Asian Art Fairs

ART FAIR REPORT: FRIEZE SEOUL & KIAF 2023

Installation, Thaddeus Ropac, Frieze Seoul

Amid some concerns on the health of the South Korean art market, with art sales having dropped back to pre-covid level, gallerists, dealers and collectors alike were pinning their hopes on the return of Frieze Seoul and its counterpoint fair, KIAF.

Whilst various pundits have suggested the Korean market is “thin” due to its “volatility”, others suggest the number of buyers has in fact increased, with the ‘popularity’ of all things art having harnessed a broader demographic.

For more than three decades now, South Korea has maintained an important position within the broader Asian market, particularly with respect to the secondary market; as sophisticated, well-educated and focused collectors these members of affluent families hold significant purchasing power. 

With this as a backdrop, it is only reasonable then that a new generation of young collectors is emerging, one that is enthusiastically participating in the art market and happily embracing the concept of a collection. Notably, collectors under the age of 50 equate for 80% of contemporary art sales.

This strong and multi-demographic collector base has no doubt encouraged leading Western galleries to set up shop over the years, with the likes of Perrotin, Pace, Thaddeaus Ropac, and Lehmann Maupin taking up residence in the arts precincts on offer.  Jay Jopling’s White Cube is the most recent addition, with its timely opening of a group exhibition “The Embodied Spirit” offering some respite during Seoul Art Week.

Of course, South Korea has created a favourable business environment for European galleries, with an ever-increasing availability of English-speaking Korean art professionals, relatively low rent on gallery space, and ‘free trade zones’ providing seamless logistics.

Installation, Jonas Wood @ Gagosian Gallery, Frieze Seoul

Frieze Seoul

At just after 2pm at the VIP opening of Frieze Seoul, an enthusiastic ambience permeated the stands, with fresh-faced gallery staff at the ready; and they needed to be!  With foot traffic increasing by the minute, this was a buoyant and clearly successful start to Frieze’s 2nd iteration in Seoul.

Clearly a number of works had been pre-sold but equally, there was some high value negotiations taking place on the first day; a Kusama bronze pumpkin was being considered by competing parties at one stand (and this was not the only Kusama on display, a selection of Infinity Dot paintings of varying dimensions and quality also populated the fair), six figure sales were being transacted at many booths, and the first Georg Baselitz on display at Thaddeus Ropac sold for €1,200,000 ($1.3 million), and was replaced a day or so later, with an equally stunning Baselitz.

Installation, Yayoi Kusama @ David Zwirner, Frieze Seoul

Collector and institutional Interest in George Condo’s Picasso-inspired paintings has been strong across Asia, and in 2021, Condo was the subject of an extensive survey show at the Long Museum in Shanghai; in 2020, one of his paintings sold for $6.58 million at a Christie’s Hong Kong auction, setting an auction record for him.  This market traction no doubt proved salient during Frieze Seoul, with several galleries exhibiting and indeed selling, works by Condo.   

Hauser &Wirth had a choice “Picasso-inspired” painting occupying its own dedicated wall; Spruth Magers had a strong 2022 work on paper, Almine Rech included an earlier 2008/2009 small oil on linen, on their stand; and David Zwirner’s large, calligraphic mixed media work on linen attracted interest.

Fair favourite (at both Freize and KIAF), Park Seo Bo’s sublime paintings and works on paper punctuated the booths, and drew the crowds, especially during the ‘happening’ at White Cube’s stand where ebullient director Jay Jopling observed the frantic adulation surrounding the now frail 91 year artist.  Along with leading internationalist Seoul gallery, Kukje, both sold works by the father of the 'Dansaekhwa' movement for around the $500k mark. 

The fervour bodes well for White Cube’s forthcoming, major solo exhibition for Park Seo Bo, scheduled for autumn 2024 at the gallery’s upcoming New York space on Madison Avenue (which is set to open in October this year). Jopling is also planning for a local project with a South Korean institution.

