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THE ART NEWSPAPER


Art Basel: 14 June 2018
Robert Longo’s Death
Star II (2017-18) Gerhard Richter’s
and Carol Bove’s
Egg (2018), both
newest work: a
in Unlimited, sold Foucault pendulum
for $1.5m each
A FOUCAULT PENDULUM created by the
German artist Gerhard Richter is set to start
swinging permanently from the dome of a
deconsecrated Catholic church in Münster
this weekend.
Invented by the French physicist Léon
Foucault in 1851, the pendulum convinced
the Catholic church that the Earth rotated,
something its leaders had previously
denied. Richter’s work comprises a 48kg
brass ball suspended on a 29m-long cable
from the dome of the early Baroque
Dominican church. A magnet created by the
physics department of Münster University
keeps the ball moving constantly over a
circular space with a stone surface, where
the church altar stood until it was removed
to make way for the pendulum.
Richter, who will attend the inaugura-
tion ceremony on 17 June, says that he is
fascinated by the history of the pendulum
and has long wanted to create his own. “It
particularly appealed to me to put it in a
church, because the church had a different

What are the limits of


view [of Foucault’s discovery] at the time”,
Christie’s in London; without estimates he said, when presenting his plan last year.
or reserves, many of the works sold for The pendulum “represents a small victory
less than Saatchi paid for them. for science,” he said. The work is intended

Art Basel’s Unlimited?


As such, there is a price disparity to be meditative rather than entertaining.
between the Unlimited works and the Richter envisages the church as a space
blue-chip paintings in the main fair. for cultural events and wants his installa-
The most expensive pieces sold in the tion to provide a backdrop for concerts,
main fair by Wednesday afternoon lectures, readings and similar events.
were two paintings by Joan Mitchell, The city estimates the cost of reno-
both priced around $14m at Lévy Gorvy vating the church and installing the work,

The sector has raised the bar for large-scale and Hauser & Wirth. In Unlimited, the
highest-value sales so far are Robert
which Richter has donated, at €650,000.
At Art Basel, Richter’s works can be

A
works, but price and size do not always match Longo’s Death Star II (2017-18), a sphere
of bullets addressing gun violence,
found on the stands of Galerie Löhrl, Marian
Goodman and Gagosian Gallery. C.H.
which was sold to a European museum
rt Basel’s intro- galleries who make proposals”. The by Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac for $1.5m, The artist’s new pendulum, which will
duction of the works are selected by a committee swing constantly in the former church

“Unlimited is a
Unlimited sector of six galleries, with Jetzer casting a
for large-scale deciding vote for those on a “maybe”
works in 2000 was
cannily prescient,
list. “I have a very different role as a
curator; I also work for a museum [the good concept and
foreseeing a global
explosion in private museums hungry
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture
Garden in Washington, DC], and the
meets a demand”
for large-scale anchor works. But nearly two roles are not to be compared,” he
20 years on, can a concept plugging says. What is shown one year, Jetzer and Carol Bove’s five-tonne steel sculp-
the gap between the commercial and says, “triggers the quality” of the next. ture Egg (2018), sold by David Zwirner
LONGO AND BOVE: © DAVID OWENS; DAVID-OWENS.CO.UK. MITCHELL: PHOTO: RON AMSTUTZ;

“Unlimited is a good concept and gallery to a private US collector, also for


© THE JOAN MITCHELL FOUNDATION; COURTESY OF HAUSER & WIRTH. RICHTER: © A KLAUSER

the curatorial worlds satisfy both? And


how can it be kept fresh? meets a demand,” says the collector $1.5m. “Unlimited provides a space for
Unlimited’s move to the first floor Alain Servais. “In the beginning, it was works between the commercial context
this year attracted speculation (its pre- very powerful, as the quality of the art and a museum show,” says Branwen
vious ground-floor location is occupied was very high.” But, he says, with “an Joan Mitchell’s Composition (1969) sold Jones, a director of David Zwirner.
by another event). But although the influx of new money into the arts and at Art Basel for around $14m Galleries often help with the
ceiling is slightly lower and there are low connoisseurship” today, Unlimited production costs of large-scale works
72 presentations compared with 76 in finds itself “full of brand names, but often an inverse relationship between destined for both fairs and biennials.
2017, the footprint remains the same. the quality is perhaps not primary”. He size and price, as the more difficult it is “With Carol’s work, we helped her
“It doesn’t have the status of a makes a distinction between “commer- to display and store a work, the fewer with production costs and sourcing
museum, but it tries to create a similar, cial value versus cultural value—the potential buyers it has. As blue-chip scrap metal,” Jones says. The gallery
more considered context for works,” two are very different”. art is increasingly traded as a financial also supported Bove’s presentation for
says Gianni Jetzer, Unlimited’s curator. A presentation in Unlimited adds asset, paintings by bankable artists are the Swiss Pavilion at last year’s Venice
Jetzer compares the selection process SFr20,000 ($20,000) to the cost of a stand easier to sell on swiftly. Large works are Biennale. Similarly, Lisson Gallery
to “a board game with many partici- in the main fair, but large works do not trickier, as shown in 2013, when Charles sometimes funds large-scale works
pants, the most important being the necessarily mean big bucks. There is Saatchi sold off 50 large sculptures at CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 

THEART N EWS PA PE R . C O M / D OW N LOAD THE FREE DA I LY A P P / @ THEA RTNE WSPA P E R / @ T H E A RT N E WSPA P E R .O FFI C I A L
2 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

NEWS
 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
for Unlimited, says Greg Hilty, the
gallery’s curatorial director. “Unlimited
is comparable in scale and ambition

Basel
to a biennial,” he says. “But, of course,
it is commercial, and it is a bit more
democratic in its curatorial approach,
more catholic in taste.”
Hilty adds that artists “tend to be
thrilled to be shown [in Unlimited]”.
The South African photographer

Swiss galleries
Mikhael Subotzky concurs. “As an
artist, Unlimited makes Art Basel
the only fair worth visiting,” he says.
His collaborative work with Patrick

forge ahead
Waterhouse, Ponte City (2008-14), is
being shown in Unlimited this year,
but when Subotzky’s film Moses and
Griffiths (2012) was shown in the sector
in 2014, he says, “it led to my selection

despite the
for the 2015 Venice Biennale because
the curator first saw my work here”.
Other artists have also gone from
Unlimited to biennial. Shwetal Patel, of
the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, says that the

global squeeze
Polish artist Alicja Kwade was selected
for the Indian event in 2016 on the
merits of her work at Unlimited in 2016.

“Unlimited is a bit
The late Swiss artist
Sophie Taeuber-Arp’s
more catholic in
homes with works from his gallery,
New initiatives, fair without having to buy them. Six Espaces Distinct taste than a biennial”
(1939) is on Von Bartha’s
subsidies and a focus “These shows offer a different
atmosphere from a fair or gallery, and stand at the fair Unlimited also revisits the biennial
on Swiss artists help are much more relaxed,” he says. Von back catalogues. Among the works
Bartha and his parents have exhibited included this year are Wolfgang Laib’s

S
dealers to adapt at Art Basel for more than four decades. means-tested basis, with costs ranging that the number of Swiss dealers has installation You will go somewhere else
Works on his stand are priced between from SFr6,800 to SFr15,000. “Older gal- decreased over the past 20 years “as the (1997-2005) and Lygia Pape’s installation
SFr4,500 ($4,500) and SFr1.5m ($1.5m). leries subsidise the younger galleries fair has become more global”. There Ttéia 1, B (2000/2018), works that were
wiss dealers have not Other long-standing Art Basel at Liste. We have been enacting David are no Swiss galleries in Statements shown at the Venice Biennale in 1997
been immune to the exhibitors from Switzerland are doing Zwirner’s suggestion for many years,” this year, but two appear in the Feature and 2009 respectively.
recent global squeeze their best to fly the flag for Swiss says Jacqueline Uhlmann, Liste’s head sector: Galerie Lange + Pult and Monica Cecilia Alemani, the director of
on the middle market, artists at the fair. Basel-based Stampa is of fair management. (In April, Zwirner De Cardenas. New York’s High Line Art and curator
with 50 galleries closing presenting nine Swiss artists, includ- said that larger businesses should The initiatives come at a good of the Art Basel Cities initiative, thinks
in the past five years, ing Roman Signer (Kajak auf Fässern, financially support smaller galleries time. Nicolas Galley, the director of that Unlimited provides a platform for
according to the Swiss 2017; SFr70,000) and Gerda Steiner and at fairs.) the programme in art-market studies works that “might be hard to exhibit
Art Market Association. In a report Jörg Lenzlinger (Handycreep, undated, The newly formed, patron-backed at the University of Zurich, recently in conventional venues”. She men-
published earlier this year, the organi- SFr9,000). The latter duo also have an Friends of Liste offers a SFr2,000 told local press: “Collectors who spend tions the Romanian artist Ana Lupas,
sation blamed unfavourable economic exhibition at Basel’s Museum Tinguely stipend to galleries in need of help with SFr20,000 to SFr50,000 a year in the “who had a small presentation at Tate
conditions in Europe and increased this week (Too Early to Panic, until 23 exhibition costs at the fair. Meanwhile, galleries they trust—this collector Modern in London but here can bring
running costs, particularly at art fairs, September). Pro Helvetia (the Swiss Arts Council) base has fallen away.” a monumental work [not previously
as well as “the growing dominance Meanwhile, the Liste art fair in offers financial support to galleries Another challenge is whether small exhibited] and get great exposure”.
of international auction houses and Basel, which has been providing a showing work by Swiss artists at inter- galleries can retain their rising stars. Curatorial approval aside, Unlimited,
online sales”. platform for younger galleries for national art fairs. Art Basel offers com- The art-market commentator Kuno with its large number of interactive
But galleries at Art Basel and more than 20 years, offers stands on a parable rates to Liste in its Statements Fischer says that mid-career artists works, is a crowd-pleaser: around 95,000
beyond are adapting—in some cases, sector, which costs SFr12,000 per stand. “often switch to bigger galleries with people visited last year. As Alain Servais
by setting up new commercial initia- More than half of the 18 participants in a global presence to be represented on says: “It is a public playground now, but
tives. The Basel-based dealer Stefan von Fifty Swiss galleries this year’s sector, which is dedicated to an international basis and in the most it’s an expensive exercise for galleries. It
Bartha—who says that the cost of par-
ticipating in art fairs has doubled over have closed in the solo projects by emerging artists, took
part in Liste in 2017.  
important art fairs”. It seems that those
dealers battling to sustain a presence
has been a great brand-building invest-
ment for the fair and for galleries, but
the past ten years, rising to SFr150,000 past five years, an art A spokeswoman for Art Basel says in the difficult middle market may not is it still necessarily commercial for the
($150,000) at Art Basel—is allowing col- that the fair does not provide a break- feel secure just yet. galleries or for the fair?”
lectors to organise exhibitions in their market report says down of galleries by country, but notes Gareth Harris and Anny Shaw Anna Brady

