AO On-Site – London: Frieze Art Fair, October 5th – 8th, 2017

October 7th, 2017

Do Ho Suh at Victoria Miro, via Art Observed
Do Ho Suh at Victoria Miro, via Art Observed

On a cloudy Wednesday morning in London’s Regent’s Park, the doors opened on this year’s edition of the Frieze art fair, marking the latest edition of an event that has long billed itself as the premiere at event in the British capital.  This year’s opening continued to show why, as strong sales and an increasingly attentive approach towards curating and showing works made for an immersive and nuanced whole.

Renate Bertlmann at Richard Saltoun Gallery, via Art Observed
Renate Bertlmann at Richard Saltoun Gallery, via Art Observed

Frieze has long staked its reputation on focusing on the contemporary, in any sense of the word.  Young galleries and artists are at a premium at the fair, and director Victoria Siddall has emphasized the role that curatorship plays in the fair’s proceedings, often doubling down on impressive curated shows alongside the fair’s main sales offerings.

Pamela Rosencranz at Spruth Magers, via Art Observed
Pamela Rosencranz at Spruth Magers, via Art Observed

This could be seen in considerable degree this year. At the center of the fair’s ambitious direction this year were a series of special projects, including its annual talks, performances and sculpture projects, but also complemented this year by “Sex Work: Feminist Art & Radical Politics,” an exhibition organized by Alison M. Gingeras that culled together works by a wide range of historically-resonant feminist artists and conceptual practitioners. Spread throughout the fair, visitors could encounter a series of comical yet commanding cactus and sex toy sculptures by Renate Bertlmann in one corner, or Betty Tompkins’s arresting drawings depicted sexual organs in mid-congress.

Hauser and Wirth's Bronze Age Show, via Art Observed
Hauser and Wirth’s Bronze Age Show, via Art Observed

Hauser and Wirth's Bronze Age Show, via Art Observed.
Hauser and Wirth’s Bronze Age Show, via Art Observed.

But it wasn’t just the fair itself that was taking a broader curatorial tack in its exhibition projects. Take the Hauser & Wirth booth for instance, which had put together an impressively expansive exhibition curated by University of Cambridge professor Mary Beard.  Bronze Age c. 3500 BC – AD 2017 was an intriguing experiment in conceptual show-making, arranging a body of works from Louise BourgeoisMarcel Duchamp and others into a simulated museum exhibition exploring the intersection of bronze sculpture and tool making in the past through to the present day. The gallery’s focus saw a Subodh Gupta’s set of bronze potatoes (Food for Others, 2013) sell for €150,000, while a Jean Arp sculpture sold for $1.1 million.

Hauser and Wirth's Bronze Age Show, via Art Observed
Hauser and Wirth’s Bronze Age Show, via Art Observed

At Gagosian Gallery, a show of works explored the concept of drawing and painting as inseparable practices, including works by Sterling Ruby, Franz West and Mark GrotjahnDavid Zwirner had also brought an impressively appointed booth this year, and earned the sales to prove it, as Jeff Koons’s Gazing Ball (Giotto the Kiss of Judas) for $2.75 million, while another Koons work notched $600,000.

Jeremy Moon at Luhring Augustine, via Art Observed
Jeremy Moon at Luhring Augustine, via Art Observed

Jose Davila at Travesia Cuatro, via Art Observed
Jose Davila at Travesia Cuatro, via Art Observed

Outside the fair, the sculpture park was back in strong form, bringing works like Michael Craig Martin’s skeletal wheelbarrow form, Alicja Kwade’s mirrored rock installation, and a massive piece by KAWS that sat nearby.  Inside, the fair’s performance schedule was also already in full swing, as Mark Fell launched into the first of a series of performances featuring new compositions of electroacoustic sound design.

Anabelle Juda, via Art Observed
Anabelle Juda, via Art Observed

Jannis Kounellis at Michael Werner, via Art Observed
Jannis Kounellis at Michael Werner, via Art Observed

With such a broad program, the Frieze fair seems to have once again proven itself as a central event in the fall art calendar, pushing its own limits as a fair and exhibition project even as its exhibitors push themselves ever further.  The show closes Sunday, October 8th.

Joseph Beuys at David Zwirner, via Art Observed
Joseph Beuys at David Zwirner, via Art Observed

Drawing works at Gagosian Gallery, via Art Observed
Drawing works at Gagosian Gallery, via Art Observed

Drawing works at Gagosian Gallery, via Art Observed
Drawing works at Gagosian Gallery, via Art Observed

Claes Oldenburg and Hauser and Wirth, via Art Observed
Claes Oldenburg at Hauser & Wirth, via Art Observed

Cindy Sherman at Skarstedt, via Art Observed
Cindy Sherman at Skarstedt, via Art Observed

Work on via at Gavin Brown's Enterprise, via Art Observed
Work on via at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, via Art Observed

Jean-Michel Basquiat at Acquavella
Jean-Michel Basquiat at Acquavella

Andy Warhol at Nahmand Contemporary, via Art Observed
Andy Warhol at Nahmand Contemporary, via Art Observed

Dan Flavin at David Zwirner, via Art Observed
Dan Flavin at David Zwirner, via Art Observed

— D. Creahan

Read more:
Frieze London [Exhibition Page]
As Frieze London Matures, Choices Push Boundaries [NYT]
Frieze 2017: Judas, Bourgeois and Mary Beard storm the hyper-capitalist hothouse [Guardian]
Big Sales at Frieze Preview—$2.75 M. Koons, $2.5 M. Polke—Point to Continued Strength in London Market [Art News]