SAN JOSE, CA.- On Sunday, April 13th,
Silicon Valley Contemporary closed a successful inaugural year for the Valleys first art fair. The premier event drew over 6,500 attendees to the San Jose McEnery Convention Center, with over 2,000 lining up for the VIP Opening Night Preview to benefit the San Jose Museum of Art. Silicon Valley Contemporary delivered on its aim of building bridges between the art and tech worlds and grooming a new collector base for cutting edge contemporary art works.
Ultimately, the fair indicated strong interest in the region for viewing and collecting fine art, spread across mediums and demographics. The fairs robust panel discussion program proved immensely popular, with standing room only audiences learning about the fine art market and collecting from national art experts. As an exercise in new market disruption, one of the Valleys core tenets, Silicon Valley Contemporarys first year proved a telling experiment, revealing effective modes for educating and engaging this audience, which the fair plans to build on in its 2015 return. Fair goers demonstrated interest in all genres, and this positive response to our first-year effort from thousands of art enthusiasts is encouraging and establishes a strong foundation on which to build next year, said Rick Friedman, President, Hamptons Expo Group and founder of Silicon Valley Contemporary.
Silicon Valley Contemporary brought a fair that matched the innovative spirit of the region, the #1 filer of new patents in the United States, as Kerry Adams-Hapner, San Joses Director of Cultural Affairs & Deputy Director of Economic Development, pointed out in Thursdays press conference. The first year fair was also host to a range of other first-and-only claimsfirst time art acquisitions by new collectors, first time art fair attendees in a growing market, and the first Drone-produced paintings.
Throughout the fair, guests were seen using the Collectrium app to identify works of art they were interested in. The official technology partner of the fair, Collectrium produced the Silicon Valley Contemporary app for iPhone and iPad, a comprehensive digital guide to the fair's exhibitors and artworks available in real time point-and-shoot display through Collectriums revolutionary image recognition feature.
Jamie Austin, Curator and Director of Programs for ZERO1, a preeminent authority on the intersection between art and technology, attended the fair and spoke of the positive impact of the event for the area, stating, Silicon Valley Contemporary was a welcomed experiment in downtown San Jose. From the strong collection of videos in the "Moving Image Experience" to media projects by Gary Hill and the Marina Abramovic Institute, I appreciated the fair's focus on showcasing artists using technology as a tool to create innovative new work."
Sales documented at SVC were in a range of mediums and price pointsfrom major works placed in prominent collections to Low-Brow and Street Art pieces purchased by novice collectors, proving a viable market for fine art in the Valley. Opening night sales kicked off with the purchase of Jasper Johnss Lands End, for $28,000, and a Mark Flood Untitled painting, for $80,000, sold at Mark Borghi Fine Art, and continued through the final hour of the fair with Seoul based Art Company MISOOLSIDAE selling a Jeong Hyun-Sook. Additionally, the first known Bitcoin sale at an art fair, Off Limits but Blessed by The Fed by Dana Louise Kirkpatrick sold by KM Fine Arts Gallery for more than 40 Bitcoins. Many exhibitors cited interest and follow-up that would extend sales through the coming weeks, and numerous new contacts made.
Lester Marks, a noted Houston based collector and featured guest speaker at the fair, acquired a major work for his collection at the fair by the 2014 Distinguished Media Artist, Gary Hill, asking price $65,000. In a comment made shortly after he said, "I'm very excited to have acquired Klein Bottle with the Image of Its Own Making (after Robert Morris) by Gary Hill from James Harris Gallery at Silicon Valley Contemporary. This piece will join another important work of art in my collectiona video piece by Bill Viola. Its an honor to have work by two pioneers working with the moving image and new media." Produced in an edition of five, Marks acquired the third in the edition, as well as a piece by Turkish video artist Rafik Anadol.