NEW YORK, NY.- The Armory Show closed on Sunday, March 10, with exhibitors reporting excellent sales across all exhibitor sections on all five days of the fair. Numerous exhibitors reported acquisitions from private and public intuitions across the U.S. and internationally, in addition to an increased presence of curators at the fair. For the second consecutive year, The Armory Show was presented by Lead Partner Athena Art Finance.
Cementing its role as New Yorks definitive international art fair, and bolstering its position as the marquee event to kick off the annual art calendar, The Armory Show welcomed over 57,000 visitors across all days, with a significant presence of museum curators, institutional trustees, and private collectors from over 160 museums and cultural institutions worldwide, including: Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Dallas Museum of Art, Denver Art Museum, de Young Museum, Hammer Museum, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, MIT List Visual Arts Center, Nasher Sculpture Garden, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Serpentine Galleries, Smart Museum of Art, Speed Art Museum, Tate Americas Foundation, Walker Art Center, and Warhol Museum.
From the beginning of our work on the 25th Anniversary edition of The Armory Show, we recognized that this year was an incredibly important milestone. The bar that we set for the 2019 edition was high, and we can proudly say that this years fair surpassed these bold expectations, remarked Nicole Berry, Executive Director. With steady sales reported by galleries and notable institutional presence, The Armory Show remains the premier gateway for international galleries to access North American collectors and institutions. This year, we were proud to present a diverse, sophisticated, and exhilarating cross-section of galleries in the art world capital. As we write the next chapter of The Armory Show, the fair will continue to be the premier art fair in New York.
Notable attendees included: Philip and Shelly Fox Aarons, Cecilia Alemani, Pedro Barbosa, Maria Babikova, Swizz Beatz and Alicia Keys, Suzanne Deal Booth, Stacey Bendet, Estrellita B. Brodsky, Elizabeth Callender, Richard Chang, Sofia Coppola, Joel and Zoe Dictrow, Eric Diefenbach and JK Brown, Paul Dano and Zoe Kazan, Bob and Renee Drake, Tom Finkelpearl, James Franco, Ella Fontanals-Cisneros, Charlotte Ford, Glenn Fuhrman, Ryan Gander, Alex Gartenfeld, Massimiliano Gioni, Thelma Golden, Agnes Gund, Susan and Michael Hort, Anne Huntington, Isabelle Huppert, Gianni Jetzer, Jill and Peter Kraus, Jenny Laird, Adam Lindemann, Glenn Lowry, Bernard Lumpkin, Sherry and Joel Mallin, Mariko Mori, David Mugrabi, B.J. Novak, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Anne Pasternak, Antoni Porowski, Q-Tip, Renee Rockefeller, Scott Rothkopf, Don and Mera Rubell, Beth Rudin de Woody, Howard Rachofsky, Paul Rudd, Paul Schimmel, Alan Schwartz, Phyllis Lally Seevers, Alain Servais, Jennifer Stockman, Daniel Sallick, James Spader, Laurie Tisch, Philippe Vergne, Adam Weinberg, Margaret Wu, and Anita and Poju Zabludowicz.
The Armory Shows 25th Anniversary edition featured 198 galleries from 33 countries, with 63 new exhibitors, including several who have returned after years of absence, including 303 Gallery (New York), Tanya Bonakdar Gallery (New York, Los Angeles), Stephen Friedman Gallery (London), Galerie Krinzinger (Vienna), David Nolan Gallery (New York), and Zeno X Gallery (Antwerp).
The 2019 edition reflected a strong focus on in-depth presentations and curatorial approaches, with over 80 exhibitors staging solo- and dual-artist presentations, from artist debuts to restaged historical works. The fairs second annual Curatorial Leadership Summit convened 70 invited curators for a close-door discussion chaired by Dan Byers, Director, Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University
The 2019 edition saw the distribution of $40,000 in prizes to artists and galleries. Ryan Ganders Het Spel (My neotonic ovoid contribution to Modernism), 2019, presented by Lisson Gallery, was the winner of the inaugural Pommery Prize, which awards $20,000 to be shared between the artist and presenting gallery. Kapwani Kiwanga, presented by Galerie Jérôme Poggi, was the winner of the inaugural Étant donnés Prize, which awards $10,000 to the artist. First-time exhibitor Charlie James Gallery was the winner of the third annual Presents Booth Prize, supported for the third consecutive year by Athena Art Finance.
Armory Live celebrated the fair's 25th Anniversary with four days of dedicated talks featuring internationally renowned artists, curators, collectors, and art practitioners. Notable highlights included Melanie Gerlis, Art Market Columnist, Financial Times, who led a discussion on the evolving role of the collector with gallerist Sean Kelly, collectors Daniel Sallick and Pedro Barbosa, art advisor Lisa Schiff, and Managing Director of Athena Art Finance, Naomi Baigell. Charlotte Burns, Executive Editor of In Other Words, writer Antwaun Sargent, artist Paul Anthony Smith, and Lauren Haynes, curator at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, probed what aspects of the American identity remain unaddressed and overlooked, while ARTnews Editor-in-Chief Sarah Douglas, writer Linda Yablonsky, and gallerist Mitchell Algus, considered how notions of sexuality and provocation have changed over the last twenty-five years.