The Freshman FiveBy Jacquelyn Lewis
Published: December 4, 2007
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Courtesy Monya Rowe
At Aqua Wynwood: Vera Iliatova, "City of Women" (2007). Available at Monya Rowe's booth
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Courtesy Andrea Schwartz Gallery
At Red Dot: John Belingheri, "Nectar" (2007). Available at Andrea Schwartz Gallery's booth
On-the-ground reports from Art Basel Miami Beach and the satellite fairs.
Still Growing Strong
ABMB 2007 will be bigger than ever. A report on everyone's favorite winter playground from Art+Auction.
When in Miami…
Culture+Travel recommends where to stay, what to see, where to play, what to eat. A good chunk of those are first-timers in Miami—ranging from Art MB, a new incarnation of SeaFair, the art fair on a colossal, multi-million dollar yacht that has been sailing the high seas since September, to Takashi Murakami’s intrepid GEISAI Miami, featuring artists without gallery representation—and the sheer number of newcomers has taken even seasoned Miami participants by surprise. “We had no idea that there would be this multiplicity of satellite fairs this year,” says Dirk Park, co-director of the three-year-old Aqua Art Miami, which is launching a second fair, Aqua Wynwood, this year. While fair directors insist there’s room for everyone (“I’m not at all concerned about the number of art fairs,” says Robert Klein, president of the Association of International Photography Art Dealers, which is launching a new fair this year), ARTINFO wanted to know how the newcomers are planning to stand out in the sea of satellites. We asked the organizers of five of the freshman fairs to tell us what they have that the others don’t.
Robert Klein, president, Association of International Photography Art Dealers
Nicole Hudson, Art Now organizer
Shino Takagi, GEISAI Miami organizer
Tamar Holton-Hinshaw, Red Dot organizer
Dirk Park, Aqua Wynwood co-director
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