Stedelijk director
Beatrix Ruf cleared Liste feels the weight
over ‘conflict of Cuban history
TAEUBER-ARP: © DAVID OWENS; DAVID-OWENS.CO.UK. NOVO: COURTESY OF EL APARTAMENTO. RUF: MICHAEL STEWART/GETTY IMAGES
of interest’
THE LAWS OF the land have been reduced to their weight in ink in a work by the
BEATRIX RUF, WHO resigned Cuban artist Reynier Leyva Novo, on the stand of the Havana-based gallery El
as the director of Amsterdam’s Apartamento at the Liste fair. The Weight of History (2018) includes books with their pages
Stedelijk Museum last October, covered in the exact amount of black ink used to write key parts of the Cuban constitution,
has been cleared of allegations including the penal code. The books (in an edition of ten; €8,000 each), come with a USB
of a conflict of interest by the city stick containing the “software that calculates the amount of ink in the constitution”, says
council. Ruf stepped down after the the gallery’s director Christian Gundín García. The work was produced and published with
Dutch press suggested that her Swiss- help from the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, which has acquired a copy. J.S.
registered private consultancy Currentmatters
compromised the museum, which accepted works on loan from owners
she advised. She was also accused of failing to disclose arrangements
relating to a donation of works by the collector Thomas Borgmann.
The council’s report, which was leaked to the Amsterdam television
company AT5, focused on whether Ruf had complied with Dutch cultural
governance code. The authors of the report argue that there is no reason
to doubt Ruf’s integrity and criticise the Stedelijk’s supervisory board
for its handling of the affair. On Tuesday, three of the board’s members
resigned. In a statement, Ruf said: “Contrary to stories in the press, the
independent investigators concluded [that] I always acted with integrity;
all side activities were approved; and I never ran an art consulting business
on the side.” M.B.

How do I see the bigger picture?


For some of life’s questions, you’re not alone.
Together we can find an answer.
ubs.com/art

Carlos Cruz-Diez, Physichromie UBS Vert, 1975, 277 x 560 cm, Acrylic paint on aluminum and coated Plexiglas,
UBS Art Collection, © 2018, ProLitteris, Zurich © UBS 2018. All rights reserved.

poster_260x43,5 .indd 1 23/05/2018 11:04


4 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

COMMENT
Anna
Brady Listen now
The podcast
that takes
you inside
Could fairs publish “For all the supposed
are on the back foot in terms of data-

the art world


harvesting. “It would be hugely useful to
know exactly what people sold,” he says. desire for transparency,

sale prices? Don’t


“I don’t think it’s realistic at the moment
to insist that exhibitors report all sales, no one will make
but with this drive towards transparency, the first move”
in future it might be.” The Dutch fair’s

hold your breath


chairman, Nanne Dekking, advocates the
use of blockchain-based technology as than it is to sell conceptual work, and yet
a means of increasing transparency by that’s the kind of work that often has the
creating a digital sales ledger for works most to offer.”
of art. But for blockchain to work, sales So, how do we fix it? Arguments
In a market increasingly reliant Basel’s fairs—or any other fairs—exists. at fairs—and within galleries—would against price reporting at fairs include The Art Newspaper
on price databases to support
its claim that art is a
The 2018 Art Basel and UBS Art
Market Report found that in 2017,
have to be recorded, accurately.
In its first three years, from 2003 to
confidentiality, the administrative
burden and the complexities of after- Weekly podcast
measurable asset, fairs remain data surveyed galleries made 46% of their 2005, London’s Frieze fair attempted to sales, not to mention the value of the
deserts. Against a barrage of sales figures sales at fairs, up 5% on 2016; McAndrew report overall sales figures (recorded as data that galleries would hand to fair in association with Bonhams
from auctions, step inside a fair and estimates that fair sales “reached close £20m, £26m and £30m respectively), but organisers (and their competitors).
everyone becomes coy. Many galleries to $15.5bn in 2017”. By her calculations, then stopped on the basis that these were Again, we hit the rock of opacity that New episode every Friday,
still “do not discuss prices”—in a trade fair. sales at fairs account for around 24% “misleading” and “inaccurate”. Today, is the comfortable foundation of the art
market. For all the supposed desire for
available from wherever you listen
In March, Art Basel published its of the estimated $63.7bn-worth of art Frieze co-founder Matthew Slotover says:
second art-market report, written by sold in 2017, but we have no idea how or “Only around 60% of exhibitors would transparency, no one will make the first to podcasts, including iTunes,
the economist Clare McAndrew. As Marc where that money was spent. respond, and it was mainly larger galleries move because it is the far more difficult Stitcher, TuneIn, Soundcloud and
Spiegler, Art Basel’s global director, Could fairs do the unthinkable and who wanted sales to remain confidential, path. Dealers cannot claim to want trans- theartnewspaper.com/podcasts
writes in the introduction, “understand- insist that exhibitors provide full sales so we felt that the results were skewed.” parency, nor complain that auction sales
ing the market’s dynamics is essential”. information? Spiegler says: “As we are Spiegler acknowledges that the skew perceptions of value, unless they
Yet, ironically, none of Art Basel’s fairs not involved in the sales, it is difficult for dominance of auction sales skews the reveal more details of their dealings. And
BRADY: © MIKHAIL MENDELEVICH

can contribute sales data to its own us to stipulate anything, but I do think perception of value. “There’s a real risk of to enforce that would require a power
report. Aside from random “selected that pricing transparency is very helpful.” misperception when an artist is successful greater than a humble fair organiser.
theartnewspaper.com
sales” reports, no comprehensive public Patrick van Maris, the chairman of but the only sales data is auction data. • Anna Brady hosts an Art Basel talk on ␣ 
sales record of deals done within Art Maastricht’s Tefaf fair, admits that fairs It’s a lot easier to sell paintings at auction gallery models in Hall 1.1 at 5pm today

THE MAYOR GALLERY


BILLY APPLE
WIFREDO ARCAY
IMRE BAK
JOOST BALJEU
ALBERTO BIASI
CHARLES BIEDERMAN
CARLOS CAIROLI
MIGUEL CHEVALIER
GIANNI COLOMBO
BRUCE CONNER
WALDEMAR CORDEIRO
JOSEPH CORNELL
CARLOS CRUZ-DÍEZ
herman de vries
AD DEKKERS
MAX ERNST
WOJCIECH FANGOR
STANO FILKO
LUCIO FONTANA
JEAN GORIN
WALLY HEDRICK
ANTHONY HILL
GYÖRGY JOVÁNOVICS
ATTILA KOVÁCS
TADAAKI KUWAYAMA
WALTER LEBLANC
RAÚL LOZZA
HEINZ MACK
ROBERT MALLARY
CHRISTIAN MEGERT
FRANÇOIS MORELLET
OTTO PIENE
SIGMAR POLKE
MIRA SCHENDEL
JAN SCHOONHOVEN
GEORGE SEGAL
TURI SIMETI
KLAUS STAUDT
SHINKICHI TAJIRI
LUIS TOMASELLO
GERHARD VON GRAEVENITZ
CAREL VISSER

Art | Basel
Wally Hedrick, For-Ever, 1997, Oil on canvas
221 x 78.8 cm, 87 x 31 inches STAND A4
Yto
Barrada
Tree Identification for Beginners

Art Basel
Unlimited
Tree Identification for Beginners Curtain 2017
cotton, silk, linen, natural dyes
JUNE 14 – 17, 2018
511.8 x 650.9 x 0.2 cm | 16' 9 1⁄2” x 21' 4 1⁄4" x 1⁄16" overall installed
© Yto Barrada

Also at Unlimited
Lee Ufan
Visit Pace at Booth A5 Relatum (Iron Field)
6 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

DIARY
Now we
know where
Damien Hirst
goes to find
inspiration

Basel

When the love


don’t last
A troupe of semi-naked performers Hirst goes potty
covered in red body paint danced
around the Messeplatz by the Do you want to own a work of art showing
entrance to Art Basel as visitors and Damien Hirst sitting on the toilet? Then head
collectors began to gather for yester- to a pop-up venue near the Liste fair, which
day’s vernissage at 4pm. But the Swiss is selling in-your-face figurines of the YBA
There’s a piano in there somewhere... police were quick to react, moving squatting on the loo. The sculpture is the
along the scantily clad group as brainchild of the dealer Jérémie Jean-
In tune with nature they preserved their modesty Ferdinand Maret, the founder of The Pro-
using gold reflective blankets. posal gallery, who produced the pieces in a
It can be hard enough to stave off the ravag- “The police said we can’t do it,” factory near Shenzhen in China in an edition
es of time using paper or canvas. But what said one of the few clothed members, of 200 (priced at $500 each). “We all look
do you do when the work is alive? Visitors who handed out leaflets with phrases the same on the toilet,” Maret says, adding:
to Art Basel’s Unlimited sector will hear including “make love”. The short-lived “It’s my body and Damien’s head, by the way.”
piano music coming from Rashid Johnson’s performance was not connected to
installation Antoine’s Organ (2016) when the the Basilea installation currently dom-
work is “activated” by the pianist Antoine inating the space outside the fair. “I
Baldwin, who is hidden behind shelves of think it was something spiritual,” said
house plants, books and shea butter. If a col- one of the Art Basel guides nearby.
lector or museum shells out $950,000, the The crowd seemed nonplussed, with
structure will be supplemented by “typical most visitors concentrating on the
house plants sourced locally”, says a spokes- matter at hand—getting into the fair to
woman for Hauser & Wirth gallery, which see the really explicit material.
represents the artist. And will they have to The semi-naked troupe was deemed
adopt Baldwin, too? Although the work is much too cheeky for the Messeplatz
named after the classically trained pianist,
“it can be activated by any musician”, the
spokeswoman explains, although she was
unable to reveal the ability level required.
Perhaps it’s best just to find a gardener who
is partial to a tinkle of the ivories.

