Art Basel bound: Canada’s most creative A-types preview the best of 2013′s fair
Now in its 12th year, Art Basel Miami is regarded as the biggest art event in North America. Beyond attracting
star couples like Jay Z and Beyoncé, the 250-plus international galleries
participating bring more than 50,000 art lovers to Miami. To help navigate this
gigantic affair, which runs from Dec. 5 to 8, we’ve highlighted key names from
Canada’s art scene who will be in attendance, and asked them about past
memories and future itineraries.
Hugh Scott-Douglas
Artist
Artist
Ottawa’s Hugh Scott-Douglas is
looking forward to heading to Art Basel Miami this year with his fashion
designer wife, Lara Vincent. The duo will be hanging at nightspots
like Le Baron and David Lynch’s Silencio by night and frequenting theJessica Silverman, Blum & Poe and De La Cruz spaces by day (all of which will have
pieces by the 25-year-old on display). “NADA at Art Basel Miami 2011 was the
start of my career, because it gave my work the opportunity to be seen by
larger galleries and collectors,” he says. “I stepped up from being an emerging
artist to being an internationally recognized emerging artist.” His collectors
include the Dallas Museum of Art, Takashi Murakami and François Pinault.
Scott-Douglas’s latest work took inspiration from the notion of how we can
imagine a building from a blueprint or a film from its poster or trailer. “For
me, it becomes about how to find a material or process that can reflect or
highlight some of this content or echo its history.” —Alexandra Breen
“I was making
work as a closeted artist,” laughs Julia Dault, 35, referring to her past life as an art
critic for the National Post. “You can only put off what you’ve wanted
to do your whole life for so long.” So in 2006, the painter/sculptor packed her
bags for an MFA program at Parsons. Now, she’s included in the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Guggenheim Museum collections. An art fair regular (she
shows with Jessica Bradley and International Art Objects), the Toronto native
says she was “stopped dead in her tracks” by an Ellsworth Kelly painting in the
Matthew Marks Gallery at last year’s fair. This year, she’s been commissioned
to do a sculpture for the Herzog & de Meuron-designed Pérez Art Museum Miami.
Adding to her buzz is the fact that her sculptures are constructed entirely
on-site. Fashion lovers are equally worked up by the news of her upcoming
collaboration with Jeremy Laing on his S/S 2014 collection. —A.B.
In
2002, Toronto’s Judith Tatar attended
her first Art Basel Miami. She packed a couple of outfits, but had few
expectations. Eleven years later—having done the global art fair circuit and
opened Tatar Art
Projects, which advises clients like the Conrad Hotel in New
York—things have changed. Tatar now plans her visit to South Beach months in
advance. “From an anthropological point of view, watching that much wealth and
glamour mixing together is a fun experience,” she says. “Seeing Emily Blunt and
Calvin Klein is fascinating. It’s like celebrity porn.” This year, Tatar has
her eye on Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld, the son of Carine Roitfield,
who has opened a New York gallery: “He’s becoming quite the scion in the art
establishment.”—Elio Iannacci
establishment.”—Elio Iannacci
Daniel
Faria and Rui Amaral
Gallery owner and curator
Gallery owner and curator
If
Gen Y thinks of Douglas Coupland first
and foremost as an artist, it’s largely thanks to Daniel Faria. In
2012, the Torontonian curated 100 “canvases” by the Vancouver icon, and last
summer he nurtured their relationship with a show of Coupland’s new pixellated
works. Faria and his partner, Rui Amaral, who also
works with the Toronto gallery Scrap Metal, are both international art fair
fixtures, spending months on the schmooze. In December, the duo will return to
Art Basel Miami. “In New York or London, you get sucked up in the big city,”
says Faria, “but in Miami you’re inevitably running into art people [and]
having conversations about art.” As a result, younger, concurrent fairs like
the New Art Dealers Alliance (NADA) have taken hold.
“Miami has turned itself around in the last 10 years,” says Amaral. “Basel has
been one of the strongest pioneers of that shift.” —Ellen Himelfarb
For Dr. Diane Vachon,
art collector, board member and acquisition committee member at the Musée National des Beaux-Arts
du Québec and theMusée d’art contemporain de Montréal, the attraction to
Basel lies beyond the sheer beauty of the art. “Artists are like the people at
the front of the ship, keeping vigil over society,” she says. “They show us the
way.” Which is why each year, Vachon makes her way south to hunt for talent at
the event’s offshoot fairs—NADA and Pulse—which focus on emerging talent. As
for Art Basel Miami proper, she has a tip for newbies: “I go to the main fair
three or four times during my stay, just so it can sink in.” In 2012, Vachon
brought home a large drawing by Berlin-based artist Jorinde Voigt, whose
sudden popularity has since risen to international levels, giving Vachon Basel
gold. —Abi Slone
Laing
and Kathleen Brown
Art Consultants
Art Consultants
“Basel has become
such a big part of our lives,” says Kathleen
Brown of Brown Art Consulting, a company she
founded in Vancouver with her husband, Laing. “We’ve been collecting for 30-some years for other
people, and we’ve attended Basel Miami since 2007.” Works from artists like Ai Weiwei and Jenny Holzer—who’s known for making LED pieces with
politically charged phrases—are among the Browns’ Basel triumphs. “Jenny’s a
blue-chip artist,” says Laing, adding that appreciation of Holzer’s work has
gone up considerably since they secured her art in Miami. “She was just written
about in The New York
Times.” Naomi Campbell and Will Smith are among the Browns’ celebrity
encounters at the fair. “We think we can attract and retain good clients based
on our knowledge of international art and the market,” Kathleen says. —E.I.
