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Art Basel Miami Beach 2023: What To Expect At The Main Fair

Forbes Lifestyle Travel Art Basel Miami Beach 2023: What To Expect At The Main Fair Cheryl Tiu Contributor Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. I’m a Miami-based journalist, content creator and consultant Following Click to save this article. You’ll be asked to sign into your Forbes account.

Nov 24, 2023, 09:43pm EST Press play to listen to this article! Got it! Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Linkedin Art Basel returns to Miami Beach from December 6 to 10, with 277 galleries participating this year. Art Basel December is upon us and for folks in Miami— or in the art world— that means: Art Basel Miami Beach . From December 6 to 10 (by-invitation private viewings are on December 6 and 7), the Miami Beach Convention Center will be home to 277 galleries; 25 of which will be participating for the first time, with two-thirds hailing from North and Latin America.

In mediums ranging from paintings and sculptures to photography and digital art, some of the resounding themes this year include works that speak to nature, as well as cultural and spiritual geographies. We break down the fair’s main sectors with what to expect this year: Galleries is the main section of the fair where the world’s leading galleries present the highest quality of paintings, sculptures, drawings, installations, photography, videos and digital works. The late Filipino American artist Pacita Abad’s “I’m up and down like a yo-yo (2003)” will be .

. . [+] presented by Singapore-based STPI Creative Workshop & Gallery STPI Gallery Singapore This year’s show will include never-before-seen works by Argentinian Italian surrealist Leonor Fini from the artist’s personal collection, jointly presented by Galerie Minsky (Paris) and Weinstein Gallery (San Francisco), as well as an homage to Brockman Gallery, the first major contemporary gallery run by and for Black artists, coorganized by Parrasch Heijnen Gallery (Los Angeles) and Franklin Parrasch Gallery (New York) in collaboration with Alonzo Davis, one of Brockman Gallery’s founders.

Fulton Leroy Washington (aka Mr. Wash)’s “From Behind the Glass” (2022),” will be presented by . .

. [+] Jeffrey Deitch. Louisiana-born Washington was previously incarcerated for 21 years for a non-violent drug case.

While in prison, he learned to paint and draw. His works often feature fellow inmates with vulnerabilities expressed in large tears running down their faces, such as this one on CJ Rice. Charles White/ Fulton Leroy Washington/ Jeffrey Deitch MORE FOR YOU ‘Smugglers’ Wins Best Film At 44th Blue Dragon Awards California Vineyard That Was Sought Out By The Royal Wine Family Of The US Wine World Funniest Wildlife Photos: 15 Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards Winners Meridians showcases large-scale sculptures, paintings and installations which go beyond the traditional art fair booth layout.

It will feature 19 projects this year, including site-specific works for Art Basel Miami Beach, curated for the fourth consecutive year by Mexico City-based curator and Director of Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporaneo, Magalí Arriola, Kabinett, which provides provides galleries the opportunity to present curated exhibitions within their main booths, will have 28 installations. Nova is a space for galleries to present new works by up to three artists. The Ranch (New York) will showcase never-before-exhibited sculptures by Puerto Rican artist Daniel Lind-Ramos inspired by his hometown of Loíza, the largest Afro-Caribbean enclave in Puerto Rico.

Gypsum Gallery (Cairo) will present new paintings by Egyptian artist Basim Magdy, the first staging of the artist’s paintings in the US. In Positions, the sector for young galleries to showcase solo presentations by emerging voices, Galatea (Rio de Janeiro) will exhibit a new photo series by Brazilian artist Allan Weber, known for his work on everyday life in Rio de Janeiro’s favelas. Dürst Britt & Mayhew (The Hague), the first Dutch gallery to participate in Art Basel Miami Beach, will present new works by Mexican artist Alejandra Venegas, hand-carved on native wood.

Survey, dedicated to galleries to showcase artistic practices of historical relevance, will include solo presentations of American artist and activist Karen Finley centered on her 1977 interactive installation at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, during a protracted legal battle with the National Endowment for the Arts, presented by Freight+Volume (New York); as well as American artist Vivian Browne, whose “Africa Series” paintings from the 1970s will be presented by Ryan Lee (New York). Conversations, a series of live debates among artists, gallerists, collectors, curators, museum directors and critics will run from December 7 to 9. Curated by Emily Butler, this year will features 35 thought leaders across nine panels celebrating Latin America.

The program will draw inspiration from Miami’s position as a gateway to Latin America and the Caribbean, honoring Afro-Latino, Latino, and feminist histories, the artistic ecologies of Florida, and other topical issues in 2023. These conversations will be live-streamed on Facebook and recorded. Brazilian artist Vânia Mignone’s “Untitled (2022)” will be presented by São Paulo’s Casa Triângulo Filipe Berndt/ Vânia Mignone/ Casa Triângulo Also taking place during this period, the UBS Art Lounge (open to UBS-invited guests) at the Miami Beach Convention Center, will showcase the UBS Art Collection which includes a site-specific triptych painting by Jeffrey Gibson entitled, “Just When You Least Expect It,” commissioned for the UBS Arena in Elmont, New York.

The Lounge will also feature the Collection’s recent acquisitions by Nick Cave, Awol Erizku, Deana Lawson, and Hank Willis Thomas. UBS has also partnered with Art Noir, a global creative collective and non-profit organization that catalyzes cultural equity across the arts and culture industries, to create the UBS Art Studio, which will be stationed near the Meridians sector. The group presentation organized by Art Noir co-founder and curator Larry Ossei-Mensah will features works by Anthony Akinbola, Sonia Gomes, Melissa Joseph, and Nari Ward, artists who engage in practices that utilize accessible materials like durags, shoelaces, and other textiles to create art that invite inquiry and discourse.

This is open to all Art Basel Miami Beach ticket holders. (They will also be presenting at the Soundscape Park. ) For more tickets and more information, please visit the Art Basel Miami Beach website.

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From: forbes
URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/cheryltiu/2023/11/24/art-basel-miami-beach-2023-what-to-expect-at-the-main-fair/

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