SEMI-NAKED TROUPE, ANTOINE’S ORGAN AND PICCADILLY SHOP: JOSÉ DA SILVA. MARET, KELLER AND “ASK ME” SIGNS: GARETH HARRIS. HEFER: © DAVID OWENS; DAVID-OWENS.CO.UK
How Picasso kept Ernst
Porky Hefer gets ready for a bedtime story
Beyeler on his toes
The director of the Fondation Beyeler, Sam Critters and confessions
Keller, says that a preliminary sketch of Picas-
so’s epoch-making Les Demoiselles d’Avignon The giant cuddly animals created by the
(1907) once caused an almighty rift between designer Porky Hefer, on the shared stand of
Ernst and Hildy Beyeler, the powerhouse col- Kebab and a night bus the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, Southern
lecting couple who founded the eponymous home, anyone? Guild and SFA Advisory in Design Miami/
privately run museum just outside Basel. At Basel, have been turning even the most hard-
the press launch for The Early Picasso: Blue
and Rose, the Picasso blockbuster that is due London calling OVERHEARD nosed collectors into big kids. People’s “faces
light up” and they seem to “lose control”,
to open at the Beyeler next February, Keller says Lezanne van Heerden, the director of
pointed out that Hildy almost left Ernst on Where does the director of the world’s biggest art fair chill out after VIP day? TO STEWARDS HOLDING Southern Guild, which represents Hefer.
discovering his plans to sell the sketch. “She
even put her suitcase under the work,” Keller
Perhaps he quaffs champagne and slurps raw fish canapés at the Audemars
Piguet Semiconductor opening, or downs an Aperol Spritz at the Kunsthalle bar?
“ASK ME” PLACARDS: One suited-and-booted visitor “flung himself
on to” a giant polar bear. The cute critters,

“Is there a
quipped—proof of her passion No. Marc Spiegler was spotted lighting up the dancefloor at the trendiest party made to draw attention to their endangered
for the seismic work in town, hosted by 11 of Liste art fair’s hottest galleries, including Berlin’s Dan status, were the subject of a talk chaired by
that heralded Gunn, New York’s Lomex, Glasgow’s Koppe Astner and London’s Arcadia Missa. Design Miami’s chief creative officer, Rodman

McDonald’s
Cubism. As Spiegler threw shapes in the cabaret-like Balz bar, surrounded by young artists Primack. But the question on everyone’s mind
and gallerists as well as some of London’s top talent-spotters (such as Sarah was whether Porky Hefer was the designer’s
Diana McCrory, the director of the soon-to-open Goldsmiths gallery, and Simon Parris, real name. “Hefer is my real surname,” the

in the fair?”
Widmaier the head of programme at the South London Gallery), one reveller remarked that designer says, admitting that his brother gave
Picasso, it was like a “re-creation of Peckham in here”, referring to the trendy south London him the nickname “Porky”. “He called me
the artist’s area. “Except no bar in Peckham has lightbulbs on its ceiling like this,” she added. every fat name in the book. I didn’t under-
granddaughter, And with people spilling into the street, drinking and smoking outside the retailer stand the [animal] theme at the time… [but]
with Sam Keller next door called Piccadilly Shop, it really felt like a little bit of London in Basel. it’s the biggest asset I have at the moment.”

KIMIYO MISHIMA
Magazine, oil on canvas, 162 x 130.5 cm (63 3⁄4 x 51 3⁄8 in.)

PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURES


June 8 – July 13, 2018
Transfiguration III (Detail), 1966

Malzgasse 20 4052 Basel Switzerland Phone +41 (0)61 271 71 83


mail@annemoma.com www.annemoma.com

AnnMoma_TANp_2018_OK.indd 3 26/05/2018 12:43


01172018026_HWZH_260x372_AD_ArtNewspaper_Foerg.indd 1 08.06.18 08:42
London Hong Kong New York

Carol Bove Suzan Frecon Marlene Dumas


8 June–4 August 23 May–30 June Myths & Mortals
28 April–30 June

Richard Serra
Fairs Drawings Jordan Wolfson
23 May–30 June Riverboat song

Unlimited
2 May–23 June

11–17 June
Projects by Francis Alÿs,
Carol Bove, and Fred Sandback

Art Basel
12–17 June
Booth G8

David Zwirner
THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018 9

FEATURE

Are art awards really worth may have been conservative on that front [in
“Prizes are important,

WINNING?
keeping prices deliberately low].”
The gallery is showing works from
Himid’s Negative Positives: the Guardian
but the determining
Series (2007-16), in which the eponymous UK
newspaper acts as a canvas. Prices start at
factor is the strength
£12,000. Works from the 2017 series known of the work”
as Men in Drawers begin at £30,000.
Panting says that collectors outside the
UK are familiar with the Turner Prize and says. Worth equates the Turner Prize with
the way in which it bestows legitimacy on the annual MacArthur Fellows Program,

P
artists, both critically and commercially. which offers “genius grants” to American
Candace Worth, a New York-based art and US-based cultural figures, and the
adviser, confirms this view. The prize is $100,000 Hugo Boss Prize, administered by

Winning a prize
rize-winners and nominees Top: the UK sound “prestigious”, she says, and on the radar of the New York-based Solomon R. Guggenheim
pepper the Basel landscape artist Susan Philipsz “collectors who care”. Foundation. Frances Stark, who is showing a

can give an artist


this year, but do their wins the Turner The Middle Eastern financier painting installation in Art Unlimited, called
predominantly national Prize in 2010. Below, Mohammed Afkhami says: “It is important The Outsized Series: So that part of a part of
accolades count for much Agnieszka Polska because… a recognised and prestigious a reader can partially assimilate part of a part
international on the international
market?
(centre) is awarded
the 2017 Berlin
award… vindicates your decision. [But] it
is not the determining factor, which in my
of a book (2018), has been nominated for the
Hugo Boss award this year.

exposure, but the The Turner Prize, for example, which was
established in 1984 by the Tate, recognises
Nationalgalerie prize;
she said she should
view is the aesthetic strength of the work.”
The UK collector Christian Levett is of
Artists who were involved in the Turner
Prize in its early years, however, are often a

question of who
UK-based artists who have had an outstand- have been paid for like mind, saying that “it definitely adds mere footnote in the competition’s history.
ing display of work during the previous 12 the work involved to the provenance of an artist to have won The late UK sculptor Helen Chadwick was
months. The 30-year-old New Zealander Luke the Turner Prize or represented a country one of the first women to be nominated, in
really benefits— Willis Thompson, the youngest nominee
this year, has a show at the Kunsthalle Basel
at the Venice Biennale”. However, the
work itself—its date, quality and
1987. Richard Saltoun’s London-based gallery
is showing a series of works by Chadwick in

critically and (until 19 August), and Lubaina Himid—who


became the oldest ever winner of the
exhibition and publication
history—outweighs any
Feature at Art Basel—but do collectors know
about her nomination? “I doubt it,” Saltoun

commercially—
PHILIPSZ: REUTERS/ANDREW WINNING. POLSKA: OFFENBLEN.DE

Turner Prize last year, aged 63—has related awards, he adds. says. “I doubt the Basel audience will be
a solo presentation in Art Basel’s Worth states that the aware of Helen Chadwick.”

is an increasingly
Feature section, with London’s Tate’s decision last year Nevertheless, the gallery is presenting
Hollybush Gardens gallery. to abolish its previous some higher-priced works by the artist, with
“Even before her win, there age limit of 49 chimes two pieces from Piss Flowers (1991-92) and

vexed one. was quite keen market interest,”


says Lisa Panting, the co-director of
with recent trends. “It
makes sense at a time
Wreaths to Pleasure (1992-93) available for
around $250,000 and $350,000. Smaller works
the gallery, which has represented when the market is are priced from $2,000. Saltoun is one of 16
By Gareth Harris Himid since 2013. “Prices for her acknowledging the sig- first-time exhibitors—many of them emerg-
work have increased, but not hugely; nificance of overlooked, ing and mid-sized galleries—at the fair.
they have not doubled, although we mid-career artists,” she CONTINUED ON PAGE 10 

AUGUST 2-5, 2018


CenturyLink Field Event Center
seattleartfair.com
10 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

FEATURE
Tse (2016), made from
bottle caps by the award-
winning Ghanaian artist El
Anatsui, is priced at $1.1m
with Goodman Gallery

