, Easthampton, New York: Mia Fonssagrives-Solow. Would it surprise you to know she was a jewelry designer before turning to sculpture?
In the next post I'll have overview pics from Pulse and NADA
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4 comments:
Fabulous collection of images! I am drooling over the whole thing. Just gorgeous! Thank you so much, JM.
Incredible. Don't see how you were able to sample so much. This tent is enormous. Thanks for posting. And your photographs are clear and pleasing to view, a welcomed change from many other artists' presentations.
Thanks, Joanne!
Very well done!! Makes me want to return to the Art Fair "Scene"!! Thank you.
Linda Durham
Santa Fe
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