Art Projects at London Art Fair 2017:Highlights and 'Dialogues' Collaborations Announced

London Art Fair
Nov 16, 2016 5:00AM

18–22 January 2017 (VIP Preview 17 January)

Business Design Centre, Islington, N1

David Watkins, Interplanetary Trajectory, 2014. Courtesy of Joanna Bryant Projects.

London Art Fair has today announced highlights of the most international Art Projects to date, including:


·   A curated showcase of the freshest contemporary art from across the world

·   Dialogues’, a series of five collaborations between UK and international galleries guest curated by Miguel Amado

·   Over 40% non-UK exhibitors (inc. USA, Zimbabwe, South Korea)

·   Focussed solo presentations from artists including Chris Agnew (Kristin Hjellegjerde, London), Victoria Lucas (Chiara Williams Contemporary Art, London) and Yong Il Shin (Do Gallery, South Korea)

·   The De’longhi Art Projects Artist Award will award one artist with £2,500


Dedicated to cultivating a community of emerging international galleries and artists, Art Projects has established itself as an important platform for galleries to showcase the most stimulating contemporary practice. Highlights for 2017 include large-scale installations, solo shows and thematic group displays; alongside an accompanying programme of collaborative film and new media initiatives.

A major feature of the section is ‘Dialogues’; five pairs of collaborations between galleries intended to encourage and foster relationships on a global scale. Now in its fourth year, the 2017 edition has been curated by Miguel Amado, Senior Curator at Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, UK.

The five ‘Dialogues’ collaborations for 2017 are:

·   Maus Contemporary (Birmingham, USA) / Golden Thread Gallery (Belfast, UK)

·   Carlos Carvalho Arte Contemporânea (Lisbon, Portugal) / Kalfayan Galleries (Athens and Thessaloniki,  Greece)

·   First Floor Gallery (Harare, Zimbabwe) / LLE (Cardiff, UK)

·   Gibbons and Nicholas (Dublin, Ireland) / Jack House Gallery (Portsmouth, UK)

·   IMT GALLERY (London, UK) / Division of Labour (London, UK)


Miguel Amado comments:

“I was looking for innovative work that addresses the issues of our times, and I believe that all artists featured in ‘Dialogues’ match this brief. The selected galleries represent some of the best art being made both in the UK and across the world, and I am thrilled that we were able to bring them together on this occasion.”


With galleries from outside the UK making up two fifths of exhibitors, the 13th edition of Art Projects is the most international Art Projects to date. Artists represented also come from a diverse selection of countries including Greece, Germany, Japan, France, South Korea and Zimbabwe.


International galleries participating in Art Projects for the first time include CRAG – CHIONO REISOVA ART GALLERY (Italy), Do Gallery (South Korea) and RED CORRIDOR Gallery (Germany). New UK galleries include London-based Joanna Bryant & Julian Page and Ed Cross Fine Art, as well as Manchester-based OBJECT / A.


Solo presentations include ‘Lay of the Land (and other such Myths)’, an exhibition by SOLO Award 2016 winner Victoria Lucas from Chiara Williams Contemporary Art, Chris Agnew’s fantastical architectural drawings from Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery and paintings by Yong Il Shin from Do Gallery. Perve Galeria (Portugal) is bringing creative collaborations between the South African artist Beezy Bailey and Brian Eno, the well-known music composer and artist featuring a wide range of works of paintings accompanied by original sound pieces.


International photography is also prevalent. MATÈRIA (Italy) will be bringing a solo presentation of work by Chinese photographer Xiaoyi Chen, focussing on her ‘Koan’ series and a large scale artwork from her recent body of work ‘An Infinitesimal Wink’. Galerie Rothamel (Germany) is presenting a Hiroyuki Masuyama solo show: ‘Turners Journey from London to Rome’, made up of Turner inspired photographic composites. Galerija Fotografija (Slovenia) and Noorforart Contemporary (France) will also feature solo shows of contemporary photography.


Group exhibitions include Iniva’s show of six women artists, including Sutapa Biswas, Mary Evans and Joy Gregory, creating an intergenerational dialogue by asking these three established artists to choose three early-career artists to offer overlapping perspectives at the intersection of race, gender and politics.

 

London Art Fair’s Lee Cavaliere comments:

“Art Projects is incredibly strong this year. It’s particularly pertinent that the section presents a hugely international offering, reflecting an atmosphere of borderlessness within the global arts community. The galleries demonstrate excellent quality and academic rigour, born from a prevailing attitude of creative collaboration.”