Art awards
at Art Basel this year

 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9


of not only social but also aesthetic reality,
A recent controversy has raised the question gender being just one of its glaring discrim-
of whether prizes are in fact lucrative for inatory categories, does not represent how
artists. The Berlin Nationalgalerie prize, we see ourselves, or our community,” the
which takes the form of a solo signatories say.
exhibition at the Hamburger Bahnhof
museum and an accompanying publication,
was mired in controversy last year, when WINNERS AND LOSERS
the four artists shortlisted said that they The nominees hit back, saying that “the

PRIZE-WINNERS AT BASEL THIS YEAR


should be paid for the exhibition they were all-too-rapid shift of public attention from
required to put together. artistic discourse or content—let alone
The prize was awarded to Agnieszka merit—towards white male privilege
Polska by the German culture minister, is frankly something that we regret”. There are plenty of works by awards, which had a noticeable
Monika Grütters, in late October; the Consequently, the organiser of the prize, award-winners on show at the knock-on effect in terms of drum-
three other finalists were Jumana Manna, the non-profit body La Jeune Peinture fair this year—a sign that prizes ming up more pointed interest
Iman Issa and Sol Calero. All four artists Belge, decided not to award it in 2019. “[We] have a certain cachet. The French from collectors and museum
are female, and they were all born outside regret that the [nominated] artists are artist Laurent Grasso, who won curators who came to our stands
Germany. “There is an unspoken assump- unable to work serenely due to the current the Prix Duchamp in 2008, says: at Frieze,” she says. Hank Willis
tion that the participants are likely to be pressure of a social debate that does not “Such a prize is always good Thomas, who won a Guggenheim
remunerated by the market as a result of target them directly, but of which they are news. Indeed, ten years later, it Fellowship for photography this
being nominated for or winning the prize,” nonetheless the victims,” its representa- is still interesting and a topic [of year, has expanded his already
the artists said. “We know that this is not tives said in a statement. discussion].” The win continues enthusiastic collector base, par-
always the case. The logic of artists working The final word goes to an artist. At Art to boost his profile; Grasso’s ticularly at art fairs, she adds.
for exposure feeds directly into the normal- Basel, a piece by Kader Attia that combines work is currently in a special Prix One of the biggest winners
isation of the unregulated pay structures painting and sculpture (Untitled, 2018), was Marcel Duchamp exhibition in appears to be the Ghanaian
ubiquitous in the art field.” shown earlier this week with Lehmann China (Bridging the Gap, featuring artist El Anatsui. His work on

WILLIS THOMPSON: PHILIPP HÄNGER/KUNSTHALLE BASEL. HIMID: REUTERS/DARREN STAPLES


The Nationalgalerie prize, awarded Luke Willis Thompson’s _Human (2018) at the Maupin gallery. The French-Algerian artist a selection of nominees, is at Goodman’s stand at Basel,
every two years to artists under 40 living Kunsthalle Basel (top). Above, Lubaina Himid won the Prix Marcel Duchamp, France’s top the Tsinghua University Art entitled Tse (2016) and made
and working in Germany, is a joint venture speaks after winning the Turner Prize in 2017 contemporary art prize, in 2016, and was Museum, Beijing, until 17 June). from bottle caps, is priced at
between the Friends of the Nationalgalerie awarded this year’s Joan Miró prize by the At Art Basel, Grasso is showing $1.1m. “On the eve of El Anatsui’s
and the Nationalgalerie itself, which is part more than 800 people, including the inde- Fundació Joan Miró and Obra Social La Caixa. new paintings related to his film first exhibition in Africa of his
of the Berlin State Museums. The Berlin pendent curator Katerina Gregos, signed an “Prizes are welcome for an artist, project OttO (2018), with New metallic tapestries, held at the
State Museums welcomed the nominees’ open letter condemning the “exclusionary especially for someone like me, who is York’s Sean Kelly Gallery. Goodman Gallery last year, he
statement, saying that their points have shortlist” drawn up by seven judges includ- radical and very critical politically,” Attia Liza Essers, the director won the Praemium Imperiale
been taken seriously. ing Sophie Lauwers, the head of exhibitions says. “I got the Duchamp prize the day after of the Goodman Gallery in award for sculpture. This did not
The four artists also expressed their at Bozar in Brussels. opening La Colonie [Attia’s space in Paris Johannesburg, says that awards go unnoticed by prominent South
concern about the public focus on their The row centred on the all-male shortlist for art and cultural activism]. I was sur- can have a positive effect at fairs. African collectors,” Essers says.
gender and national origin—and another of Sven Augustijnen, Koenraad Dedobbeleer, prised; I thought the launch could have put “Two of our artists—Kiluanji Kia Jack Shainman gallery of New
gender row shook the art world in Belgium Gabriel Kuri and the duo of Jos de Gruyter off the grand jury. The win did not change Henda and Kapwani Kiwanga— York is also showing works by El
when the five nominees for the 2019 Belgian & Harald Thys. “The flagrant exclusivity of me personally. What is important is never received the most recent Frieze Anatsui at Art Basel. G.H.
Art Prize withdrew. The move came after this year’s candidates and the prize’s denial giving up your radicalism.”

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14 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

IN PICTURES
Unlimited

Plastic, 1

plants—and
lots of gold
“I always find myself playing a
game of Tetris to create a
square that can accommodate
different works to make for a very
intuitive [presentation],” says Gianni
Jetzer, the curator of Art Basel’s Gianni
Unlimited sector, which is devoted Jetzer
to large-scale works. “It’s
important for me to give
every artist the greatest
chance to be seen.” Jetzer
took us on a whistle-stop
tour of Unlimited and
chose a few highlights
from this year’s display.
Emily Sharpe

1 PAUL RAMIREZ JONAS 4 ANA LUPAS


Alternative Facts (2017) Christmas trees for the years
Galeria Nara Roesler to come (1993)
“This is a work I really cherish. Visitors pull a P420
number [as part of the installation] and wait “It’s great to present figures like Lupas because
for [the artist or an assistant] to write down she has been slightly forgotten in Europe and
and notarise the alternative facts they bring to hasn’t received much exposure in the US. Believe
them. A coin is exchanged as a symbolic pay- it or not, this is the first time the piece has been
ment. The coin is then gilded, which is in itself exhibited all together. The trees measure the hu-
a symbolic act, as it may now look like gold, but midity in the space, so they change shape [with
it is not. The coin is glued to the paper, which changes in the humidity levels]. The installation
is then notarised. It has to do with how a state contradicts the archetypal reading of a tree
authority can produce the truth and that it is rooted in the earth. Instead, it’s horizontal, so it
actually a very bureaucratic and simple system becomes this line, almost like a three-dimension-
that is valid and seems to function.” al drawing. Lupas has attached gold-leaf accents
and has placed a box of objects or stones with lit-
2 JOSÉ YAQUE tle rings that indicate that they can be hung from
TUMBA ABIERTA III (2018) the Christmas tree. She has reinvented an iconic
Galleria Continua symbol and made it into something different.”
“José Yaque, a Cuban artist who lives in Havana,
BARBARA BLOOM 2
has created what is almost like a whisky bar but
with natural materials that one might find in a
5 The Tip of the Iceberg (1991)
botanist’s [laboratory]. It’s a way to encapsulate Galerie Gisela Capitain, in collaboration with
nature. You can see the different levels of de- Galleria Raffaella Cortese and David Lewis
composition—the live process that starts from “This piece brings together deep space and
the plants rotting—in each bottle by looking at deep sea. The tip of the iceberg and sets of china
the colour of the water. The sister piece was [stamped with the Titanic logo] allude to the sea
shown at the most recent Venice Biennale.” and [the sinking of the] Titanic, while the lunette
on the ceiling depicts objects, such as wrenches,
3 HE XIANGYU cameras, gloves and screwdrivers, that Nasa has
Untitled (2018) reported as being lost in space and so are pre-
White Space Beijing sumably orbiting the earth. The walls are a deep
“It’s like an egg carton blown up to an incredible blue—again, a reference to the sea and sky. She
size. Because it is a square and a wall piece, it was one of the first artists from the 1980s who
has a certain relationship to painting, although staged objects in a conceptual way. In the 1970s,
it is clearly not a hand-painted canvas. The much of the conceptual art was very dry.”
gold leaf offers a second reference to religious
paintings, as it was often used to show the im-
6 MATTHEW BARNEY
portance of saints. The single egg [in the work] Partition (2002/2018)
is an autobiographical element because the Sadie Coles HQ, Gladstone Gallery
artist was an only child, so his socialisation and and Regen Projects
his becoming who he is today was influenced “It is a reinterpretation in plastic of a piece from
by Chinese policy, which meant that boys and his film Cremaster 3 [2002], which was originally
girls of his generation are only children. On the made from petroleum jelly—an unstable materi-
wall are family photographs; one shows him al. It combines different elements from the film,
standing in Tiananmen Square as a child, eight which was shot in the Chrysler Building—a [struc-
years after the [1989] massacre. I asked him if ture] mostly built by Irish freemason contractors
he knew about it when he posed for the picture and builders. The bar is inspired by a classic Irish
and he said that he only found out about it in bar, but part of it is twisted and crushed. It also
college. It shows us a certain innocence and the incorporates freemason symbols, and the pile of
loneliness of being an only child, and how this potatoes refers to the Irish potato famine. It is
can have an impact on a society and on a life.” shown with photographs from the film.”
THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018 15

4 5

6
ALL PHOTOS: © DAVID OWENS; DAVID-OWENS.CO.UK
ART BASEL | JUNE 14–17, 2018 | HALL 2.0 STAND F12

UNLIMITED | ALBERTO BURRI: CELLOTEX | STAND U19

Alberto Burri, Combustione Plastica, 1958, Plastic, acrylic, cloth, and Vinavil on canvas, 47 1/4 x 59 1/8 in. (120 x 150 cm.)
© 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SIAE, Rome
THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018 17

