Artissima 2018 Sections
Karlos Gil, Daedalus Overdrive, 2017. Courtesy of the artist and Galeria Francisco Fino.
David Horvitz, WHEN THE OCEAN SOUNDS (WAVES), 2018. Courtesy of the artist and Loom Gallery.
Artissima 2018 has eight sections.
Four sections are selected by the fair’s committee:
• Main Section, presenting the most representative galleries on the international scene. This year 94 galleries have been selected, including 44 foreign ones.
• New Entries, section dedicated to emerging international players, with 14 galleries this year, of which 10 from abroad.
• Dialogue, focuses on specific projects in which the works of two or three artists are shown in close dialogue with each other, presenting 19 galleries of which 12 from other countries.
• Art Spaces & Editions, a gathering of galleries specialised in artists’ editions and multiples, project spaces and non-profit initiatives, with 9 exhibitors.
Four of the sections are curated by teams of international curators and directors:
• Present Future
• Back to the Future
• Disegni
• Sound (new!)
Main Section, New Entries, Dialogue, Art Spaces & Editions Selection Committee
Isabella Bortolozzi, Isabella Bortolozzi gallery, Berlin
Paola Capata, Monitor gallery, Roma
Guido Costa, Guido Costa Projects gallery, Torino
Martin McGeown, Cabinet gallery, London
Alessandro Pasotti, P420 gallery, Bologna
Gregor Podnar, Gregor Podnar gallery, Berlin
Jocelyn Wolff, Jocelyn Wolff gallery, Paris
CURATED SECTIONS
PRESENT FUTURE
For 18 years now, Present Future is the curated section of Artissima for emerging talents.
The works presented at the centre of the pavilion are the result of in-depth research conducted by the curatorial team composed of Cloé Perrone (coordinator), Myriam Ben Salah and Juan Canela, who for the first time have also evaluated proposals submitted spontaneously by galleries.
In 2018 Present Future features the works of 18 artists presented by 19 galleries (14 foreign, 5 Italian): original projects created specifically for the fair, or being shown for the first time in a European and Italian context.
During Artissima, one of the artists in the section will receive the illy Present Future Prize, sponsored by illycaffè since 2001 and now at its 18th iteration. Assigned by an international jury to the project deemed most innovative, since 2012 the award has granted the winner the exceptional opportunity to have a solo show in the spaces of the Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art.
In 2017 the winner was the artist Cally Spooner, presented by the galleries GB Agency (Paris) and Zero… (Milano), with the work Soundtrack for a Troubled Time, 2017. The solo show will open at the museum in parallel with Artissima 2018.
Thanks to the contemporary outlook of illycaffè and the active partnership with Castello di Rivoli, the illy Present Future Prize makes an important contribution to the success of emerging artists, and confirms the vital role of Artissima in the support of international talents.
Present Future Committee
Cloé Perrone (coordinator), independent curator, Roma, New York
Myriam Ben Salah, independent curator and writer, Paris
Juan Canela, independent curator and writer, Barcelona
illy Present Future Prize Committee
Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, director, Castello di Rivoli Museo d'Arte Contemporanea, Torino
Sofia Hernandez Chong Cuy, director, Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art, Rotterdam
Kirsty Ogg, director, New Contemporaries, London
Winners of the previous editions
2017: Cally Spooner, GB Agency, Paris, Zero…, Milano
2016: Cécile B. Evans, Galerie Barbara Seiler, Zurich
2015: Alina Chaiderov, Galerie Antoine Levi, Paris
2014: Rachel Rose, Galerie High Art, Paris
2013: Caroline Achaintre, Arcade Gallery, London and Fatma Bucak, Galleria Alberto Peola, Torino
2012: Vanessa Safavi, Chert Gallery, Berlin; Santo Tolone, Limoncello Gallery, London and Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa, Proyectos Ultravioleta, Guatemala City
Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea illy Present Future 2018 Prize Exhibition
https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/programma-speciale-artissima/
Piazzale Mafalda di Savoia, Rivoli, Torino
Cally Spooner, solo show
Eighteen years of illy Present Future Prize
To celebrate the 18th year of illy Present Future Prize, Artissima and illycaffè have made a video that narrates its phases, through the winning artists from 2001 to 2017. A story based on images and quotations, dynamic and engaging, combining the most significant events of every single year in the world with a focus on the winners and their works, to shed light on the vision and courage of the prize and its organisers. The video will be on view at Artissima and during the upcoming Venice Biennale.
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BACK TO THE FUTURE
Back to the Future is the curated section of Artissima for the rediscovery of the pioneers of contemporary art, underlining the importance of artists who have played a central role in the transformation of formal languages, and whose works are actively influencing contemporary practices.
Now at its ninth edition, in 2018 the section concentrates on the period 1980-1994, the 15 years prior to the birth of the fair: a unique opportunity to rediscover the art trends in progress on the international scene when Artissima made its debut, and to assess their impact on today’s creative experimentation.
Presented in an assigned area of the pavilion with a museum-quality display, Back to the Future has been coordinated for the second consecutive year by Anna Daneri with the curatorial team of Cristiano Raimondi, Gabriela Rangel and Pietro Rigolo.
In 2018 Back to the Future focuses on 21 artists, presented by 23 galleries (17 foreign, 6 Italian).
