Tuesday, March 26, 2024

A $9 million Willem de Kooning painting leads early sales at Art Basel Hong Kong. https://ift.tt/FmypYfR

A $9 million Willem de Kooning painting is among the top sales reported from Art Basel Hong Kong’s first day. The painting was sold by Hauser & Wirth, which also sold Philip Guston’s The Desire (1978) for $8.5 million and Mark Bradford’s May the Lord be the first one in the car...and the last out.(2023) for $3.5 million.

On Tuesday morning, the fair kicked off the first of its two VIP Days at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre. This edition marks a return to the fair’s pre-pandemic size, hosting more than 240 galleries, a 37% increase in exhibitors from 2023.

More notable six- and seven-figure sales reported by galleries from opening day at Art Basel Hong Kong 2024 include:

Stay tuned for our full sales report on Monday.



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Why Figurative Artists Have Turned to Monochromatic Palettes https://ift.tt/hNqZx81

Unrest, 2023
Alayna Coverly
VillageOneArt

With Both Hands, 2023
Elijah Kauffman
Soft Times Gallery

A notable shift has transpired in the painting world of late: A growing cohort of emerging and mid-career artists, many of them figurative painters, are enveloping their subjects in varying shades of high-intensity colors, all taken from the same section of the color wheel. Neon-nearing hues like ghostly teals, laser lemon yellows, and mythical fuchsias are being used in similar shades to depict the world around us from the mundane to the magical. Often depicting the world through monochromatic compositions, these artists have developed a signature palette that they rarely deviate from.

Historically, painting styles have adapted alongside advancements in photography and film. In the age of virtual reality with the contemporary world oversaturated with imagery, it’s only natural for painters to gravitate towards a single-color palette as a way to emphatically differentiate their real or imagined scenes from digital media. One intent feels clear: a shared desire to convey what it feels like to be alive today, a sensation that the true-to-life colors of realism may no longer fully capture.

Insomnia, 2024
Jesse Zuo
sobering

Artists have always focused on specific hues to influence a viewer’s mood: The warm oranges and earthy pinks synonymous with Picasso’s Rose Period, for instance, evoke feelings of serenity, even joy. Similarly, contemporary painters are using a finessed color scheme to allure viewers into their own intimate way of seeing the world. Like the late French artist Yves Klein once said, working in his signature blue was an “open window to freedom,” granting him “the possibility of being immersed in the immeasurable existence of color.”

Here are 11 contemporary artists who share Klein’s passion for color, showing that a single hue can define a whole canvas, even birth an entire body of work. Whether working in varying shades of the same color or one dominant shade, these artists are all creating worlds shaped by the infinite possibilities of color.


Yamuna Forzani

B. 1993, England. Lives and works in Amsterdam.

The Adoration of Mystique, 2023
Yamuna Forzani
Rademakers Gallery

Embodied , 2023
Yamuna Forzani
Rademakers Gallery

To make her euphoric, mostly monochromatic tapestries, Yamuna Forzani uses a circular knitting machine—a computerized tool that limits the number of yarns she can work with. Even so, her use of eye-catching, phosphorescent hues is a deliberate choice. “I like to take up space and scream for attention,” Forzani said. A textile artist, designer, and queer activist, Forzani creates immersive performances or queer “utopias,” using her knitted tapestries and kaleidoscopic line of streetwear to bring these free-spirited productions to life.

Energized by her love of dressing drag queens, performers, and dancers within the underground queer ballroom community in the Netherlands, Forzani approaches her ascendant career in textile-making with a sense of verve and veneration for queer life. Marrying Renaissance-inspired lighting and composition with lambent colors, each tapestry is a celebration of the queer body. Her subjects’ bodies are contoured with recycled neon yarn, enhancing their 3D effect—as seen in The Adoration of Mystique (2023)—signifying “we’re here, and we’re not going to be ignored,” she said.

Although Forzani’s background is in textiles and fashion—she won the Dutch Design Awards for her artistic direction of a ballroom fashion show—she has gained notoriety as a fine artist. Her work is in the Stedelijk Museum’s permanent collection and is currently part of “She Knows,” a group exhibition open through April 27th at Rademakers Gallery in Amsterdam.


