An average year seems the general verdict on Frieze. Everyone picks up on the Focus section of young gallery projects, so I've concentrated on the main fair with a works from some of the best stands. Most worthwhile art is transformative in some way, but many of my favourite works at this year's Frieze (to Sunday 9 Oct) leaned a little more explicitly towards the transcendental, if only far enough to poke fun at it. Maybe I was looking to escape the Brexit and Colombia votes. My choices are short on figurative painting: there was plenty around, so I've popped an interesting new one by Chris Ofili above (Triangles, 2016 at David Zwirner).
James Turrell:
Suite from Aten Reign, 2014 - woodcut, at Kayne Griffin Corcoran, Los Angeles
James Turrell is an obvious place to start: his attention to
modulated light somehow generates transcendence in the present moment. Kayne Griffin Corcoran showed projection,
photographs and woodcuts – which related seamlessly to each other – emerging
from the 2013 Guggenheim Project for which Turrell recast the rotunda as an
enormous volume filled with shifting artificial and natural light, effectively
turning Frank Lloyd Wright’s iconic architecture into one of his Skyspaces.
Frances Upritchard:
John, 2009 at Kate MacGarry, London
Kate MacGarry’s solo stand for New Zealander Frances
Upritchard an extensive range of new work including a nifty range of hats as
well as all sorts of new figures. Yet it was John, a character who has returned
to the gallery after dropping out in 2009, who caught my eye. Whatever he's doing with his right hand, his weirdly all-over Paisley seems just right
for a cool dude who, I imagine, has come down to semi-traditional earth after a
history of striving for the other-worldly through the portal of drugs.
Betty Tompkins:
Ersatz Cunt Painting # 1, 2016 at P.P.O.W, New York
What looked from afar - especially if someone half-hit it - like a somewhat transcendental pink
glow not unlike Turrell’s proved to be one of Betty Tompkins’ depictions of
genetalia. Her recent series are soft in focus but hardcore in title, and so
impact differently from the black and white penetration close-ups of the ‘Fuck
Paintings’ for which Tompkins first became known in the 1970’s. But both
appropriate and subvert the masculine gaze of pornography to assert women’s
ownership of their sexuality. Relevantly,
perhaps, Celia Hempton had cocks as large at Southard Reid, and there was also…
AA Bronson: Queer Vitrine 1, 2016 at Maureen Paley,
London (detail) Wood and glass custom vitrine containing assorted found
mail, zines, collages, drawings (water colour on paper) of various dimensions,
polaroid photographs, and used envelopes, together with voodoo doll (AA
Bronson's Pucci underwear, string, wool, and various hidden elements), Reindeer
bone wrapped in a cotton handkerchief, bamboo and cotton ritual objects,
Himalayan rope incense in a plastic and paper package, amber on cotton string,
pyrite cubic crystals, glass beads, Thai carved bone phallus and steel curved
piercing barbell.
The only survivor for more than two
decades now of the still-influential Canadian collective General Idea
(1969-94), AA Bronson’s history ranges across over 100 exhibitions, alternative
publishing, AIDS activism, erotic novels, shamanistic performances and work as
a healer in which ‘butt massages’ are central. All of which you could find
traces of in a teeming vitrine at Maureen Paley, made up from items sent by
admirers to make up an automatic self-portrait, though there was a small
watercolour which Bronson bought – from a James Unsworth show he’d organised,
and featuring what I took to be a rainbow standing in for the more out-of-body
aspects of sex.
Monika Baer: CMY,
2016 at Greene Naftali, New York
After sex and drugs, can alcohol be far
behind? Berlin-based Monika Baer has made a number of paintings which use
liquor bottles as a motif to, in the gallery’s words, ‘flirt with the notion of
a stable pictorial system’. More recently, their implied commentary has
moved beyond the canvas in a sort of trompe-l’oiel double bluff, and here the
attached bottle seemed either to suggest that some distillation of the classic
printing colours had occurred or to propose a possible cause for the chromatic
vision revealed.
Roman Ondak: Third Way, 2013 at Kurimanzutto, Mexico City
Kurimanzutto, worthy winners of the Best Stand prize, made the Slovak Roman Ondak (also showing at the South London Gallery now) and Portuguese Leonor Antunes (work bought by Tate) chime naturally with a Latin American sensibility. A ladder immediately implies upward striving, but here the absurdly-scaled conjunction of an old wooden original and a miniaturised model suggests the possibility of a change of perspective – and of reconciling the two viewpoints to arrive - who knows? - at a dialectical third way which moves us forward.