INTERVIEW
Artist

GILLIAM IN SAN FRANCISCO: ART FRESH; COURTESY OF THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE. PORTRAIT: STEPHEN FRIETCH; COURTESY OF DAVID KORDANSKY GALLERY, LOS ANGELES. RONDO: COURTESY OF THE ARTIST, THE KUNSTMUSEUM BASEL AND DAVID KORDANSKY GALLERY
Sam Gilliam:
A life
beyond
the frame
With a show of his unstretched
canvases at the Kunstmuseum Basel,
the lyrical abstractionist is enjoying a
late resurgence in popularity.
By José da Silva


I
Sam Gilliam, pictured above in San Francisco
’ve always listened to painters—the canvas. In in 1973, was influenced by the Colour Field
everyone, from Coltrane 1967, he began a series artists of Washington, DC. Rondo (1971, left)
to Beyoncé, but not always of works called slices, or has been acquired by the Kunstmuseum Basel
while I work,” says Sam bevelled-edge paintings,
Gilliam during the installa- pouring diluted acrylic the same time, Richard Tuttle started doing
tion of works for his show paint onto the unstretched, this, and also some French artists from the
at the Kunstmuseum Basel unprimed canvas, then folding or group Supports/Surfaces,” he says. “But it
(until 30 September), which focuses on the crumpling the fabric before stretching it was very different; it was still very much
period from 1967 to 1973. This is the 84-year- on a bevelled frame after the paint had dried. in the tradition of classical painting. And
old US lyrical abstractionist’s first major He went a step further when he started Tuttle’s works were not paintings; they were
European exhibition. his Drape series in 1978. “That is when coloured fabrics. No one had done it in this
Although “the relation between music he made his most radical decisions, to huge architectural way that Gilliam did.”
and my work isn’t so direct, the structure of completely get rid of the stretcher, to really His works from this period are often
jazz is important”, Gilliam says. “My Drape advance painting in a way no one had done political—a reflection of the turbulent
paintings are never hung the same way before,” says Josef Helfenstein, the director times in which they were made. While
twice. The composition is always present, of the Kunstmuseum Basel and co-curator of Gilliam has always believed that “abstrac-
but one must let things go, be open to the show. Almost like curtains or tapestries, tion is as political as representation”,
improvisation, spontaneity, what’s happen- Gilliam began to hang the canvases in some writers associated with the Black
ing in a space while one works.” corners, from the wall and ceiling. Arts Movement of the 1960s and 1970s
The African-American artist embodied Gilliam was “blurring completely the disagreed, as noted by Mark Godfrey in
the late 1960s jazz ethos in pushing his territory [of painting] and widening it in his catalogue essay for the recent Soul of a
medium to its limits, creating experimental three-dimensional space, and also, in a Nation exhibition at London’s Tate Modern,
abstract works just like his musical heroes. In way, in time: these pieces have a perform- in which Gilliam’s work was shown. Some
1962, the Mississippi-born Gilliam moved to ative component; they’re never the same,” writers felt that “the role and responsibility
Washington, DC, where he came into contact Helfenstein says. of black artists was to create empowering
with Colour Field painting. But Gilliam The artist’s work “compares really inter- images for their people”. Further still,
took a different path from the abstract estingly” to that of his peers and he was “not black artists making abstract works were
painters of the period, peeling right back the only one to have used canvas without said to be “prostrating themselves before
and dismantling the starting point for most stretchers,” Helfenstein says. “At around CONTINUED ON PAGE 18 

Christopher Wool
A New Sculpture
Through August 2018
Luhring Augustine
Bushwick, New York
18 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

INTERVIEW
GILLIAM AT
UNLIMITED
Gilliam is also showing a new

Artist
large-scale work, Unpainted
(2018), in the Unlimited
section of Art Basel with Los
Angeles’s David Kordansky
Gallery. “Gilliam is one of the
most important US artists of
his generation. It is long due
that he gets more international
presence,” says Unlimited’s
curator Gianni Jetzer, adding
that he is “thrilled” that Claude
Viallat—who was a key member
of the Supports/Surfaces
group and is “another master
of staging painting as three-di-
mensional installation art”—is Gilliam’s
also appearing in this year’s new piece
Unlimited. “The French and the Unpainted
American artist are the same age (2018) can
and for me they are soulmates be seen at
with different backgrounds and Art Basel
origins,” Jetzer says. J.S.

 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17


The show at the wildly into a new territory”, Helfenstein says. who are very much focusing on African- look at the Kunstmuseum’s collection,
white institutions and producing work Kunstmuseum This difficulty in categorising his work is, American art,” Helfenstein adds. like in every collection, there are gaps,” he
according to established white aesthetic Basel focuses on Helfenstein believes, one of the reasons that One of the major markers of a renewed says. The exhibition includes the museum’s
ideals”, Godfrey writes. Gilliam’s work from Gilliam was forgotten for so long. “It was the interest in Gilliam—and one that could not recent acquisition, Rondo (1971).
But Gilliam argues that “the expres- 1967 to 1973 time of Minimalist art, it was the late period be missed by visitors—was his huge work Gilliam was very involved in hanging
sive act of making a mark and hanging of Pop art, conceptual art,” which Gilliam Yves Klein Blue (2017) at last year’s Venice the show. “These works are a little bit
it in space is always political. My work is did not fit neatly into, either. “Now he’s Biennale. This marked the return to Venice site-specific, and what I find more interest-
as political as it is formal. Sometimes the seen again in the broader historical context, for Gilliam, who in 1972 became the first ing is that they are kind of time-specific,”
politics are foregrounded by titles. For which is really the goal of our show,” African-American artist to represent the Helfenstein says. “Depending on the space
example, Green April (1968-70) [which is Helfenstein says. US at the biennial when the curator Walter and the place and the moment, they need to
in the Kunstmuseum show] is the largest The curator also notes that Gilliam was Hopps invited him and five others, includ- be almost performed—you don’t just hang

KUNSTMUSEUM: JULIAN SALINAS. UNPAINTED: © DAVID OWENS; DAVID-OWENS.CO.UK


example of a suite of works responding to “sidelined” as an African-American for ing Diane Arbus, to participate. “I spent them like most paintings.”
the April 4, 1968 assassination of Dr Martin making abstract work that was not obviously a week living in the American Pavilion, “It is historically very important to
Luther King Jr.” and figuratively political. “You could see installing my work,” the artist says. document what he says about the work and
Although “he really comes from the in that context [of the Soul of a Nation “Showing at the entrance of the Central to learn how it was intended, as it has not
Washington Colour Field group, he goes exhibition] how unique he was; there were Pavilion 45 years later was liberating: one’s been shown for decades now,” Helfenstein
very few abstract black artists at the time,” work is experienced more broadly; the says. “As a curator you have a certain space
he says. reading is universal rather than national.” to interpret things, but it’s up to you—
“The expressive act of The recent resurgence of looking at “The reason why I thought this show because at a certain point he won’t be

making a mark and


histories of art that are not skewed towards would be especially appropriate here in around any more—to show this in a respon-
white male artists has led to a renewed Basel is because we have a well-known sible and ideal way. There is also something

hanging it in space interest in many African-American artists


who influenced today’s generation.
collection of post-war American art,”
Helfenstein says, who had come to know
very generous about it—in a way it’s like the
jazz of the time.”
is always political” Furthermore, “there are now African-
American collectors with significant means
Gilliam from his time as director of the
Menil Collection in Texas. “But when you
• The Music of Colour: Sam Gilliam, 1967-73,
Kunstmuseum Basel, until 30 September

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12 MAY - 28 JULY 2018


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Art Basel
Hall 2.0 Booth D4
Works by
Andreas Gursky, Pierre Huyghe, Anselm Kiefer,
Ragnar Kjartansson, Sherrie Levine, Glenn Ligon,
Sharon Lockhart, Paul Pfeiffer, Ed Ruscha
and more from the Broad collection.

bernard jacobson gallery Reserve free tickets at thebroad.org


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Henri Matisse Patitcha 1947 35 x 28 cm Image Credit: Ragnar Kjartansson, The Visitors, 2012. Nine channel HD video projection. Commissioned by the
Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich. The Broad Art Foundation. Photo Elísabet Davids. © Ragnar Kjartansson

ArtbaselDailies20183.indd 1 08/06/2018 12:40


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Nancy Hoffman Gallery New York Vito Schnabel Gallery Engadine Valley Cologne Aperture Foundation New York
Rhona Hoffman Gallery Chicago Eduardo Secci Contemporary Florence Moskowitz Bayse Los Angeles Artadia New York
The Hole New York Carrie Secrist Gallery Chicago Shulamit Nazarian Los Angeles Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum
Edwynn Houk Gallery New York, Zürich Stuart Shave / Modern Art London Night Gallery Los Angeles East Lansing
GALLERY HYUNDAI Seoul William Shearburn Gallery St. Louis NOME Berlin Chicago Artists Coalition Chicago
Charlie James Gallery Los Angele Jessica Silverman Gallery San Francisco Officine dell’lmmagine Milan The Conservation Center Chicago
Jenkins Johnson Gallery San Francisco, Simoens Gallery Knokke ROCKELMANN& Berlin DePaul Art Museum Chicago
New York Sims Reed Gallery London Romer Young Gallery San Francisco Human Rights Watch
Kalfayan Galleries Athens, Thessaloniki SmithDavidson Gallery Amsterdam, Miami Sapar Contemporary New York Hyde Park Art Center Chicago
Paul Kasmin Gallery New York Fredric Snitzer Gallery Miami SIM Galeria Curitiba, São Paulo The Joyce Foundation
Anton Kern Gallery New York Sous Les Etoiles Gallery New York Catinca Tabacaru New York, Harare MOSTYN Llandudno
Tina Kim Gallery New York Stene Projects Gallery Stockholm Zalucky Contemporary Toronto National YoungArts Foundation Miami
David Klein Gallery Detroit, Birmingham MARC STRAUS New York Natural Resources Defense Council
Robert Koch Gallery San Francisco Hollis Taggart Galleries New York (NRDC) Chicago
Alan Koppel Gallery Chicago Sundaram Tagore Gallery New York, ProjectArt Chicago, New York,
Galerie Kornfeld Berlin Singapore, Hong Kong Los Angeles, Detroit, Miami, Pittsburgh
Lévy Gorvy New York, London, Shanghai Tandem Press Madison The School of the Art Institute
David Lewis Gallery New York TEMPLON Paris, Brussels of Chicago Chicago
Library Street Collective Detroit Vallarino Fine Art New York Threewalls Chicago
University of Chicago Department
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CALENDAR
Art Basel
From left: Giacometti’s Listings are arranged
Caroline (1961), Bacon’s
Portrait of Isabel
alphabetically by area.
Rawsthorne Standing in Commercial galleries
a Street in Soho (1967)
and Giacometti’s study are marked ▼
of Rawsthorne, Tête
d’Isabel (1937-39)