Jesse Zuo

B. 2000, Beijing. Lives and works in New York.

Blues, 2023
Jesse Zuo
Soft Times Gallery

Orchids, 2023
Jesse Zuo
Soft Times Gallery

An MFA candidate at the School of Visual Arts, Jesse Zuo credits Lisa Yuskavage as the source of inspiration for her painterly voice. After discovering the pioneering painter at a David Zwirner show in 2021, she made an “impulsive attempt” to move beyond traditional realism in pursuit of a style that would better showcase her innate attraction to color. “They were the best-received pieces that I’d done up until that point,” Zuo said.

Whether depicting the moment of anticipation before a painful pimple bursts or capturing a woman’s waist as she struggles to squeeze herself into too-tight jeans, Zuo’s paintings monumentalize the mundane. Colors that appear pulled from thermal heat-map imaging inflate the underlying mood behind each moment. Interested in viewers’ subjective, emotional response to tints like warm yellows and sticky oranges (as in her 2023 painting Rain), Zuo sees colors as “suggestions,” never the “right answer,” she said. The emerging painter was included in Soft Times Gallery’s presentation in the winter 2024 edition of Artsy’s online art fair Foundations, and currently has three paintings in “Chapter II,” a group show at sobering galerie in Paris open through April 4th.


Elijah Kauffman

B. 1998, Salt Lake City. Lives and works in Providence, Rhode Island.

But I'm a Cheerleader, 2022
Elijah Kauffman
Soft Times Gallery

Growing up queer in the world capital of Mormon culture might present its challenges, but artist Elijah Kauffman credits Salt Lake City’s strong counterculture and “DIY” community for giving them the tools to launch their painting career. Action-filled coming-of-age scenes meet magical realism and mythology in the young figure painter’s dynamic works, which teem with the tumult of adolescence. Limiting each work to a single, monochromatic hue not only dramatizes each scene, making the works feel “larger than life,” but helps “convey a lot about the emotions and experiences of the figures in the paintings,” Kauffman told Testudo.

In moody blues, teenagers gaze longingly through car windows. Elsewhere, ablaze in the orange glow of birthday candles, friends celebrate another year gone by. Or, spotlit by traffic-light green, an adolescent duo plays twister in tall, swaying grass. Inspired by film stills from teen drama series like Skins and My So-Called Life, Kauffman told Testudo that they are “not necessarily condoning” or critiquing their subjects’ behavior, but “recognizing some of the moments in these scenes that feel kind of divine or ethereal and bringing those to the foreground.” Since graduating from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2022 with a BFA in painting, they have had solo exhibitions in London, Salt Lake City, and Providence, Rhode Island.


Alayna Coverly

B. 1994, Bloomington, Indiana. Lives and works in New York.

Turning, 2023
Alayna Coverly
VillageOneArt

Indefinite, 2023
Alayna Coverly
VillageOneArt

With the precision of a hyperrealist, Alayna Coverly captures silhouetted bodies swathed in the shining, undulating folds of fabric. Faceless women pose defiantly, their faces wholly obscured by opulently patterned head scarves that seem to entrap their thoughts. In newer works from her inaugural solo exhibition “Find Me” presented by VillageOneArt earlier this year, women appear in small groups, tussling between tangled silken sheets enveloping them. A grandeur arises not only from the seductive and voyeuristic mystery of Coverly’s subjects but also from the painter’s masterful use of color.

Keeping her colors saturated and bright is a way of offsetting the “suffocation and anxiety of people wrapped in fabric,” Coverly said. Tired of “seeing traumatic things shown aggressively” in the media, particularly instances of abuse towards women, she adopts a gentler, more tender approach to depicting the hardships of womanhood. Coverly graduated from the New York Academy of Art in 2023 with an MFA in painting and was included in “The Quiet Moment,” an all-female group exhibition at FORMah, on view in New York last August.


Dominic Chambers

B. 1993, St. Louis, Missouri. Lives and works in New Haven, Connecticut.

Her Softness in Red (Grace Lynee Haynes), 2020
Dominic Chambers
Unit

The interiority of Dominic Chambers’s Black subjects takes center stage in the mid-career artist and writer’s introspective paintings—his subjects rest, read, contemplate, and wonder in idleness and repose. “Our normative understanding of the Black body is a hyperactive one,” Chambers told Artsy when he was named a member of The Artsy Vanguard 2022, deliberately dispelling this racist misconception.

