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PRESS REVIEW

nº25 / MASTERPIECE 2018

The 9th edition of Masterpiece at the Royal Hospital Chelsea, offered an unparalleled opportunity for networking, champagne, and connoisseurship.





GOLF CAR TO MORTALITY

Masterpiece's inimitable strength is its ability to transcend

the traditional pigeonholing of art into cultures

Philip Hewat-Jaboor

Chairman of Masterpiece



 


Interviews and featured galleries, artists by Zoltan Alexander

Private walk with Paul Freud


Marina Abramović at Factum Arte Foundation (Madrid), Chiharu Shiota at Blain Southern Gallery (London), Syrie Maugham, Michele Oka Doner, Mattia Bonetti, Barnaby Barford and Sebastian Errazuriz at David Gill Gallery (London), Alexander Calder, Paul McCarthy and Larry Bell at Hauser & Wirth Gallery (London), Bam Bogart at Vigo Gallery (London), Brigitte Bouquin-Selles at Davies Street Gallery (london), Rob and Nick Carter at Ben Brown Fine Arts (London), Jenny Holzer, Marc Quin and Boris Savalev at Factum Arte Foundation (Madrid), Andy Warhol at Galerie von Vertes (Zürich)



 


Masterpiece 2018 / © video by Zoltan Alexander ZOLTAN+MEDIA




With dear friend, Paul Freud, we took a golf car at the entrance of Chelsea Bridge Road to drive to the 9th edition of Masterpiece at the Royal Hospital Chelsea, the ultimate glitzy meeting place colliding with the Mayfair Art Weekend.


What sets Masterpiece apart from other art fairs is the eclectic set-up and juxtaposition design, art, antiques, furniture, precious jewellery collections and speedboats. The fair offers an unparalleled opportunity for networking and champagne, but also a passion for beauty and connoisseurship.


This year the fair has expanded both in size and scope and was the strongest yet. With flow of visitors, we walked through 6,000 years of art history from some 160 renowned galleries worldwide and selected significant art pieces from Masterpiece 2018.




Factum Arte Foundation / “Five Stages of Maya Dance” by Marina Abramović / Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA


MASTERPIECE


At the entrance, Masterpiece Presents welcomed the visitors with a spectacular edition in light and stone, a phenomenal immersive work by Marina Abramović.


It was a collaboration with Factum Arte Foundation from Madrid using an advanced 3D scanning. Abramović has created a mesmerising body of work that pushed once again all the boundaries of her experimental vision.


We walked through her projected portrait on a fine mist of water to enter a low-lit exhibition space dedicated to the “Five Stages of Maya Dance", a splendid and wild series of alabaster sculptures. Walking around the five cutting-edge pieces, Abramović's haunting presence decomposed into intricately carved of 3D Chinese ink landscapes.


At this point in my life, I decided to capture my performance in a more permanent material to face mortality. Alabaster, with its immutable, translucent and luminous qualities proved the perfect material for my experiment.”




Blain Southern Gallery / Installation by Chiharu Shiota / Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA


BLAIN SOUTHERN GALLERY / London


Making a statement, a spectacular installation was presented by Blain Southern Gallery with Berlin-based Japanese artist Chiharu Shiota. She has created a site-specific installation that filled the entire booth with a web of interlacing red yarn trapping lost objects and suitcases symbolising the existential question of identity.




David Gill Gallery / (left) Work on paper “Atlas” by Michele Oka Doner, Sofa “Shield” by Mattia Bonetti, Coffee Table “Paragon” by Mattia Bonetti, (right) Mirror “Riot” by Barnaby Barford, Armchair “Elle & Lui” by Mattia Bonetti / Photo © Courtesy of David Gill Gallery


DAVID GILL GALLERY / London


The much-anticipated installation of David Gill Gallery was highly inspired by the poet and Surrealist patron Edward James. Gill was fascinated with him after coming across his house sale some years ago. He illustrated at the time how interiors can mix a Picasso with contemporary bookcases and period furniture.


The presentation at Masterpiece combines a pair of Syrie Maugham bookcases and a range of 21st-century design pieces to recapture the atmosphere of James's original library. In the heavily draped interior, the desks were overflowing with books, a Michele Oka Doner’s bronze bust, a Mattia Bonetti lounge chair, alongside with pieces by Barnaby Barford and Sebastian Errazuriz.




Hauser & Wirth Gallery / “Venice Fog, VFZ 2 ” by Larry bell / Photo © Courtesy of Hauser & Wirth Gallery


HAUSER & WIRTH GALLERY / London


Among the distinguished newcomers, the contemporary powerhouse Hauser & Wirth Gallery presented “Wunderkammer” of modern and contemporary artworks alongside 19th-century furniture, a delicate mobile by Alexander Calder and Paul McCarthy’s new work "White Snow Flower Girl" putting the emphasis on cross-collecting.