○ Basel
Non-commercial
Artstübli
Steinentorberg 28
• Eddie Hara: This Is Not Street Art
UNTIL 30 JUNE

Ausstellungsraum Klingental
Kasernenstrasse 23
• Requiem: Artists from
Atelierhaus Klingental
UNTIL 17 JUNE

Fondation Beyeler
Baselstrasse 101
• Beyeler Collection: Nature
& Abstraction
UNTIL 12 AUGUST

Bacon and Giacometti


• Bacon-Giacometti
that cover the walls and floor in the UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER
final room of the exhibition recreate
CAROLINE: PHOTO: ROBERT BAYER; © SUCCESSION ALBERTO GIACOMETTI/PROLITTERIS, ZURICH, 2018. RAWSTHORNE: PHOTO: © BPK/NATIONALGALERIE, STAATLICHE MUSEEN ZU BERLIN/JÖRG P. ANDERS;

these spaces, using archival photo- HeK. Haus der Elektronische


© THE ESTATE OF FRANCIS BACON/PROLITTERIS, ZURICH, 2018. TÊTE D’ISABEL: FONDATION GIACOMETTI, PARIS; PHOTO: JP LAGIEWSKI; © SUCCESSION ALBERTO GIACOMETTI/PROLITTERIS, ZURICH, 2018

face off at the Beyeler


graphs overlaid with sound recordings Künste Basel (House
of the artists. Created by Christian of Electronic Arts)
Borstlap, the head of the Amsterdam Freilager-Platz 9
design studio Part of a Bigger Plan, Basel/Münchenstein
the installation “offers a fascinating • Rafael Lozano-Hemmer: Voice Theatre
insight into this personal cosmos”, UNTIL 1 JULY
according to a statement. Visitors can • Lynn Hershman Leeson: Anti-Bodies
Major show explores how artists treated love and violence “in vicious ways” also watch a 360-degree film of the
studios on their mobile phones.
UNTIL 5 AUGUST

The idea for the exhibition came Historisches Museum Basel/


Bacon and Giacometti
Fondation Beyeler
artists are presented thematically in
the exhibition, with works juxtaposed
“Both challenged the out of a discussion between Küster
and Grenier at the 2015 Venice
Museum für Geschichte
Barfüsserplatz 7
UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER to allow for direct comparisons. As traditional borders Biennale. Although the Swiss museum • Medieval Worlds of Faith

A solo show of works by Francis


well as a section dedicated to pieces
modelled on Rawsthorne, themes
of aesthetics” owns important works by Bacon and
Giacometti (the museum’s founder,
UNTIL 17 NOVEMBER 2019

Bacon or Alberto Giacometti include the artists’ obsession with the renowned art dealer and collector Kunsthalle Basel
alone would be enough to draw big depicting the human head; the rep- attributes these differences to Ernst Beyeler, knew both artists per- Steinenberg 7
crowds, but the Fondation Beyeler has resentation of movement in painting Bacon’s tendency to work from pho- sonally), and has long exhibited the • Raphaela Vogel: Ultranackt
upped the ante by staging a double and sculpture; love and violence; tographs, while Giacometti liked to two side by side in its collection, the UNTIL 12 AUGUST
whammy on the two Modern masters. and the use of cage-like structures to draw from life. “The differences and curators were surprised to find that • Luke Willis Thompson: Human
The Swiss Giacometti (1901-66) and create space and perspective. similarities deepen the understand- no major institution had put on such UNTIL 19 AUGUST
the Dublin-born Bacon (1909-92) were Although the similarities in the ing of the work of both artists,” he a comparative show.
well acquainted. They first met in the artists’ work are highlighted, striking says. Küster has organised the The challenges artists faced after Kunsthaus Baselland
early 1960s, and were probably intro- differences are also brought to the 100-piece exhibition with the direc- the Second World War prompted St Jakob-Strasse 170
duced by the British painter Isabel fore. Giacometti’s use of grey stands tor of the Fondation Giacometti, different responses in Bacon and • Rossella Biscotti
Rawsthorne, who was Giacometti’s in stark contrast to Bacon’s lavish use Catherine Grenier, and the Bacon Giacometti. “Both challenged • Rochelle Feinstein
lover and a model for both artists of colour. Both artists used distortion expert Michael Peppiatt. traditional borders of aesthetics,” • Naama Tsabar
during different periods. Both strived in their work, but Bacon preferred a Both men were known for their Küster says, “in sometimes vicious UNTIL 16 JULY
to capture Rawsthorne’s famously blurring of the face; Giacometti, on small, chaotic studios; although ways: Bacon more outspokenly • Vittorio Brodmann
alluring character—Bacon in paint the other hand, attempted to elimi- Bacon admitted very few outsiders, expressive, Giacometti more inwardly UNTIL 31 DECEMBER
and Giacometti in sculpture. nate the presence of the sitter. Giacometti received visits from many destructive.”
Other similarities between the two The show’s co-curator Ulf Küster fellow artists. Two video projections Aimee Dawson ○
Continued on p24

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24 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