Drawing influence from writers like James Baldwin, Zora Neale Hurston, and Fred Moten, Chambers incorporates elements of Surrealism and magical realism into his paintings as a way of capturing the full spectrum of the Black experience. In Chambers’s works, color is a character in itself, a way to draw a direct line between his subjects’ inner worlds and the dreamlike spheres that surround them. Squares of translucent color and patterned, tear-like ovals appear regularly in his paintings, evoking transcendence.

Now represented by Lehmann Maupin, Chambers graduated from Yale with an MFA and has work in the collections of international institutions including the Centre Pompidou, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami. He was featured in a solo museum exhibition at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis earlier this year.


Cathy Tabbakh

B. 1989, Lyon, France. Lives and works in London.

Les Couleurs de la Nuit, 2023
Cathy Tabbakh
JD Malat Gallery

The Shadow of Life, 2023
Cathy Tabbakh
JD Malat Gallery

Cathy Tabbakh grew up in the lush countryside of France’s Beaujolais region, born into a family with green thumbs. Her father tended to a flourishing garden surrounding their house while her mother amassed copious amounts of houseplants. Enraptured by the way plants “seem to be constantly dancing, in movement” as Tabbakh told Court Tree Collective, her color-rich still lifes feature sumptuously shaped vases housing elegant plants. Crisp shadows enunciate each leaf’s vitality while highlighting the singularity of its silhouette.

In opposition to the darkly lit still lifes of the early modern era, Tabbakh’s work utilizes elements of abstraction. Influenced by architecture, she juxtaposes stark colors in similar shades using angular lines, creating high-tension points that seem to pop off the flat picture plane. Egyptian blues, forest greens, and plum purples appear frequently in her work—vibrant, contemporary colors that underscore the artist’s buoyant approach to art making. In September 2023, Rhodes in London inaugurated their new exhibition space with “La Vie en Couleurs,” Tabbakh’s debut solo show.


Ashley Marie

B. 1985, Michigan. Lives and works in Detroit.

Reaching Through, 2022
Ashley Marie
M Contemporary Art

Parabola, 2022
Ashley Marie
M Contemporary Art

Detroit-based artist Ashley Marie paints translucent figures floating through thick foliage in the dark of night. Some fix their gaze directly upon the viewer, while others appear fleeting, reminiscent of occult whispers or the elusive touch of the divine. “There is something greater than us,” Marie said in an interview with Artsy, “something beyond this life that we can’t even possibly imagine.” After her sister passed away, the artist asked the universe for a sign that her sibling was still there, and okay. Her request was precise: a purple flower. Within a matter of weeks, a purple pansy had sprouted from between the brick lining on her front porch steps.

Evoking the viridescent glow of the heart chakra, Marie’s use of fluorescent, night-vision green conveys a deep spirituality and offers room for “healing and growth.” Delving into the realm of the supernatural, Marie offers affirmation to her viewers that humans are more than just physical beings. “I want to give that gift [that my sister gave me] to the audience,” she said. Largely self-taught, Marie has work in the Imago Mundi collection and has participated in group shows across the U.S. A solo exhibition of new paintings will open at M Contemporary Art in Ferndale, Michigan, on April 26th.


Katia Lifshin

B. 1993, Ukraine. Lives and works in Tel Aviv.

Light Twist, 2022
Katia Lifshin
Moosey

Tightrope, 2023
Katia Lifshin
Woaw

M.C. Escher meets Alice in Wonderland in the phantasmagorical blue-green world of Katia Lifshin’s oil paintings. Drawn to the cosmic wonders of the night, Lifshin sought a female character who could fit neatly within a nocturnal world, existing as an extension of it. The mutable “shapeshifters” she depicts in her work represent an inner child of sorts, persistently chasing a distant goal.

In Light Twist (2022), a radiance seems to emanate from the subject herself, while in other works, the light source is external—a distant beam coming from the horizon. Working in grass green, Katia takes elements of the natural world and exaggerates them, pulling inspiration from the “spirit” of life. Her curious little girls are “not just humans,” Lifshin said, “they’re trying to connect to something bigger.” The emerging painter will present her first solo show in the U.S., “Light Journeys,” opening at Long Story Short in New York on April 5th.