Hans Op De Beeck: The Silent Library at Marian Boesky
Technically this room contained various separate sculptures from Has Op de Beeck’s recent switch from grey to white for his spookily smooth vanitas realisations, which start from casts and are rendered in gypsum plaster over a wooden armature. Yet it was the whole which had the ethereally striking effect with the whiteness changing the mood and shifting with the light as clouds passed overhead. The wow factor may have somewhat displaced what the gallery calls Op De Beeck’s ‘wide-ranging reflection on the tragicomic way in which humans stage and organize their lives’. Moreover, anther colourless stand was a winner: Francois Ghebly’s black and white display of 1980’s Channa Horwtiz drawings – which could equally have been in frieze masters but was too old for Frieze’s new 1990’s focus section.
Ryan Gander: Post-life
romantic, or Trying to make it on risk and hard work alone, 2016 at the
Lisson Gallery, London
Ryan Gander is a fecund cultural
magpie, so it was no surprise to find that as well ‘Auto-Abstraction’, his
dice-driven curation of the joint booth of Limoncello and Taro Nasu, several of
his works were dotted around. Having notice the ubiquity of Degas' ballerinas in
museums, but feeling for the paradoxically heavy and plinth-bound nature of these
should-be-nimble dancing spirits, Gander has set a series free to interact with
the art clichés likely to surround them: here she seems to year for the
romantic epiphany of a Kleinian blue monochrome.
Matti Braun: Untitled,
2016 at Johnen – Esther Schipper
Gander it was who provided the Johnen – Schipper combined
stand with a grey curtain backdrop, animated by wind in reference to his
Documenta 13 presentation of a breeze as art. Among the works to look good
against it were Matti Braun’s lushly restrained, super-saturated hue-shifting
abstractions dyed onto silk. They appropriate textile techniques used in
religious and ritualistic contexts, but subtract the iconography to leave just
an other-worldly shimmer.
Laurent Dupont and
Lucy McKenzie: Fireplace & 19
Prague Objects, 2015 at Galerie Meyer Kainer, Vienna
Two contrastingly artificial sculptural surfaces of paint
combined effectively at Meyer Kainer. Brussels-based Scot Lucy McKenzie is
known for her meticulous recreations in paint of noticeboards and the effects
of stone textures. Her fireplace was, then, fairly typical, and her
collaboration with native Belgian Laurent Dupont made it into the display for
vessels, in which his quotidian found originals (here from the Czech republic)
are transformed by the simple means of covering them with a thick layer of
paint.
Julie Verhoeven:
Frieze project The Toilet Attendant… Now
Wash Your Hands at loos near P6
You can’t get more basic than excrement, and of course shit
has an honourable artistic tradition. All the same, I don’t remember any Fair
previously making the loos as much fun as here. London-based Dutch artist Julie
Verhoeven carpeted the men’s in a bright pink and the women’s in bold blue,
decorated every stall and urinal with cheeky artworks, and was herself in
attendance in a typically outlandish costume – selling sculptural products such
as bog trolls and fur turds. Hidden
function and labour were brought to attention and – yes – transcended.
Taking it easy in Paulina Olowska's show at Simon Lee |
The film programme was a refreshingly concise 15 minutes of
Shana Moulton, Rachel Maclean, Ming Won and Samson Kambalu. The other talking
point stands were Seventeen’s sit-on-a-snake virtual reality show by Jon Rafman,
and Hauser & Wirth’s presentation of their artists' work as that of a fictional artist in a mock-up studio
(were they trying to transcend the grubby fiscal reality of the fair?). Other
notable booths included Almine Rech (inc witty young American Carrie Weiss) , Supportico Lopez, Stevenson’s persuasive
45 year survey of new-to-me Penny Siopsis; and Chewdays’ combination of Palaeolithic
artefacts with Gabriele Beveridge’s meditations on ephemerality. And Simon Lee
deserve a prize for ‘dealing with repeat offenders’, as they put it, by hanging three different solo show on each of the five days. Paulina Olowska’s energetic
melange also gave me the opportunity - at Paulina's invitation - to take a rest on a sea of blue innards…
Here are the booth codes: A3, A9, A10, B6, B11, B13, B19, C11, C13, D7, D10, D13, E6, G2, G8, G11, H18, loos
at P
Robert Rauschenberg: Clay painting (for John Cage and Merce Cunningham), 1953-1992.
Frieze Masters generates a more relaxed ambience, less
obviously in need of transcendence. My favourite solo stands were the three
gallery presentation of Frank Stella (collaboration is a definite trend),
Ropac’s James Rosenquist, Ad Dekkers at the Mayor Gallery, Pace's notably wide-ranging Lucas Samrars retrospective, Krinzinger's cotractingly focussed sample of the underrated Martha Jungwirth and Nancy Grossman at
Michael Rosenfeld. The outstanding thematic display was Luxembourg &
Dayan’s examination of ‘the formless’, and I also enjoyed W & K’s presentation
of the effect of expressionism on Viennese actionism.
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