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Armory Show and Art Chicago Get New Group Leader

August 12, 2011 by Marion Maneker

Artinfo suggests that the Merchandise Mart is embarking on a major defensive strategy to revitalize Art Chicago and the Armory Show in light of the new fair coming to New York. Steven Levy has been named Senior Vice President of MMPI’s Art Group:

In the last few years, Merchandise Mart’s biggest fairs, the Armory Show and Art Chicago, have garnered lackluster reviews from both gallerists and the media for being less than discriminate when it comes to letting in exhibitors. But Levy, it seems, is hoping to shake things up: “All will be examined and rethought as of this minute to best showcase the uniqueness of each fair,” he said in a statement.

Levy has worked in trade and consumer shows for over 35 years, though this new position will be his first foray into the world of fine art. He is also the co-founder of the Interior Design Show and the One of a Kind holiday shopping art and craft shows in Toronto, Vancouver, and Chicago. He is currently the senior vice president and general manager of Merchandise Mart’s Canadian division.

Merchandise Mart Taps Steven Levy to Oversee the Armory Show, Art Chicago, and the Company’s Other Art Fairs (ArtInfo)

Ziegler Sells Out at Armory

March 10, 2011 by Marion Maneker

More Armory sales reports. This time they come from two galleries that talked to Mutual Art about their booth strategies and the volume of traffic:

Lindsay Ramsay: We did a solo show of a YBA (Young British Artist) Toby Ziegler, which we sold out. […] This wasn’t just a display of works from the stockroom – it was a very unique installation. I would say we sold about ten of the artist’s works, ranging in price from $15,000 – $60,000.

Anne-Claudie Coric: A young Chinese artist who makes installation from stolen neons: He-An (see image below); Indian artist Atul Dodiya (we sold his work for 60 000 EUR); Berlin-based Japanese artist Chiaru Shiota, whose thread sculptures we sold the first day and now have a waiting list (price range 8,000 – 15 000 EUR). We also sold works by artists we have been representing for a long time: Chilean installation artist Ivan Navarro, American photographer James Casebere and German painter Jonathan Meese.

Gallery directors reflect on The Armory Show: Are we post-recession? (Mutual Art)

Auction Houses Strangling Art Fairs

March 9, 2011 by Marion Maneker

Anthony Haden-Guest reviews the Armory Show and all of its satellites. He sees a “notable” trend toward absence among the biggest names:

Many hefty New York galleries were no-shows at the Armory, among them Pace, Marian Goodman, Michael Werner, David Zwirner and Gagosian (each choosing to show elsewhere or at no fair at all), and that meant that many artists who have seemed ubiquitous features of the Global Artscape—Takashi Murakami, Anselm Reyle, et al.—were conspicuous by their near total absence. I saw no striking Warhols and no Jeff Koons, for instance. Indeed, apart from outbreaks of Mel Ramos here and there, Pop and post-Pop, once the fairs’ emblems, were a diminished presence.

So did Armory 2011 signal that the model of the art fair as a system for delivering high-end merchandise to the extravagantly well-heeled is passé? Hardly. The change is a reflection of the fact that the auction houses (and their private sales arms) are increasingly wresting four-star goods away from the dealers. “And people don’t want their art to be overexposed. Burned,” said the Rhinebeck dealer, Stephen Mazoh. “There’s a ceiling to the number of millions somebody will spend at an art fair. It’s to do with discretion. At an art fair, the prices are known.”

Art Fairs Give Ground to Auction Houses (NY Observer)

Last Armory Sales

March 6, 2011 by Marion Maneker

Katya Kazakina and Kelly Crow were around the Armory Show last week. They pulled up these sales:

  • David Kordansky:  three vibrant Primitivist paintings by West Coast artist Ruby Neri, with prices ranging from $14,000 to $18,000.
  • Blain/Southern: Matt Collishaw’s 13-piece series of Old Master-style still life photographs depicting fast-food morsels like onion rings and cheeseburgers,  $10,000 apiece.
  • Greenberg Van Doren: Alexander Gorlizki, A Time to Refrain,” sold to an American collector for $6,000.

Adam Sender Grabs $2,000 Silk-Screens; Giacometti Priced at $4.5 Million (Bloomberg)

At Armory, Fast Food, 3-D and Some New Big Guns (Wall Street Journal)

 

Armory Show Sale Late Hit

March 9, 2010 by Marion Maneker

David D’Arcy in the National offers this sale:

  • Michael Schultz Gallery of Berlin sold East Is Red by the Chinese painter Zou Cao to a New York collector for €130,000

Back to Business in the US Art Market (The National)

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