Xiao Wang

B. 1990, Beijing. Lives and works in New York.

Spaced In, Spaced Out #2, 2023
Xiao Wang
PM/AM

Growing up in Beijing, Xiao Wang and his peers were taught to master Socialist Realism, the Soviet-inspired painting style typically using an earthy, naturalistic palette. Eager to distinguish his style from the influences of his early studies, Wang began “distorting” colors as a way to elevate his works to “a different space, a parallel dimension almost,” he said.

Drawing on the visual and narrative language of cinematography, Wang approaches his paintings in the same way as a set designer does a stage. Beams of light illuminate his subjects who ponder, reflect, and agonize in luxuriant foliage and under lavender, cloud-filled skies. His subjects are frozen in these shades “not just to create a sense of drama and mood, but almost as a way [for each canvas] to tell a story on its own,” he said. Wang’s work has been included in group shows in Germany, the U.K., Italy, and Denmark. In 2023, he was the subject of a solo exhibition at PM/AM in London.


Thebe Phetogo

B. 1993, Serowe, Botswana. Lives and works in Gaborone, Botswana.

Proposition 2 - Material Need and Practical Effects, Painting 2, 2022
Thebe Phetogo

The Disparate Man, 2022
Thebe Phetogo
Eclectica Contemporary

The eye-blinding, neon shade of Thebe Phetogo’s phantasmic paintings has been described as “puke green” and likened to nuclear waste and acid rain. For the artist, however, the reference is simple: Evocative of a green screen, it’s an “artificial backdrop” as he describes it, upon which “modern myths are told.” Using shoe polish to cast a black sheen over his ghostly figures as seen in Proposition 2 - Material Need and Practical Effects, Painting 2 (2022), Phetogo cleverly—but subtly—weaves the history of minstrel performances into his work.

Interested in the idea of the Black body as both a social construct and as an analog to a “blackbody,” a hypothetical object in physics that absorbs electromagnetic radiation, Phetogo uses jarring, contrived colors in an act of satire. Societal expectations of Blackness are mocked and exaggerated to the point where the humor turns back on the viewer. In his 2024 series of “Lowe” landscapes, the Motswana artist paints a regional creation story as an infographic, once again using outlandish colors to explore the theme of misconstrued information. With recent solo exhibitions at in Lagos (“7 Propositions for the Origin of a blackbody,” 2023) and at Von Ammon Co. in Washington, D.C. (“8 Propositions for the Origin of a blackbody,” 2024), Phetogo is beginning to gain more mainstream acclaim.


Siji Krishnan

B. 1983, Kerala, India. Lives and works in Kochi, India.

Against the wind, 2022
Siji Krishnan
Michael Kohn Gallery

There is a calm elegance and understated beauty to Siji Krishnan’s works that is perhaps born from the “weightlessness” the painter says she feels when creating. Often painting in watercolor on rice paper, she is intentional about her gentle use of color. Earth tones like amber, sand, and oatmeal characterize her palette, which she sees as an extension of herself. To make a difficult emotion feel lighter, she might introduce pastel yellows, as seen in Against the wind (2022). In other moments, however, an ominous soil-colored cloud might encroach upon a scene as in Circus Family (2020). “Everything I’m feeling comes through [my work],” the artist said.

Krishnan’s work was included in Michael Kohn Gallery’s booth at Art Basel Miami Beach 2023, and will be the subject of a show at the gallery in Los Angeles, opening on April 27th—her first solo exhibition in the U.S. Her paintings are held in international institutions including the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, the Dallas Museum of Art, and the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art in New Delhi.



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Monday, March 25, 2024

Xin Liu wins inaugural K11 Artist Prize for emerging Asian artists. https://ift.tt/RHBXyor

Multidisciplinary artist Xin Liu has won the inaugural K11 Artist Prize, an award established in 2023 by the K11 Art Foundation to spotlight emerging Asian talents.

Born in 1991 in Xinjiang, China and based in New York, Liu was selected from eight shortlisted artists for her interdisciplinary work that bridges art and science. The artist studied measurement, control technology, and instruments at Tsinghua University in Beijing, and later received a master’s degree in media art and science from MIT and an MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. Her educational experiences have inspired her to approach her work like science experiments.


