New York art fairs are returning, eyes open and fingers crossed
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New York art fairs are returning, eyes open and fingers crossed
Allison Janae Hamilton, All the Stars Appointed to Their Places, 2021. Archival pigment print. Image dimensions: 40 x 60 in. 101.6 x 152.4 cm. Framed dimensions: 40 7/8 x 60 7/8 in. 103.8 x 154.6 cm. Edition of 5 plus 2 AP.

by Zachary Small



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Artworks are being flown in from overseas, the showroom has been spruced up and ticket sales have started for the Armory Show, which is readying to become the first major American art fair to come back amid the pandemic, when it opens Sept. 9 at its new location at the Javits Convention Center.

“We have to be ready for anything,” the fair’s executive director, Nicole Berry, said in a phone interview. “We are putting on this event and have a Plan A, B, C, D and E.”

When plans for the Armory Show came together earlier this year, Berry envisioned the fair as an anchor of the fall arts season, symbolizing the art world’s triumphant return to in-person selling and schmoozing. She planned on opening her event near full capacity, welcoming thousands of visitors to browse the works of nearly 500 artists presented by more than 200 galleries from 37 countries.

“We believe NYC will emerge from this pandemic stronger than ever,” Berry said at the time, describing the fall season as a “pivotal moment when the city’s cultural organizations are reopening.”

Then came a summer resurgence of the coronavirus, stagnant vaccination rates and travel restrictions, preventing many galleries from participating in what has typically been an economic engine in the art market. And earlier this month, several trade expos decided to cancel their shows, making the Champagne and oyster-shucking celebrations of the past seem unlikely. The New York International Antiquarian Book Fair, the New York International Auto Show and PAD London, an art and design fair, all decided to forgo their 2021 editions.

The Armory Show still intends to feature dealers such as David Zwirner, Stephen Friedman and Marianne Boesky and showcase important artists including Wolfgang Tillmans, Deborah Roberts and Jeffrey Gibson. But not everyone is on board. Nearly a quarter of its more than 200 exhibitors have deferred participation in the physical fair — although they will take part online — because of travel restrictions. Gallery representatives unable to attend will have registrations rolled over to next year’s edition, Berry said.

Some European collectors eager to attend the fair have contingency plans of their own. Alain Servais, a Belgian investment banker and collector, has considered spending two weeks in Mexico to bypass the travel restrictions in his home country to enter the United States. “It’s nonsense and something very few people can afford,” he said. “So, for now, the American art world will be largely left alone.”

Sales from the world’s art fairs reached an estimated $16.6 billion in 2019, representing nearly 43% of annual sales for dealers, according to the Art Basel and UBS Art Market 2021 report. That percentage was slashed in half during the pandemic, when more than 60% of art fairs around the world canceled events and dealers found ways of reaching clients online.

“When the vaccine first became widely available, it seemed as if a switch would flip and suddenly everything would revert — including large public gatherings like fairs,” said Natasha Degen, chairwoman of art market studies at the Fashion Institute of Technology. “Events like the Armory Show will attract a core group of art world players but not the broader crowds that have given fairs their energy in recent years.”

Armory Show organizers said the majority of ticket sales occur just before the event and without reservations, so it’s difficult to say how crowded the showroom floor will be. In a typical year, the show welcomes about 54,000 people during its run time, but the pandemic has led to some health and safety measures that could limit crowds. Those include a mask mandate inside the exhibition, timed tickets and either proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of entering the Javits Center. Two other fairs opening that same week have adopted the same policies: the Spring/Break Art Show at 625 Madison Ave. and the Future Fair at 601 West 26th St. However, visitors wishing to attend Independent at the Battery Maritime Building and Art on Paper at Pier 36 must be vaccinated.

Despite setbacks and uncertainty, the Armory Show is proceeding with a program that revises its model. Its new location at the Javits Center has allowed fair organizers to combine its modern and contemporary art sections under one roof.

The fair is also making a larger investment in public art, starting a new program called Armory Off-Site, which has commissioned four artists to create works throughout the city with the help of municipal groups such as the Parks Department, the Hudson River Park Trust and the Hell’s Kitchen Alliance.

One of the Off-Site programs is at Pier 64, where artist Katja Larsson will present “New Neo Classics,” a series of sculptures that imbue everyday objects such as a crumpled baseball cap with an aura of antiquity reminiscent of the ancient Egyptian fragmented statues found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Another Off-Site work will feature a large RV parked at Astor Place, where artists Johnny DeFeo and Aaron Zulpo, from a collective called the Guild of Adventure Painters, will host painting sessions with guest artists and share an exhibition of new works.




In Chelsea, the Future Fair has rebuilt its program from the ground up after postponing its inaugural edition last year because of the pandemic. Nearly half of the show’s presenters are unable to participate and will be replaced by new galleries. Among the new list of 34 exhibitors, 25% are owned by people of color and half are owned by women — a rarity in the world of art fairs, which lacks diversity.

“We have been working on this since 2018 and it’s been a labor of love,” Rachel Mijares Fick, one of the Armory Show’s organizers, said of the fair. “There were moments when we were like, How are we going to get through this?”

A similar question floated through the minds of other gallerists who needed to make a decision on whether to take part in the Armory Show.

“It was a disappointment to realize that we wouldn’t make it this year,” said Nadia Gerazouni, whose gallery in Athens, Greece, The Breeder, has decided to participate online. The Armory Show would have been the dealer’s first physical fair since the pandemic started, and an opportunity to introduce her young artists to the American market. Some other galleries have decided to hire proxies to operate their booths, but Gerazouni was skeptical. “It’s not possible for a new hire to just show up and do the job of a gallery director,” she said.

Daniel Faria, a dealer based in Toronto, is determined to have a successful run at the Armory Show for the sake of his artists. Last year, Jennifer Rose Sciarrino was supposed to take part in Frieze Sculpture at Rockefeller Center when the program shifted focus because of the pandemic. She lost that opportunity, but she will have another chance at exhibiting through the Armory Show.

“We have a responsibility to show her work,” said Faria, who is preparing to wear an N95 mask on the showroom floor to be safe. “To say that I am 100% comfortable wouldn’t necessarily be true. But at this point, we have committed to going and it would take the Armory Show canceling itself for us not to go.”



THE SHOWS

The Armory Show runs Sept. 9-12; tickets are available at thearmoryshow.com.

Independent Art Fair, Sept. 9-12; tickets are available at independenthq.com.

Future Fair, Sept. 9-12; tickets are at futurefairs.com.

Art on Paper, Sept. 9-12; tickets are at thepaperfair.com.

Spring/Break Art Show, Sept. 8-13; tickets are at springbreakartshow.com.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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