CALENDAR
Art Basel


Continued from p23
Schweizerisches a Collaborative Installation
Kunstmuseum Basel Gegenwart Architekturmuseum UNTIL 4 AUGUST
St Alban, Rheinweg 60 Steinenberg 7
• Theaster Gates: Black Madonna • Bengal Stream: the Vibrant t John Schmid Galerie
UNTIL 21 OCTOBER Architecture Scene of Bangladesh St Alban Anlage 67
UNTIL 24 JUNE • Olaf Holzapfel
Kunstmuseum Basel Hauptbau UNTIL 4 NOVEMBER
St Alban-Graben 16 Commercial
• Metropole in Schwarz-Weiss: Paris t Laleh June Galerie
Im Spiegel der Editions Paul-Martial t Anne Mosseri-Marlio Galerie Picassoplatz 4
UNTIL 24 JUNE Malzgasse 20 • Ten Years
• Art, Money, Museum: the • Kimiyo Mishima UNTIL 28 JULY
Picasso Story, 50 Years Later UNTIL 13 JULY
UNTIL 12 AUGUST t Nicolas Krupp
• Modern Dance of the Dead t Atelier-Editions Fanal Contemporary Art
UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER St Alban-Tal 39 Rosentalstrasse 28
• Adolf Wőlfli: Focus Paper • Karin Kappeli-von Bülow, • Raimer Jochims Gerda Steiner and Jörg Lenzlinger’s installation Floods (2011) will be restaged as part of the artists’ show
UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER Fabienne Sylvestre UNTIL 1 SEPTEMBER
• Martha Rosler, Hito Steyerl: War Games
UNTIL 2 DECEMBER
UNTIL 12 JULY
t Stampa Swiss artists run amok at the Tinguely
• My Dear Holder! Documents from t Balzer Projects Spalenberg 2
the Archive of Carl Albert Loosli Wallstrasse 10 • Vivian Suter: Works, 1988-2018 Too Early to Panic: Gerda Steiner and Jörg Lenzlinger
UNTIL 14 OCTOBER • The End Is Where We Start From: • General Idea: Works, 1981-92 Museum Tinguely, Basel
UNTIL 23 SEPTEMBER
on Tsunamis, Nuclear Explosions UNTIL 1 SEPTEMBER
Kunstmuseum Basel Neubau and Other Fairy Tales What do tears, fitness machines, labyrinths, fertiliser crystals, secretaries, tree branches and
St Alban-Graben 20 UNTIL 21 JULY t Tony Wuethrich Galerie meteorites have in common? Nothing, normally, but in the surreal worlds that the Swiss
• Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts Vogesenstrasse 29 artists Gerda Steiner and Jörg Lenzlinger concoct, using natural and mass-produced objects, each
UNTIL 26 AUGUST t Büro • Bettina Scholz: Parallel Realities has a role to play. For the exhibition Too Early to Panic, the Museum Tinguely is presenting
• Maria Lassnig: Dialogues St. Johanns-Vorstadt 46 UNTIL 30 JUNE labyrinthine installations that incorporate all of these elements and many more. Nature,
UNTIL 26 AUGUST • Lynn Hershman Leeson biodiversity and transformation are key themes in the duo’s work, and the immersive
• Sam Gilliam: the Music of Colour UNTIL 17 JUNE t Vitrine Basel presentation is designed to awaken the senses and allow for the contemplation of concepts such as
UNTIL 30 SEPTEMBER Vogesenplatz growth, beauty, death and fertility—and the impact on society of the choices we make. “It’s a total
t Galerie Carzaniga • Hanae Wilke: Close Quarters work of art—a real gesamtkunstwerk,” says the exhibition’s curator, Séverine Fromaigeat, who
Museum der Kulturen Basel Gemsberg 8 + 10 UNTIL 24 JUNE worked closely with the artists on the show, which explores 25 years of Steiner and Lenzlinger’s
Münsterplatz 20 • Lorenz Spring: Works from • Jamie Fitzpatrick, Lindsey working relationship, as well as what they did separately before they became a duo. E.S.
• Secrecy: Who’s Allowed to Private Collections Mendick: Smut
Know What UNTIL 16 JUNE UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER
UNTIL 21 APRIL 2019 Stadtmuseum Aarau WINTERTHUR Schweizerisches Landesmuseum
t Galerie Knoell t Von Bartha Schlossplatz 23 Fotomuseum Winterthur Museumstrasse 2
Museum Tinguely Luftgasslein 4 Kannenfeldplatz 6 • Peter Koehl: Carte Blanche Gruzenstrasse 44 and 45 • Swiss Press Photo 18
Paul Sacher-Anlage 1 • Konstruktiv: Vantongerloo, • Landon Metz: Feels So Right Now UNTIL 14 JUNE • Juergen Teller: Enjoy Your Life! UNTIL 1 JULY
• Gerda Steiner and Jőrg Albers, Bill, Loewensberg UNTIL 21 JULY • Network Swiss Press UNTIL 7 OCTOBER • World Press Photo
Lenzlinger: Too Early to Panic UNTIL 14 JULY UNTIL 8 JULY UNTIL 8 JULY
UNTIL 23 SEPTEMBER Kunst Raum Riehen • Multicoloured Is Life Kunstmuseum Winterthur • In Search of Style 1850-1900
• Gauri Gill: Traces t Graf & Schelble Galerie Berowergut Baselstrasse 71, Riehen UNTIL 26 AUGUST Museumstrasse 52 UNTIL 15 JULY
UNTIL 1 NOVEMBER Spalenvorstadt 14 • Louisa Clement: Language of Realities • The Female Touch: Miniature Portraits • What Does Switzerland Eat?
• Selected Works by Gallery Artists • Tim Berresheim: Smashin’ Time II BERN • Rembrandt Operates UNTIL 23 SEPTEMBER
Salts UNTIL 20 JUNE UNTIL 12 AUGUST Kornhausforum UNTIL 17 JUNE • Joggeli, Pitschi, Globi: Popular
Hauptstrasse 12, Birsfelden Kornhausplatz 18, Postfach • Occupying Spaces: Works Swiss Picture Books
• Rodrigo Hernandez: t Guillaume Daeppen • Architektur Macht Schuel: by Female Sculptors 15 JUNE-14 OCTOBER
the Gourd and the Fish Gallery for Urban Art Architekturforum Bern Vortragsreihe UNTIL 12 AUGUST
Shedhalle
 Beyond Basel
• Jumana Manna Müllheimerstrasse 144 UNTIL 26 JUNE • Ferdinand Hodler/Alberto
• Bhanu Kapil • Sergej Vutuc • Walter Studer: Photographs, 1918-86 Giacometti: a Confrontation Rote Fabrik, Seestrasse 395
UNTIL 25 AUGUST • Tadej Vaukman UNTIL 5 AUGUST UNTIL 19 AUGUST • Studio A Fantasy
UNTIL 14 JULY UNTIL 29 JULY
Schaulager France Kunsthalle Bern Kunsthalle Winterthur
Ruchfeldstrasse 19 t Hebel 121 Helvetiaplatz 1 Market Gasse 25 t Galerie Eva Presenhuber
• Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts Hebelstrasse 121 ALTKIRCH • Harald Szeemann: Grandfather, • Una Szeemann Maag Areal, Zahnradstrasse 21
UNTIL 26 AUGUST • Kate Shepherd/Daniel Gottin: Crac Alsace a Pioneer Like Us UNTIL 22 JULY • Doug Aitken
18, rue du Chateau UNTIL 2 AUGUST UNTIL 27 JULY
ZURICH
 SATELLITE FAIRS
• On Working and then Not Working • Harald Szeemann: Museum
UNTIL 16 SEPTEMBER of Obsessions Haus Konstruktiv t Galerie Gmurzynska,
UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER Selnaustrasse 25 Talstrasse
MULHOUSE • Imi Knoebel Talstrasse 37
La Filature Kunstmuseum Bern • Till Velten • Christo
20 Lane Nathan Katz Hodlerstrasse 12 UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER UNTIL 30 JUNE
• Christian Milovanoff • Gurlitt: Status Report, Nazi Art • Wifredo Lam: Nouveau
UNTIL 1 SEPTEMBER Theft and its Consequences Kunsthaus Zürich Nouveau Monde
STEINER AND LENZLINGER: © GERDA STEINER AND JÖRG LENZLINGER, 2018. BROTHERUS: © ELINA BROTHERUS; COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND CAMARA OSCURA GALERIA DE ARTE

UNTIL 15 JULY Heimplatz 1 UNTIL 30 SEPTEMBER


Germany • Martha Stettler: an Impressionist • Magritte, Dietrich, Rousseau:
Between Bern and Paris Visionary Objectivity t Galerie Gmurzynska,
SIEGEN UNTIL 29 JULY UNTIL 8 JULY Paradeplatz
Museum für Gegenwartskunst • Fashion Drive: Extreme Talstrasse 37 and Paradeplatz 2
Unteres Schloss 1 Zentrum Paul Klee Clothing in the Visual Arts • Christo
• Remembering Landscape Monument im Fruchtland 3 UNTIL 15 JULY UNTIL 30 JUNE
UNTIL 30 SEPTEMBER • Etel Adnan
15 JUNE-7 OCTOBER Luma Westbau t Galerie Mark Müller
WEIL AM RHEIN • Cosmos Klee Lowenbraukunst Hafnerstrasse 44
Elina Brotherus’s Gelbe Musik with Sunflowers (2016, detail),
Vitra Design Museum UNTIL 28 OCTOBER Limmatstrasse 270 • Christine Streuli: Smokescreen
presented by Camara Oscura Galeria de Arte at Photo Basel
Charles-Eames-Strasse 1 • Ser Serpas UNTIL 21 JULY
Design Miami/Basel Paper Positions • Bas Princen: Image and Architecture LIESTAL • Lena Tuntunjian
Hall 1 Süd, Messe Basel Ackermannshof, UNTIL 5 AUGUST Kunsthalle Palazzo • Women’s History Museum: t Galerie Nicola von Senger
UNTIL 17 JUNE St Johanns-Vorstadt 19-12 • Night Fever: Designing Club Poststrasse 2 Her Bed Surrounded by Machines Limmatstrasse 275
UNTIL 17 JUNE Culture, 1960-Today • Spirit of Geneva: Narrative UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER • Daniele Buetti
Frame UNTIL 9 SEPTEMBER Painting from the Geneva Area UNTIL 14 JULY
Basel Art Center, Photo Basel UNTIL 24 JUNE Museum für Gestaltung
Riehentorstrasse 31
UNTIL 17 JUNE
Volkshaus Basel, Rebgasse 12-14
UNTIL 17 JUNE
Switzerland Ausstellungsstrasse 60 t Galerie Peter Kilchmann
LUCERNE • Protest! Resistance in Posters Zahnradstrasse 21
GZ-Bazel Rhy Art Fair AARAU Kunstmuseum Luzern UNTIL 2 SEPTEMBER • Los Carpinteros: Susurro
An der Messe, Schönaustrasse 10 Rhypark, Mülhauserstrasse 17 Aargauer Kunsthaus Europaplatz 1 • Oiphorie: Atelier Oi Del Palmar
UNTIL 17 JUNE UNTIL 17 JUNE Aargauerplatz • Carnival of Animals: Works UNTIL 30 SEPTEMBER UNTIL 27 JULY
I Never Read, Art Book Fair Scope Basel • Su-Mei Tse: Nested from the Collection
Kaserne Basel, Klybeckstrasse 1b Scope Haus, Webergasse 34 UNTIL 12 AUGUST UNTIL 6 JANUARY 2019 Museum Rietberg t Hauser & Wirth
UNTIL 16 JUNE UNTIL 17 JUNE • On the Road: Ten Years of Caravan Gablerstrasse 15 Limmatstrasse 270
UNTIL 23 SEPTEMBER t Galerie Urs Meile • Monsters, Devils and Demons • Jean Dubuffet and the City
Liste Volta 14 • Pictures for Everyone: Prints and Rosenberghohe 4 UNTIL 16 SEPTEMBER • Roni Horn Wits’ End Sample:
Burgweg 15 Elsässerstrasse 215
Multiples by Thomas Huber, 1980-2018 • Meng Huang: Bo (Waves) • Bead Art from Africa Recent Drawings
UNTIL 17 JUNE UNTIL 16 JUNE
UNTIL 11 NOVEMBER UNTIL 3 AUGUST UNTIL 21 OCTOBER UNTIL 1 SEPTEMBER
THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018 25
w

JOIN
 The week’s
FRIDAY 15 JUNE
CONVERSATIONS
SATURDAY 16 JUNE
CONVERSATIONS NEW YORK’S
LEADING FAIR
10am Society, Politics and the 10am Artist Influencers

talks and events Art System


Artists Lauren Bon and Ahmet Ogut
The New York-based artist Sarah Sze
tells Serpentine Galleries artistic direc-
Unless otherwise noted, all take and the curator Laura Raicovich discuss tor Hans Ulrich Obrist how the German
place in Hall 1.1, Messe Basel the ways in which the arts community artist Katharina Grosse’s work inspired
is supporting social change and areas in and informed her own practice.
which more can be done. 2pm The Alberto Burri Case
2pm Self-Construction, The life and work of the Italian
THURSDAY 14 JUNE Self-Governance post-war artist is explored by Bruno
CONVERSATIONS The architects Patti Anahory and Corà from the Fondazione Palazzo
10am What Can a Biennial Do? David Juarez, and Santiago Cirugeda, Albizzini Collezione Burri, Luca