An attempt to touch you, 2023
Xin Liu (b. 1991)
Make Room

“It is a year of many firsts for us, and to celebrate Xin is special in this context,” said Alia Al-Senussi, chairperson of the K11 Art Foundation International Council. “Xin is distinguished by an innovative, interdisciplinary practice deeply inspired by her Chinese identity and heritage.”

Liu’s 2023 solo exhibition at Pioneer Works, “Seedings and Offspring,” featured sculptures, videos, and virtual reality installations that explored themes of space travel and immortality. Currently, she is an artist in residence at the Houston Asian American Archive at Rice University and is the arts curator for the Space Exploration Initiative at MIT Media Lab.

As part of the prize, Liu will receive mentorship from the K11 International Council, which includes Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Sarah Arison, Basma Al Sulaiman, Eugenio Re Rebaudengo, and Olga Re Rebaudengo. Melissa Ling, Shota Nakamura, and Greg Ito were among the other artists shortlisted for the prize.



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How a New Generation of Paris Gallerists Has Changed the City’s Art Scene https://ift.tt/xhk0qdR

Paris is a city steeped in art history. Today, the French capital has a huge density of galleries, as well as a rich well of longstanding institutions and private museums such as the Pinault Collection and the Fondation Louis Vuitton. People no longer visit Paris just to go to the Louvre, but to see exceptional contemporary art exhibitions, too. While the local grisaille et grève—gray skies and strikes—may persist, there is a sunny outlook on the Paris scene.

There are three main centers of art world activity in the city: the old-world 6th arrondissement (Saint-Germain-des-Prés), the wealthy 8th arrondissement (Avenue Matignon), and the creative epicenter of the Marais, which encompasses the 3rd and 4th arrondissements.

Several wider developments have taken place in recent years. Since the U.K. left the European Union in 2020, a crop of international galleries opened, such as White Cube in 2020, Mariane Ibrahim in 2021, and Hauser & Wirth in 2023. Art Basel also launched the fair Paris+ in 2022, raising the city’s global art world profile further.

There has also been a new wave of young galleries, many of which are using an international lens to curate their programming. Christophe Person opened his namesake gallery specializing in African art in December 2022, prior to which he’d been working for French auction house Piasa, inaugurating its department for contemporary African art. Today, the market for African art is “really within the mainstream,” he said, citing interest from collectors, institutions, and private foundations.

“The relationship between France and Africa is very strong, but it’s very charged,” Person said. “But especially for the artists from the Francophone countries, they’ve got this link to France and Paris, I think they are happy to have the opportunity to be shown here.”

Séquelle, 2023
Fally Sene Sow
Christophe Person

COLONIAL SWAG: I Know All About What You Want to Know All About, 2023
April Bey
193 Gallery

193 Gallery, with two spaces on Rue Béranger in the Haut Marais, was founded in 2018 by César Levy to explore non-Western identities from the Caribbean, Latin America, Asia, and Africa. He noted that, in addition to the behemoth Paris+, there’s a spectrum of fairs catering to different regions and tastes. “There’s a fair dedicated to African art [AKAA], to Asian art [ASIA NOW], and there’s a new fair coming in September dedicated to Latin American art [MIRA Art Fair],” he said. “There’s this desire to discover different art scenes of the world.” In a more generalist display, next week will see the opening of Art Paris (April 4th–7th) at the Grand Palais Éphémère, bringing together 136 modern and contemporary art galleries from 25 countries for its 26th edition.

Scott Billy, who is American-born but lived in South Africa for 25 years, owned a company selling condoms and a nonprofit providing free HIV services before opening Bonne Espérance Gallery in the 2nd arrondissement, neighboring the Marais, in 2019. “Paris has got a great African art scene, but it’s almost entirely focused on Western Africa, and it’s a big continent,” he told Artsy. “The South African art scene is quite different.” He noted that “the three best advocates for African arts are New York, London, Paris. New York and London already have [a] South African presence. Paris has no South African presence. That’s the business reason. The real reason was just because I love Paris.”

