
Photo by Sarah Douglas
Xu Zhen’s “In the Blink of an Eye” featured a person who seemed to levitate, with only one foot touching the ground.

Courtesy Sperone Westwater
Sperone Westwater sold William Wegman’s “Ray-O-Vac” (1973) for $80,000.
NEW YORK—The 21st edition of the
Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA)
Art Show kicked off Wednesday night with a preview for the benefit of
Henry Street Settlement. Things started out rather quietly at the 5:30 bell, but by 7:30 the aisles were thrumming with activity, even if it was more of the air-kiss than the deal-making variety. A stroll from one end of the fair to the other produced sightings of collectors
Adam Lindemann,
John McEnroe,
Martin Margulies, and
Beth Rudin DeWoody, as well as museum honchos like
MoMA’s
Glenn Lowry and critics
Jerry Saltz and
Peter Schjeldahl.
The Art Show, which features 70 galleries (60 of them from New York) this year and runs through February 23, has gotten increasingly contemporary in spirit, and for this edition it has branched out to include more ambitious installation works. Tavares Strachan’s actual excavated 3,000-pound, 20-square-foot portion of Crown Street in New Haven, complete with cement, earth, and parking meter, took over Ronald Feldman’s booth. And Gavin Brown, a first-time exhibitor, let artist Laura Owens, whose paintings he had on display, curate a large bookshelf, with a little help from other artists in Brown’s stable and book suppliers Printed Matter and Glenn Horowitz.
There was even a performance. As part of his group show “Body as Prop,” James Cohan hosted Chinese artist Xu Zhen’s In the Blink of an Eye, in which a person seems to levitate, with only one foot touching the ground. (Different performers took turns for 45-minute intervals, and though this writer discovered how the feat is accomplished, she refuses to give away the trick.) “We’re in a good mood, because we’ve done something unusual and people are confounded by it,” said Cohan on the fair’s second day. He might also have been in good spirits, because he sold Bill Viola’s video piece Tempest (Study for the Raft) (2005) to a collector Cohan referred to as “an old friend and supporter of the gallery.” The dealer was reticent to disclose the price, but similarly sized pieces by Viola have sold in the low to mid six-figure range in the recent past.
There appeared to be few sales on opening night, but one of the few obvious red dots went up next to Eight Bells (1883), by Winslow Homer, a large etching of a man measuring the horizon with a sextant, at the booth of New York dealer David Tunick, a veteran of the Art Show. Tunick says the piece is priced “in the low-to-mid six figures,” and he even had a second offer on the piece. (As though to drive home the point, he added a second red dot beside it.) By the fair’s second day, Tunick had put an 1803-05 study of trees by John Constable on hold, at $150,000. “If it doesn’t sell here, I’ll sell it at [the European Fine Art Fair in] Maastricht.” Tunick seemed confident in the market for Old Masters despite the hard times. “Last December was the best December we’ve ever had,” he said, and added that he had made sales in January to museums and private clients. While he admitted that this is looking like the worst recession in his 42 years of business, he said that with “Old Masters things don’t change that much.” In what was perhaps a sign of the times, dealers were initially urged to put an artwork on the outside wall of their booths that was priced at $10,000 or less and marked with a gold label bearing the word’s “Dealer’s Choice.” (The price rules were later relaxed.) “These are expensive walls!” Tunick said of his panel featuring the twice-sold Homer.
But it wasn’t only Old Masters that sold well. Sperone Westwater had a solo booth of William Wegman and quickly parted with Ray-O-Vac (1973) for $80,000. The work features six black-and-white photographs of one of the artist’s Weimaraners prancing on some electronic equipment.
Front and center at the fair, PaceWildenstein was presenting a solo show of the late Sol LeWitt. “There’s the same enthusiasm as in previous years, and we’ve had an excellent response,” said Pace’s David Goerk of the event’s opening night. “The economy will have an impact on everything, but not on people coming and seriously looking.” The gallery reported making several sales.