MARCH 7–10,
Forthcoming biennial directors Ralph the architect involved in the Basilea Massimo Barbero from the Giorgio
Rugoff (2019 Venice Biennale), Zoe Messeplatz project, discuss how Cini Foundation and Philip Rylands,
Butt (co-curator of Sharjah Biennial architecture can serve as a platform the emeritus director of the Peggy
14) and Eva González-Sancho, for pubic inquiry. Guggenheim Collection.
curator (Oslo Biennale 2019) and the Messeplatz 5pm Starting a Collection
researcher Shwetal Ashvin Pavel offer 2pm The Impact of Data on The Swiss collector of Chinese art Uli

2019
tips on how to avoid biennial fatigue the Market Sigg and the emerging art collector
and look at where biennial culture Josh Baer of the Baer Faxt and the Tom Kümmeke share their experi-
may be headed. economist Clare McAndrew talk ences—good and bad—of assembling
2pm Blockchain and the Art World about how transactional data is an art collection.
The Berlin-based artist Simon Denny currently affecting the art market PERFORMANCE
weighs in on the current and future and what effect this data may have in From 7pm Parcours Night
impact of blockchain on art with the the future. Performances
founder of the blockchain company 3pm Artist Talk: Lynn Multi-media presentations by artists,
Verisart, Robert Norton, and Kelani Hershman Leeson including Keren Cytter, Luke Willis
Nichole, the founder of Brooklyn’s The artist and film-maker Lynn Thompson and Venuri Perera, staged
Transfer gallery and director of the
New York co-operative collection of
media art, The Current.
Hershman Leeson chats with the
director of the House of Electronic
Arts, Sabine Himmelsbach, and Art
at locations within the city.
On and around Münsterplatz
FILM
APPLICATION
5pm Ethics of Exporting
Gallery Models
The gallerists Massimo De Caro, David
Basel film curator Maxa Zoller about
her interest in artificial intelligence
and biological progress.
8pm Heather Lenz: Kusama—Infinity
The documentary film-maker charts
the rise of the Japanese artist
DEADLINE JULY 11
Maupin of Lehmann Maupin and Liza 4pm Sustainable City Yayoi Kusama.
Essers of Goodman Gallery discuss Development: the Role of Art Stadtkino Basel, Klostergasse 5
the use of traditional gallery models in Cecilia Alemani, the artistic director
non-Western environments with The of Art Basel Cities Buenos Aires, the SUNDAY 17 JUNE
Art Newspaper’s art market editor, curator of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale CONVERSATIONS
Anna Brady. 2018, Anita Dube, and the artistic 1pm Techne Techno Tech
FILM director of Public Art Munich 2018, Basilea artist, dancer and electronic
7pm Lynn Hershman Leeson, Joanna Warsza, discuss the arts and music-maker Isabel Lewis talks about
Conceiving Ada healthy urban growth. the contemporary rituals associated
The Scottish actress and art-fair Messeplatz with gathering, with the Tate’s
regular Tilda Swinton plays the role of 5pm How to Buy Art international art curator Catherine
the 19th-century English mathemati- French dealer Philippe Charpentier of Wood and Sharjah 14 Biennial curator
cian Ada Lovelace, who is thought to mor charpentier, collector Monique Claire Tancons.
be the very first computer program- Burger and others discuss topics such Messeplatz
mer. A Q&A with the US artist and as trusting one’s intuition, how to 2pm Different Histories,
film-maker will follow the screening. handle buyer’s remorse and the com- Different Futures
Stadtkino Basel, Klostergasse 5 mitments made when one acquire a Art Basel’s Unlimited curator Gianni
9pm Vertighosts: Homages to work of art. Jetzer and the Bulgarian artist
Hitchcock’s Vertigo FILM Nedko Solakov, who has a piece in
Two films by Douglas Gordon and 8.30pm Shirin Neshat: the Unlimited sector, discuss works
Lynn Hershman Leeson that pay Looking for Oum Kulthum in this section and explore how by
tribute to Hitchcock’s 1958 thriller. A fictional film inspired by the life re-examining history we can change
Stadtkino Basel, Klostergasse 5 of the famed Egyptian singer Oum the future.
Kulthum, who was active throughout 3pm Artist Talk: Haegue Yang
the Arab world from the 1920s to the The South Korean artist and 2018
Actress and art-fair regular Tilda 1970s. A Q&A with the Iranian artist Wolfgang Hahn prize-winner discusses
Swinton stars in Lynn Hershman will follow the screening. her work with the director of Cologne’s
Leeson’s 1997 film Conceiving Ada Stadtkino Basel, Klostergasse 5 Museum Ludwig, Yilmaz Dziewior.

TAS18_Advertising.indd 161 5/17/18 5:16 PM


26 THE ART NEWSPAPER.COM ART BASEL FAIR EDITION 14 JUNE 2018

COLLECTOR’S EYE
Art lovers tell us what they’ve bought and why

“Female artists THE ART NEWSPAPER


are the heroines Art Basel editions

of my recent EDITORIAL AND PRODUCTION


Editor (The Art Newspaper):

acquisitions” Alison Cole


Co-editors (fair papers):
Julia Michalska, Emily Sharpe
What was the first piece of Production editor: Ria Hopkinson
art you bought? Copy editors: Alison Gunn, Dean Gurden,
Andrew McIlwraith, Vivienne Riddoch,
I made my first purchases while
Robert Spellman
I was still in law school. I focused
Designer: Vici MacDonald
on posters by Polish artists for
Photographer: David Owens
two reasons: they were within
Picture researchers: Katherine Hardy,
the reach of my student pocket—
Aimee Dawson
but, foremost, because during that
Contributors: Georgina Adam, Kenneth
time the Polish School of Posters
Baker, Anna Brady, Aimee Dawson, Alec Evans,
was a widely acknowledged and Melanie Gerlis, Gareth Harris, Ben Luke, Hannah
well-respected form of art. McGivern, Julia Michalska, Jane Morris, Emily
Sharpe, José da Silva, Anny Shaw
What is the most recent Design and production (commercial):
work you have bought? Daniela Hathaway
I am fascinated by female artists
and they are the heroines of my DIRECTORS AND PUBLISHING
most recent acquisitions. Publisher: Inna Bazhenova
Chairman: Anna Somers Cocks
What is the most valuable Chief executive: Julie Sherborn
work in your collection? Management accountant:
It was, of course, a work by a Evgenia Spellman
female artist. I hope that I will see Accountant: Matha Murali
the day when, on the list of 100 Associate publisher, fairs and events
media: Stephanie Ollivier
top-selling artists, 50% of them
Head of subscriptions and membership:
will be women. For many years,
James Greenwood
my activity has been informed by
Head of sales (UK): Kath Boon
a 50-50 philosophy, which should
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be transferred to the sphere of
Advertising sales and production
male-female equality as well. manager: Henrietta Bentall
Marketing manager (the Americas):
If money was no object, Steven Kaminski
what would be your dream Administrator/book-keeper (the Americas):
purchase? Anthony Shao
My dreams often revolve around Digital development director:

Grazyna Kulczyk
works that are for various reasons Mikhail Mendelevich
inaccessible but are not necessar- System administrator: Lucien Ntumba
ily the most expensive. Office co-ordinator and customer support:
Margaret Brown
Which work in your
collection requires the most PUBLISHED BY U. ALLEMANDI
maintenance? & CO. PUBLISHING LTD
Sometimes I wish I had trained as
UK OFFICE:
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T: +44 (0)20 3416 9000
Deep in Switzerland’s Engadin valley, in a remote town on the ancient How did you first get into find it easier to handle kinetic art. E: londonoffice@theartnewspaper.com
pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela, lies the future Muzeum Susch. collecting?
The contemporary art museum, scheduled to open on 2 January 2019, will The people who inspired me Which artists, dead or alive, US OFFICE:
join a dense cluster of more than 30 cultural institutions in this corner of most during the course of my would you invite to your T: +1 212 343 0727
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will house the vast art collection of Grazyna Kulczyk, Poland’s richest woman. art historians. So, alongside my a little, it is actually my dream to © The Art Newspaper Ltd, 2018

Kulczyk—who was married to the late billionaire industrialist Jan Kulczyk—is the core studies, I educated myself have been seated at the table of All rights reserved. No part of this newspaper may be reproduced
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founder of Stary Browar in Poznan, a former brewery that she turned into Poland’s on topics connected to art and Judy Chicago’s The Dinner Party Newspaper is not responsible for statements expressed in the
largest cultural institution. In 2015, Stary Browar, which also housed shops and then began to conduct classes [1974-79]. signed articles and interviews. While every care is taken by the
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the next step. For many years, I have dreamed about building a world-class museum munity centres in various small Which purchase do you
of contemporary art, and I want to dedicate myself to this goal in the coming years,” towns in Poland. This activity most regret?
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KULCZYK: © ADAM PLUCINSKI

Kulczyk said at the time. In addition to her museum in Susch, she also dreamed of eventually inspired me to start They say that our personality and
establishing one in Warsaw, but these plans were put on ice around the same time as building my own collection, with what we find interesting changes theartnewspaper.com
Poland’s right-wing government came to power. Here, Kulczyk tells us about how she the aim of enabling and edu- every seven years. So, really, I @theartnewspaper
@theartnewspaper
started collecting art while she was at law school. cating others in art, which is a would have to answer this ques- @theartnewspaper.official
Interview by Julia Michalska strong value I hold. tion differently every seven years.

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Egon Schiele, Reclining Woman, 1917, price realised €2,345,000

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Carlos Cruz-Diez, Physichromie UBS Vert, 1975, 277 x 560 cm, Acrylic paint on aluminum and coated Plexiglas, UBS Art Collection,
© 2018, ProLitteris, Zurich

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