Bim Bam Gallery, opened by Baimba Kamara (also on rue Béranger), started as a pop-up four years ago on rue Saint Claude in the 3rd arrondissement and found its permanent space further north a year ago. “I was able to limit my risk,” Kamara explained of the move. “It allows people with less income at the beginning to be able to start, and then you have the chance to grow; I could still be on the market and find my audience.” Kamara, who is French-born, used to live in California and loved the Oakland artists he encountered, realizing that, while they had burgeoning careers in the U.S., they had no visibility in Europe. He is especially keen to show LGBTQ+ artists and is open about discussing representation in general, being one of the very few Black gallery directors in Paris. “I feel like there are more galleries showing artists who talk about what’s happening now in our society.”

Also on rue Béranger is DS Galerie, which settled into a permanent address in March 2023. “Paris is an important place for contemporary art. It’s having a moment where the scene has captured the interest of the public,” said the gallery’s founder Thomas Havet. From 2016 to 2022, Havet helmed a nomadic curatorial project, Double Séjour, which first started in his apartment and ended up in POUSH—an industrial campus on the outskirts of Paris housing some 250 artist studios—in 2021. He sees a kind of “positivity” emerging from a more skeptically leaning French culture, rising from “the conjunction of emerging artists and interested international collectors.”

The fact that three of the newest Paris galleries are neighbors speaks to the way the Marais is a touchstone of the scene. “Paris is super geographical for galleries, and people are super strict about it,” Kamara noted. “Technically, I’m at République but I would never say that in a gallery context—it’s Haut Marais. You have to be in the Marais, it’s where things are happening.”

The ambitious scope of the Paris scene is clear, he added: “Every year you can do a list of other shows that you missed. Great shows I wanted to go, I meant to go, and I did not. The list is huge every year. The spectrum is just too much. If you’re trying to do your homework with galleries, you’re missing the museums. If you do the museums, you’re missing the galleries.”

Further afield in the city, Anna Nevicka, who moved to Paris from Latvia 10 years ago, partnered with Olivier Maréchal from a previous professional experience, opening OA Fine Art two years ago. “Paris is still a very prestigious address,” Nevicka said. “New York or London, they’re much bigger hubs—Paris has always had this luxury, and very secretive ambiance with it.” She noted that most of the galleries in the 8th arrondissement, where their space is located, feature “modern masters, beginning of 20th century, even older—17th, and so on.”

Nevicka added that there has been a “generational” change in the culture of the city: “I do find that over the last decade, French culture and cultural organizations have been much more open to new things.”

Back in the Marais, Maât Gallery, opened by Paris-born Franco-Egyptian gallerist Paul William, offers exhibitions as well as one-month residencies. William first opened NIL Gallery in the Marais with a childhood friend, where they focused on West African artists principally from Ghana and the Ivory Coast; a little over a year ago, he decided to start his own project. “Since African art had become a big trend—and I’m glad it’s emerging—I wanted to open up the scope and focus on Latin American artists because they’re not well known here,” he said.

William noted that “people have more of an entrepreneurial sense in Paris these last few years,” which works in tandem with what he describes as a French “predisposition” to art: “We’re very sensitive to the museums that surround us,” he said. The city has been injected with fresh energy from a new and more international crowd; William cites the opening of David Zwirner in 2019 and Mendes Wood DM last year as hallmarks of change. “It’s an ‘inevitable’ destination when people come to Europe,” he said. “Paris is a kind of brand.”

And it’s this brand—exacting standards, relentless cultural appetite, local pride offset by inquisitiveness about other art scenes—that is keeping Paris’s reputation so inviolable.



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Friday, March 22, 2024

5 Gallerists on What It Means to Support Women Artists Today https://ift.tt/kJ0UbhZ

Up to and Including Her Limits-Blue , 1973-76/2011
Carolee Schneemann
P.P.O.W

For decades, women gallerists have worked with women artists to create networks of support, friendship, and research that seek to challenge the male-dominated environment of the art world. Today, they continue to maintain the urgency of this project in a myriad of different ways.

The five women gallerists featured here are based in locations from London to Lagos, and this global span points to the often intersectional approach that women gallerists take to their programming. These gallerists advocate for the multiplicity of issues that women artists are tackling today, from body politics to environmentalism.


Philomene Magers and Monika Sprüth

Sprüth Magers

“We believe in the necessity of our artists being seen in public,” said Philomene Magers, the co-founder of Sprüth Magers, referring to the host of progressive and cutting-edge conceptual work that the gallery champions and strives to position within public and institutional collections. With large-scale spaces in Berlin, London, Los Angeles, and New York, Sprüth Magers is renowned for its rigorous, curatorial, and research-based program where work by women artists has always found a home.