Installation view of White Cube’s booth at Frieze Seoul, 2023.
Photo by Lets Studio. Courtesy of Lets Studio and Frieze.

With the inclusion of Frieze Masters into the same trade hall space, there was some fairly serious blue-chip work on display. As the days progressed and foot traffic multiplied, extra security contract staff and carefully placed stanchions were starting to be installed; the latter was definitely required for the Instagram worthy sculpture by Jeff Koons at European Masters gallery, Robilant & Voena.

Julian Opie @ Cristea Roberts Gallery, KIAF Seoul

KIAF

With two decades of editions behind it, this year’s KIAF comprising 210 exhibiting galleries, and more than 130 were from Korea should have been better.  Enthusiastic foot traffic aside, the purported “range of art on view is broad in scope, scale, and price point” noted by one commentator really translated into a miscellany of quality, and unfortunately, compromised the other well curated booths from an unfortunately, much smaller percentage of exhibitors.

Indeed, one European gallery with an exemplary inventory on display – think Chagall, Picasso and Fontana - was clearly dissatisfied, voicing his grievance to a patient Fair staff member. 

The frequent public service announcements requesting visitors not to take photos unless granted permission and not touch the artworks, did not help matters, invading conversations and infantilising visitors. 

However apart from these disappointments, there were some established Seoul-based galleries with a thoughtful array of works by some key Korean artists.

Chun Kwangyoung’s recognisable “Aggregate” series perhaps more akin to freestanding sculptures and wall hangings and composed of hundreds of tiny polystyrene triangles, which the artist then wraps in coloured Korean mulberry paper, was being shown by several galleries, as too was proponent of the Korean Art Informel movement of the 1950s and 60, Kim Tschang-Yeul, whose oil and graphite on linen paintings hover somewhere between abstraction and hyper-realism.

The burnt umber and raw canvas of one of the leading figures of the Korean Dansaekhwa art movement Yun Hyong Keun, was also a Fair favourite across both Frieze and Seoul, with quite a number of works on display at galleries’ respective booths.

Many of the exhibiting galleries at KIAF reported good productive engagement with visitors, with many reporting good sales.  One exhibitor noted his observance of  the “different accents and languages [which] can be heard across the fair concourse, solidifying the fact that this fair—and Seoul as a whole—is now a bona fide hub of international art. “

To view more artworks from the fairs visit https://www.instagram.com/catherineasquithart/

©Catherine Asquith 2023 

Art Fair: Taipei Dangdai 2019

Haegue Yang, Sol LeWitt Upside Down onto Wall – Cubic-Modular Wall Structure, Black, Expanded 11 Times, 2018, Aluminum venetian blinds, powder-coated aluminum hanging structure, steel wire rope, LED tubes, cable, 305 x 304 x 104 cm. Image: Courtesy of Kukje Gallery, Seoul.

Taipei Dangdai is a new international art fair commencing 18tth January 2019. 

A joint venture between Single Market Events (Tim Etchell), ARTHQ / EVENTS Limited, Ramsay Fairs Limited and Angus Montgomery Limited, the Fair’s rationale is to celebrate the city’s unique and dynamic arts scene, while highlighting global creativity and the increasing importance of the wider art market in Asia.

Fair Director, Magnus Renfrew believes now is the right time to launch an international art fair in Taipei: “Galleries are increasingly taking Asia seriously, and are looking for more than one opportunity to engage with the region’s collectors each year. For a long time, galleries that show at Art Basel have also cited Taiwanese collectors as being the most instrumental in determining the success of their participation”. 

Renfrew’s vision reflects the tenor of the word “Dangdai”, meaning ‘now’ or ‘of the present moment’:  “I hope that the fair will, appropriately, be something of a ‘moment’ for Taipei — creating an opportunity to showcase its strengths to a much wider audience, while also providing collectors, buyers and local audiences with an opportunity to engage with leading galleries from Asia and around the world on their doorstep, and on their terms. There hasn’t really been a fair of this quality before, with such a strong exhibitor line-up.”