For the second year De’Longhi, manufacturers of premium Bean to Cup coffee machines, return to London Art Fair 2017 as sponsor of the Art Projects Artist Award. One artist exhibiting in Art Projects will receive a cash prize of £2,500, assessed on the merit of their practice and work displayed at the Fair. The winner will be chosen by a judging panel including key art world figures from the areas of collecting, journalism, curating and education. The judging panel will include Adrian George, Deputy Director & Senior Curator at Government Art Collection; Rebecca Morrill, Senior Editor at Phaidon; JJ Charlesworth, publisher and editor at ArtReview; and Fabienne Nicholas, Head of Consultancy at Contemporary Art Society.


Art Projects’ insightful programme of talks, tours and performance can be enjoyed after hours on

19 January as part of Thursday Late with complimentary drinks provided by Peroni Nastro Azzurro.


There will be daily tours of Art Projects given by art journalist, curator and academic Pryle Behrman. Pryle has worked as the curator of the Art Projects section of London Art Fair in previous years and is course manager of the Art & Design programme at Writtle University College. He will be offering insights into the practices of the artists in Art Projects and the concepts behind their works.

 

ENDS

For further press information please contact

Arthur Dimsdale / Rosie Beaumont-Thomas

[email protected] / [email protected]

 

 

Notes to editors

About Miguel Amado:

Miguel Amado is Senior Curator at Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, England. He was the curator of the Portuguese Pavilion at the 2013 Venice Biennale. He has been a curator at Tate St Ives, England, and the Centro de Artes Visuais in Coimbra, Portugal, among other institutions.

He has been a curatorial fellow at Rhizome at the New Museum and Independent Curators International in New York. Also in New York, he has also been a curator-in-residence at the International Studio and Curatorial Program and the Abrons Arts Center.

As a freelancer, he has curated exhibitions and projects at various institutions and events. These include apexart in New York, the Museu Coleção Berardo in Lisbon, Frieze Projects at Frieze London and No Soul for Sale: A Festival of Independents at the X Initiative in New York and Tate Modern in London.

He is a critic for Artforum and his writing has also appeared in magazines such as The Exhibitionist. He is a lecturer at the Istituto Europeo di Design in Venice. His awards include the inaugural Contemporary Art Society Collections Fund at Frieze in 2016, a Curators Grant from the Foundation for Arts Initiatives in New York, and the 2011 apexart Unsolicited Proposal Program.

He is attending the MRes in Curatorial/Knowledge at Goldsmiths, University of London, and is a graduate of the MA in Curating Contemporary Art at the Royal College of Art; further education includes Tate Intensive, the Independent Curators International Curatorial Intensive at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing and Night School at the New Museum.


About De’Longhi:

De’Longhi is the UK’s number one premium Italian coffee machine brand. With an ethos on style, design and innovation, De’Longhi has a proud affiliation with art in the UK, including working in partnership with some of the UK’s leading artists for the Macmillan De’Longhi annual art programme over the last nine years. De’Longhi also has a longstanding headline sponsorship of Pallant House Gallery in West Sussex, which houses one of the UK’s biggest collections of modern art outside of London.

The full list of Art Projects galleries at London Art Fair 2017 is as follows:

·   BEARSPACE, London

·   Carlos Carvalho Arte Contemporânea, Lisbon

·   Chiara Williams Contemporary Art, London

·   CRAG – CHIONO REISOVA ART GALLERY, Turin

·   Division of Labour, London

·   Do  Gallery, Chungcheongbuk-do

·   Ed Cross Fine Art, London

·   First Floor Gallery Harare, Harare

·   Galerie Rothamel, Erfurt

·   Galerija Fotografija & L’Agence à Paris, Ljubljana & Paris

·   Gibbons & Nicholas, Dublin

·   Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast

·   Hanmi Gallery, London + Seoul

·   IMT GALLERY, London

·   Iniva, London

·   Jack House Gallery, Portsmouth

·   Joanna Bryant and Julian Page, London

·   Kalfayan Galleries, Athens/ Thessaloniki

·   Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London

·   LLE, Cardiff

·   MATÈRIA, Rome

·   Maus Contemporary, Birmingham AL

·   Muriel Guepin Gallery, New York

·   Noorforart Contemporary, Aix en Provence

·   Nunnery Gallery, London

·   OBJECT/A, Manchester

·   Parasol Unit Foundation for Contemporary Art, LondonPAPER, Manchester

·   Perve Galeria, Lisbon

·   RED CORRIDOR Gallery, Kuenzell/Fulda

·   The Contemporary London

·   White Conduit Projects, London

London Art Fair