During Artissima an international jury will select the gallery with the most interesting project in terms of historical importance and presentation to receive the Sardi per l’Arte Back to the Future Prize, created in 2014 thanks to the partnership with Fondazione Sardi per l’Arte, a private Torino-based institution founded by Pinuccia Sardi to support modern and contemporary art.
Back to the Future Committee Jury
Anna Daneri (coordinator), independent curator, Genova, Milano and curator, Museo Villa Croce, Genova
Cristiano Raimondi, director for development and international projects, Nouveau Musée National de Monaco
Gabriela Rangel, director for visual arts and head curator, Americas Society, New York
Pietro Rigolo, special collections archivist, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles
Sardi per l’Arte Back to the Future Prize
Julieta Gonzáles, artistic director, Fundación Jumex Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City
Jean Loisy, president, Palais de Tokyo, Paris
Andrea Viliani, director, MADRE, Napoli
Lisa Parola, curator, Fondazione Sardi per l’Arte
Winners of previous editions
2017: Galleria Loevenbruck, Paris, presenting works by the artist Jean Dupuy.
2016: Galerie in situ - Fabienne Leclerc of Paris, presenting works by the artist Lars Fredrikson.
2015: Ellen de Bruijne Projects, Amsterdam and Dan Gunn Gallery, Berlin, presenting works by the artist Michael Smith.
2014: François Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles, presenting works by the artist Channa Horwitz.
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DISEGNI
In its second year, Disegni is the curated section of Artissima focused on drawing, an artistic practice capable of capturing the immediacy of the creative process, the force of artistic gesture, in a space suspended between the nascent idea and the finished work. This medium is going through a period of renewed popularity, gradually reflected on the market, especially among new collectors.
The section provides a high-level showcase curated for the second year in a row by an exceptional duo: João Mourão and Luís Silva, directors of the Kunsthalle Lissabon, Lisbon.
Disegni will focus on the works of 23 artists represented by 24 galleries (16 foreign, 8 Italian), in a central area of the fair, to grant greater visibility to the booths and the works they display.
In 2018 Artissima continues its partnership with Irinox, a leading company in the production of blast chillers, which for the second year sponsors the Refresh Irinox Prize for the Disegni section. In 2017 the prize was assigned to David Haines.
This year the prize has grown and will include – besides the award assigned by an international jury to the artist who most vividly conveys the expressive immediacy of drawing in a contemporary way – an acquisition on the part of Irinox selected from the stands participating in the Disegni section.
Disegni Committee
Luís Silva and João Mourão, co-directors Kunsthalle Lissabon, Lisbon
Refresh Irinox Prize Jury
Naomi Beckwith, chief curator, MCA Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
Fernanda Brenner, founder and director, PIVO, Sao Paulo
Sohrab Mohebbi, curator, SculptureCenter, Long Island City, New York
Winner of the past edition
2017: David Haines, Upstream gallery, Amsterdam
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SOUND
c/o OGR – Officine Grandi Riparazioni
An important new development at the 25th edition of Artissima is Sound, the new curated section of the fair dedicated to artists working with sound. Located outside the institutional spaces of the fair, the section will be set up in a location of excellence: the OGR – Officine Grandi Riparazioni of Torino, in the dramatic exhibition areas of the Duomo and Binario 2.
To reinforce the experimental character of Artissima, and in tune with the versatile research conducted by OGR on music, performance and art, Sound presents 16 individual sound projects selected by two curators who focus on contemporary interdisciplinary practices: Yann Chateigné Tytelman, a curator and art critic based in Berlin and associate professor of art history and theory at HEAD Geneva, and Nicola Ricciardi, artistic director of OGR – Officine Grandi Riparazioni, Torino.
The section has been created in response to the recent developments of international artistic projects that has seen artists of various generations, challenging many aspects of the logic of visual art through interactive works. Sound, with its intimate and performative manifestations, is used to transform space and its perception, to reactivate memories, to free the imagination, and today it is a major part of many lines of research in a variety of contexts, precisely due to its capacity to evoke and reveal an intangible, always mutable reality.
Starting this year, the OGR Award – the second edition of the prize created for Artissima by the Fondazione per l’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea CRT – has been earmarked for the acquisition for OGR – Officine Grandi Riparazioni of a selected work from the new Sound section.
The architectural concept of the SOUND section is by the architecture firm Vudafieri Saverino Partners. Special thanks to Driade and XO Next Office for their cooperation.
Sound Committee
Yann Chateigné Tytelman, curator and art critic based in Berlin, associate professor of art history and theory at HEAD Geneva
Nicola Ricciardi, artistic director, OGR – Officine Grandi Riparazioni, Torino
Sound press preview | 1 November, 5pm (by invitation)
Sound opening | 1 November, 7-9pm (by invitation)
OGR Award Ceremony | 1 November, 7.30pm (by invitation) @ OGR – Officine Grandi Riparazioni
OGR Award Committee
Anna Colin, associate curator, Lafayette Anticipations, Paris e co-director, Open School East, Margate
Lorenzo Giusti, director, GAMEC, Bergamo
Judith Waldmann, curator and head of monitoring, Kasseler Kunstverein, Kassel
Winner of the past edition
2017: Rokni Haerizadeh, Isabelle van den Eynde gallery, Dubai
Michael Fliri, The light never sees a shadow, 2018. Courtesy of the artist.
Mimmo Jodice, Stromboli, Opera II, 1999. Courtesy of the artist and Visatmare.