The gallery also presented Larry Bell, one of the most renowned and influential artists to emerge from the Los Angeles art scene of the 1960s, known foremost for his refined surface treatment of glass and explorations of light, reflection and shadow through the material.

The large cubic glass work “Venice Fog” is a piece of new laminated glass with colour combinations inspired by the marine fog, which rolls into Venice CA, the location of Bell’s studio. With the constant presence of the misty Sea Salt colour of the exterior glass his sculpture allows two colours to be fused together through reflection and refraction.


Although we tend to think of glass as a window, it is a solid liquid that has at once three distinctive qualities: it reflects light, it absorbs light, and it transmits light all at the same time.”




Vigo Gallery / “Ploeglucht” by Bam Bogart / Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA


VIGO GALLERY / London


Vigo Gallery was another newcomer at Masterpiece presenting a group show including the much-loved Dutch expressionist painter Bam Bogart.


Bogart’s work was dedicated to exploring the materiality of paint, using it as a sculptural medium. He blurs traditional notions of painting and sculpture by building three-dimensional pieces with thick layers of material, comprised of natural ingredients of a mix of mortar, siccative, powdered chalk, varnish, and raw pigment, applied to large, heavy wooden backing structures.




Davies Street Gallery/ “Coques” by Brigitte Bouquin-Selles / Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA


DAVIES STREET GALLERY / London


During the fair, the gallery exhibited one of Brigitte Bouquin-Selles’s tapestries. She was introduced first-hand to textile art by a master of the Nouvelle Tapisserie movement.


Bouquin-Selles currently works from Angers in France at the edge of the Loire Valley. In her work, she entwines pieces of felt, weaving unordered fibres of dense material into visually ordered variations of geometric line and loose bondage. Each piece is hand woven, pitting repetition against chaotic strands of loose fibres.




Ben Brown Fine Arts / “Transforming Flowers in a Vase” by Rob & Nick Carter / Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA


BEN BROWN FINE ARTS / London


Rob and Nick Carter’s acclaimed Transforming series has been 10 years and 65.000 hours in the making and was presented at the first time by Ben Brown Fine Arts at Masterpiece 2018.


This mesmerising body of work consists of 12 looped films in slow motion, each taking as their starting point as an iconic painting or a photograph. The Transforming series was originally based on the knowledge that museum visitors look at a work of art an average of three seconds. In an attempt to inspire visitors to examine art works for longer, the Carters have created a unique intersection between the art of the past and cutting-edge computer generated images in real-time motion.




Factum Arte Foundation / Paul Feud and Charlotte of Factum Arte Foundation / Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA


FACTUM ARTE FOUNDATION / Madrid


Paul Freud and I finally arrived to the Madrid based Factum Arte Foundation.


Factum Arte Foundation consists of a team of artists, technicians and passionate conservators dedicated to digital mediation, however, it is not a gallery. Factum Arte Foundation is an exceptional space for brainstorming, a laboratory for projects taking place around the world, using digital technology for the preservation of cultural heritage.


Factum Arte is, in fact, an extraordinary foundation; their production is the result of extensive research and experimentation in the development of new materials, techniques and technology. They have never rejected a project, but are constantly adapting and developing technologies they work with, earning a reputation for the uncompromising nature of its work and obsessive commitment to pushing the boundaries that usually separate new technology and traditional craft skills.


Some remarkable large-scale projects include Jenny Holzer’s Louvre Abu Dhabi commission, Marc Quin’s “Planet” and going as far as Vologda, to the exquisite Ferapontov Monastery in Russia to record frescoes in high-resolution colour and 3D.


At that point, Paul was handed a black photographer's glove to view one of Factum Arte's projects, Boris Savalev's "Czernowitz Portfolio" with precious loose prints.




Galerie von Vertes / “Heart” by Andy Warhol / Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA


GALERIE VON VERTES / Zürich


Finally … How can you mend a broken heart? Al Green knows it. Andy Warhol knows it.




 

INDEX




COVER

(left) “Venice Fog VFZ 2” by Larry Bell

(right) artist Paul Freud

/ Photo © Courtesy of ZOLTAN+MEDIA





PUBLISHED

ARTLYST © 2018







MASTERPIECE 2018

/ published in ARTLYST © 2018


MASTERPIECE 2018

The Royal Hospital Chelsea South Grounds, SW3 4LW London

/ 28 June - 4 July 2018 / Tickets: £55



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