2013 Art Shows – A Year in Review.

WHAT MAKES FOR A GREAT ART FAIR? 

Image

1.Vernissage - defined as a great opening party. The Salon Art + Design Show in NYC at the Park Avenue Armory earlier this month was a civilized and elegant affair after a few weeks of NYC auction art frenzy. With Sylvia Panijal Chavillat & Picasso

2.Great Art: Works that have rarely or possibly never been shown before. Art Fairs should be like a well produced fashion show, always with a new collection. There are enough artists out there to support this premise.

3. Unique / Special Venue: In a good location or a creative and interesting space that draws people in.

4. Well Curated Booth: Which reflects the local cultural and global issues. A well thought out booth that can tell a story or refers to the artists behind the work.

5. Branding: Viewers should be able to identify with the show and take something away from it instead of being overly conceptual and out there, unless the later objective is to be far reaching. Then it is a show where the focus is not on selling art... begging the question "How does that help the artist?"

Some art fair organizers believe that healthy competition is good - but how much is too much?

Two contemporary art fairs were held on the same weekend last summer in Bridgehampton, NY - the artMRKT Hamptons and ArtHamptons shows.

The former with 40 exhibitors was held at the Bridgehampton Historical Center grounds in the center of the village, right at the Hampton Jitney stop.

ArtMRKT Hamptons made a valiant attempt to entertain the guests with unusual music, performances and creatively dressed waitstaff; along with a wide array of gourmet food trucks from the five boroughs.

Image

Rebecca, owner of Rebecca Hossack Art Gallery at Art Hamptons.

ArtHamptons was held north of Bridgehamton on the 95 acre Sculpture Fields of Nova's Ark with 78 galleries, with seemingly endless aisles and some booths featured just too much inventory.

Art Hamptons seemed to be focused on many social events -including a party celebrating the accomplishments of three time winner of the Pulitzer Prize and three Tony awards Edward Albee.

Both shows offered collectors a great chance to talk to exhibiting artists, gallery owners and other collectors.

I visited one of my favorites - The Rebecca Hossack Art Gallery - where I have collected from in the past. I have even gone as far as to visit her two galleries in London, and now it is easier to drop in on the gallery since they now have a location at 262 Mott Street in NYC. I've bought two pieces from Rebecca including a work by Kate Jenkins. Rececca is one of the hardest working gallery owners I know - who exhibited at both Art Hamptons and Art Southampton - the third and last local art fair this past summer.

Image

One of my highlights of the Art Hamptons fair was the opportunity to meet and talk with painter / sculptor / writer / activist Faith Ringgold who was recognized with the show's 2013 Artist Lifetime Achievement Honor.

Faith is well known for her painted story quilts, which blur the line between "high art" and "craft" by combining painting, quilted fabric and storytelling - dating back to the 1960s. She is a native of Harlem, and is a professor emeritus of the UC San Diego visual arts department.

An interesting contrarian is Eric Doeringer, an artist who does "Guerrilla Art Fairs" out of the back of his car, featuring art re-creations from the 1960s-80s including knock-offs of Richard Prince and Andy Warhol and unauthorized bootleg works from over 100 different

contemporary artists. Eric has a sense of humor about his work, and finds great locations!

At a recent ATOA (Artist Talk on Art) forum on art fairs/shows with a panel run by Michael Sellinger - he commented that art show exhibitors are going to pay a minimum of $50/sq. ft. at the more reasonably priced art fairs. I mentioned the NYC Affordable Art Fair as a good choice for galleries since the cost to do business starts at a more reasonable rate of $10-20,000 for a booth for a 3-5 day event.(Not including travel, food, employees,etc.)

Because of the expense involved, gallery owners need to be very focused on the choice of art they bring to the show and how they display it. They need to appeal to both their existing client base of collectors, the new emerging collector segment and institutions if they are going to make art shows / fairs a viable business proposition.

ImageImage
ImageImage

I am off to the Art Basel Miami Beach show on December 2nd in order to fit in the official 22 (and counting) satellite art fairs.

In order to keep your social calendars organized I recommend the paper mag blog and the Art-Collecting.com Miami Beach Art Fair Guide 2013 .

If you can pull it off to go to the pre-openings - such as Art Basel Vernissage at the Miami Beach Convention Center, for great people watching as well as an international collection of multi-million dollar branded art.

I will be seeking new artists for my personal collection and my building art curation program in commercial spaces here in NYC, as well as meeting with galleries/artist looking for commercial space in New York City.

WHAT IS YOUR CURE FOR AN ART-HANGOVER?

I'm looking forward to my "art-hangover" cure of fried chicken and waffles at
 "Tongue and Cheek" in the sofi district in Miami.

Join me for my cure, share yours or let's look at art together in Miami.

I can be reached at cindy@realartmuse.com

Leave a Reply to Mitchel Pilnick Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.