As a curator at
the Art Gallery of Ontario, Kitty Scottsays she heads to Art Basel Miami because
it’s “a great chance to see work from around the world and private collections
in a really concentrated way.” The Newfoundlander’s career has included gigs as
a visiting professor at several high-profile universities and colleges. This
year, Scott is hoping to become acquainted with more artists from Central and
South America at the Cisneros Collection. When she’s not art-hopping, Scott
will likely be spotted chatting with colleagues about art at Garcia’s Seafood
Grille & Fish Market. Emerging Canadian talents like Duane Linklater, Annie MacDonell and Mark Clintberg (who
tops her “artists to watch” list) may creep into her conversations too. —A.B.
Sarah
Anne Johnson
Artist
Artist
In 2007, Winnipeg
artist Sarah
Anne Johnson’s entire
first show at the Julie Saul Gallery was
scooped up by the Guggenheim Museum. “It exceeded any hopes and dreams I had
for myself. In one month, everything changed,” explains the 37-year-old Yale
grad and teacher. The National Gallery bought most of her second show, and the
third was purchased by collector Michael Nesbitt and donated to the Art Gallery
of Ontario. This year, Johnson’s Basel presence will be felt at the Julie Saul Gallery
with new pieces about intimacy. Heading into the bedrooms of her friends to
capture “intimate moments,” Johnson says, “These surrogate bodies [served] as
blank canvases to paint over with hopes, insecurities and desires for romance.”
When it comes to her own art collection, she says, “I’d consider re-mortgaging
my house to buy one of Shary Boyle’s porcelains.” —A.B.
Karel
Funk
Artist
Artist
Before his
paintings were mounted in the Guggenheim Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art and the National Gallery of Canada, Karel Funkwas an
aspiring pro skateboarder turned University of Manitoba grad/artist working as
a part-time janitor. An MFA from Columbia University gave him “one more push
conceptually and technically,” and led to a 2004 show at 303 Gallery, which The New York Times praised as breathing “new life into
the seemingly exhausted genre of photo realism.” Based in Winnipeg, Funk, 42,
is looking forward to showing the world what he’s been up to at Art Basel
Miami. “I’ve got some figurative work that I’m doing right now—portraits of
people who are turned away from the viewer, with most of their flesh covered by
deep shadow.” The hyperrealist painter cites the Metropolitan Museum of Art and
painters like Albrecht Dürer as top inspirations. —A.B.
Paddy
Johnson
Blogger
Blogger
Critic Paddy Johnson, a 38-
year-old Guelph, Ont., native, is an art fair sibyl of sorts. The
art-meets-digi maven behind New York’s beloved art blog Artfcity.com(voted
best blog by The Times online) posts daily Basel updates that have the industry
talking. Her street cred is about to be upped, as Art F City has teamed up with
Tumblr to sell the first Tumblr art piece at NADA. It will feature 40 artists,
including Toronto-based Lorna Mills, and the entire thing—the size of a
football field—will be printed out and rolled onto a wheel. Other activities
that have this blog queen pumped are the Untitled fair, the W Hotel parties and
NADA’s pool scene. At night, though, she’s curled up with takeout at the Marriott.—A.B.
Jeanie
Riddle
gallery director/curator
gallery director/curator
Jeanie Riddle, director and curator at Montreal
gallery Parisian Laundry, is no fool when it comes to counting
the benefits of Art Basel Miami. Beyond the art, there is the pleasure of
heading south from a Montreal winter. “It’s warm, sunny and glamorous,” she
says. “People are excited and ready to feel blown away by work—hopefully enough
to take it home.” Networking, parties, sunshine and rubbing elbows with art
stars aren’t the only things that make the trek worthwhile. “Our experience at
the NADA fair with [Montreal artist] Valérie Blass garnered
exceptional exposure,” she says. “This was also the case at the inaugural
Untitled fair, hosted right on the beach! Nothing compares to people walking
into the fair, damp from a swim and ready to talk art.” This year, Parisian
Laundry will show the work of David Armstrong Six, Janet Werner and Jaime Angelopoulos.
—A.S.
Source: fashionmagazine.com
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