Presented by UBS, the event brings together a selection of the world’s leading galleries and artists alongside influential thinkers from a wide range of disciplines, including archaeology, art history and technology.

Art Basel Hong Kong, Report

The fifth edition of Art Basel in Hong Kong, which featured 242 premier galleries from 34 countries and territories, has ended on a high note. This year’s show included memorable moments such as:

  • Our Conversations and Salon series was well received, offering visitors over 25 engaging sessions including the Salon panel 'Taking Stock: An Art Market Report'. The discussion followed the release of The Art Basel and UBS Global Art Market Report, which covers all aspects of the international art market in 2016.
  • Kingsley Ng’s Twenty-Five Minutes Older, a moving installation in which two of Hong Kong’s iconic public trams were transformed into traveling works of art. The project was commissioned by Art Basel and supported by MGM Resorts Art & Culture.
  • Another highlight was 'Virtual Frontiers: Artists Experimenting with Tilt Brush' presented by Art Basel and Google Arts & Culture, where visitors explored new virtual reality works created by artists: boychild, Cao Fei, Robin Rhode, Sun Xun, and Yang Yongliang. The works were produced using Google’s Tilt Brush - a 3D drawing and painting application.
  • Nonny de la Peña’s project, 'Passage: The Life of a Wall on Lin He Road', a new iteration of 'Safely Manoeuvring Across Lin He Road' by Lin Yilin, presented by Asia Art Archive, also proved very popular amongst visitors as well.

Journalists from across the world attended, writing overwhelmingly positive reviews.  Forbes stated that ‘since its inception five years ago, Art Basel in Hong Kong has transformed the city into one of Asia’s most important cultural hubs.’ In addition, The New York Times observed that '…in the five years since Art Basel first began in Hong Kong, it has become perhaps the most important annual event on the regional art calendar[…] When it comes to Asian art, Art Basel Hong Kong is the place to go[…]' Financial Times reported that ‘Dealers find an audience for more challenging work at the fifth edition of the fair [...] [Art Basel’s] growth maps the burgeoning engagement of the Asia Pacific region with international contemporary art.’

The five show days were attended by private collectors as well as directors, curators, trustees and patrons from nearly 80 leading international museums and institutions across 20 countries, including Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, Auckland; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; Long Museum, Shanghai; MoMA PS1, New York; Mori Art Museum, Tokyo; Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, Sydney; National Gallery Singapore, Singapore; National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul; New Museum, New York; Rockbund Art Museum, Shanghai; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco; Serpentine Galleries, London; Tate, London and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.

With numerous gallery openings and an expanded program of parallel events, the Art Basel week continued to spotlight Hong Kong's vibrant arts and cultural scene.

(from “Art Basel Hong Kong” newsletter 4th April 2017)

Art Basel Hong Kong

The fifth edition of Art Basel’s show in Hong Kong will commence on March 21 at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (HKCEC) in Wan Chai.
 
Bringing together gallerists, artists, collectors, curators, museum directors and critics from across the globe, Art Basel HK will present a total of 242 leading galleries from Asia, the Asia-Pacific and the rest of the world.
 
The fair comprises a number sectors: “Galleries”, the fair’s core sector showcases 20th and 21st century works, and also includes the “Insights” sector, the latter highlighting the curatorial projects, and the “Discoveries” sector featuring solo and 2-person projects. 
 
The “Encounters” sector is dedicated to large-scale sculptural installations and performances which punctuate the fair and is invariably a ‘feature’ of the fair, always attracting much attention and appreciation.
 
The “Kabinett” sector, previously only on show at Art Basel Miami Beach, will make its debut at this year’s ABHK, and features curated projects within selected gallery booths.
 
Complemented with a program of film, conversations and salons, (and a few parties!), Art Basel Hong Kong offers a stimulating week of all things art.
 
Beyond the fair, Hong Kong’s thriving arts scene is also on show throughout the week, with exhibitions, events and site-specific installations taking place across the city and beyond.