The beginnings of Sprüth Magers is rooted in the friendship between Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers, who merged their respective galleries in Germany in 1998. The gallery partners began their work in the early 1980s and ’90s, in the wake of the women’s liberation movement and at a time when the representation of women artists in a male-dominated art world was a particularly urgent task.

Untitled (More perfect), 2024
Barbara Kruger
Sprüth Magers

“Representing women artists is something that has come naturally to the gallery,” Magers said. Cindy Sherman and Barbara Kruger, who engage with feminism from this earlier period, have been associated with the gallerists since the early 1980s. Today, alongside a more established roster, the gallery is committed to a diverse program of younger women artists including Nora Turato, Kara Walker, and Analia Saban, encompassing a broad spectrum of performance, video, photography, sculpture, painting, and installation.

Magers emphasizes the significance of this variety: “We believe that our artists are contributing to the importance of culture in society, and in rich and diverse ways represent the time we’re living in,” she explained.


Wendy Olsoff and Penny Pilkington

P.P.O.W

On my way, 2022
Mi Kafchin
P.P.O.W

When they established their gallery, P.P.O.W, in New York’s East Village in 1983, Wendy Olsoff and Penny Pilkington saw an art world that they felt rarely reflected the political realities and aftermath of women’s liberation, civil rights, and the anti-war movement in the U.S. “We wanted to show work that spoke to the moment, and it just so happens that we have a high percentage of women artists in our program,” said Olsoff.

The gallerists have “always had a passion for storytelling, figuration, and politics,” Osloff explained. Artists such as Carolee Schneemann have become important pillars of the gallery’s program, but Osloff is also keen to note the work of younger artists they represent today. “We don’t want a program of watered-down versions of early pioneering works—the work has to be committed to the current moment, and in this sense, we see a lot of intersectional and environmentalist works,” she noted. Astrid Terazzas and Mi Kafchin are two such artists who explore trans aesthetics, utopias, and the technological and environmental realities of the current moment, for instance.

Osloff tells Artsy that while the relentless pace of the art market is difficult for artists, continuing to present a challenging body of politically engaged work is one strategy for furthering change. “It is important for us to emphasize the need to support the entirety of a program, and that collecting is not just about accumulating artworks,” Osloff said. “If collectors support across programs, then this is what will make change.”


Adenrele Sonariwo

Rele

Bodies, Tales, and Landscapes III, 2023
Diana Ejaita
Rele

Upon returning to Nigeria 15 years ago after studying in the U.K., Adenrele Sonariwo noticed that there was little in the contemporary art world of her home country that reflected the experience of young people like herself. Rele was born out of pop-up temporary exhibitions showing the work of young artists whose studios Sonariwo would visit locally in Lagos. Much of the work that Sonariwo is drawn to is by women artists, whose stories she says resonate with her personally.

“I am so aware of the challenges that women face in the art world and that stereotypes of women in Africa are still present in contemporary art,” Sonariwo explained. Though the gallery has additional locations in Los Angeles and London, Sonariwo reiterates the importance of Rele’s home turf of Lagos. “I want to represent the diverse stories that can come out of this region,” she said. Rele’s current group exhibition in Lagos, “Beyond Veils,” for example, presents work from Progress Nyandoro, Sedireng Olehile Mothibatsela, Tizta Berhanu, and Diana Ejaita, a group of women artists from Zimbabwe, Botswana, Ethiopia, and Nigeria, respectively.

Tose, 2022
Progress Nyandoro
Rele

“It’s about supporting not just one artist but an entire generation,” Sonariwo told Artsy when asked what it means to support women artists today. “Upcoming artists can see what is possible for them by viewing this work.”

She added: “Some of the artists I work with are activists, advocates, and feminists and so their work empowers upcoming artists to make change in their communities.”


Océane Sailly

Hunna Art

Océane Sailly is the founder of Hunna Art, a contemporary art gallery with branches in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates; Paris; and Failaka, Kuwait. The gallery represents women artists based in the Gulf region who address the history of the Arabian peninsula. “I knew I really wanted to work with artists and art professionals from my generation and create a platform to redefine the transparency of the gallerist-artist relationship,” Sailly told Artsy. She noted that she hopes to create a safe and comfortable space for the artists she works with.

“I think museums and art institutions can sometimes be performative in terms of supporting women artists, and other marginalized practitioners,” Sailly explained. The presence of women artists in museum collections and the art world at large is still an urgent task that gallerists must confront, she says: “There have been some positive evolutions in recent years. The groundswell of change is still building, so it’s very important to reaffirm the conscious act of supporting women artists.”

Kousa, 2021
Nour Elbasuni
Hunna Art

I choose to carry you above my body (settle in my soul) , 2023
Alymamah Rashed
Hunna Art

Just as important to supporting women artists is the regional aspect of the gallery’s program, made up of artists who are all working from the Arabian peninsula. “When I started Hunna, most of these women artists were lacking spaces to showcase their work on a local and international level,” she said.

The diversity of the work at Hunna is made clear not in the least by artists such as Nour Elbasuni, who “proposes new perspectives on masculinity through her female gaze,” said Sailly, “while Alia Zaal, Alymamah Rashed, and Talin Hazbar use their surrounding landscapes to investigate the self and the ecological, historical, and social aspects of their surroundings.”


Millie Jason Foster

Gillian Jason Gallery

Untitled No.15, 1969
Berenice Sydney
Gillian Jason Gallery

Gillian Jason Gallery is built on an intergenerational passion for supporting women artists, and is the first and only gallery in the U.K. to solely focus on women artists. Inspired by the legacy of Millie Jason Foster’s grandmother Gillian Jason, who founded the gallery in 1980, the gallery has had a physical space in Central London since 2021.

Gillian Jason Gallery’s program is broad in scope. “We’re presenting the best of art by women, whatever that art might be,” Foster said. “We’re not a gallery that solely presents feminist art.” Building out documentation and research is central to the gallery’s curatorial project; it creates full catalogues for every show and ensures every artwork on show is contextualized with thorough research.

Foster tells Artsy that part of the gallery’s central ethos is to ensure career longevity, an issue many emerging women artists still face today. “This is not just about making money, it’s about supporting women,” Foster said.

The gallery also aims to reinvigorate the estates of underrecognized artists such as Berenice Sydney, an abstract artist and printmaker who passed away in 1983. “Despite her presence in significant collections, has she received the credit she deserves from the mainstream art world?” said Foster. “That’s what I’m looking to do.”



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Hauser & Wirth to inaugurate first Basel space with historical Vilhelm Hammershøi show. https://ift.tt/AvKste2

Hauser & Wirth will inaugurate its new gallery space in Basel on June 4th with a historical survey of Vilhelm Hammershøi. The show, titled “Vilhelm Hammershøi. Silence,” marks the first solo exhibition of the 19th–20th century Danish artist in Switzerland. The new gallery is located at Luftgässlein 4 in Basel’s old town, minutes from the city’s major art institutions Kunsthalle Basel and Kunstmuseum Basel.

The focus on Hammershøi is a somewhat surprising choice to inaugurate the new outpost, given the gallery’s market star-studded artist roster, and the timing ahead of Art Basel. That said, Hauser & Wirth is well known for its historical and museum-worthy presentations—a tradition that will continue with this show, which is curated by Dr. Felix Krämer and will feature 18 pieces by Hammershøi compiled from private collections.

Born in 1864, Hammershøi is celebrated for his ability to convey a sense of stillness in his paintings. Throughout his career, he concentrated on capturing this tranquility, evident in both his portraits and detailed interior scenes. The figures in Hammershøi’s portraits often appear in the midst of routine chores or caught deep in thought.

“Hammershøi’s work reveals a remarkably modernist sensibility that continues to garner new generations of followers who join those steeped in the history of art of the 19th and early 20th Centuries,” said Carlo Knöll, the senior director at Hauser & Wirth who will be directing the Basel gallery. “His work resonates with the current international artistic community, including museums and institutions in Europe and the U.S., collectors, scholars, and living artists. Yet, despite being an artist of great acclaim and nuance, whose work is held in museum collections around the world, exhibitions dedicated to Hammershøi have been relatively few and far between.”

Hauser & Wirth’s exhibition will span from 1883 to 1914, offering a complete survey of the artist’s works. Hammershøi died in 1916 due to throat cancer at 51 years old.



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