ArteBA: Slow and Steady Wins the RaceBy Marina Cashdan
Published: May 27, 2009
In the last year alone there has been a flurry of Latin American exhibitions both in the U.S. and abroad. New York's Museum of Modern Art opened a joint show of Argentine artist León Ferrari and the Brazilian modernist Mira Schendel last month, and has a traveling mid-career retrospective of the Mexican Conceptualist Gabriel Orozco opening in December. London's Tate Modern offered a mid-career retrospective of the contemporary Brazilian Conceptualist Cildo Meireles, which opens at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts next month, and previously at the Tate's Turbine Hall there was Colombian artist Doris Salcedo's jagged floor crack. On the fair front, Mexico City’s México Arte Contemporáneo fair (MACO, aka Zona Maco) has grown from marginally international to fabulously global in the last few years, drawing in artists, curators — former Whitney Museum associate curator Shamim Momin curated the Jumex collection exhibition there this year — and gobs of dealers. And now, ArteBA, the second-largest and longest-running Latin American fair, and the only one that focuses solely on Latin American artists, is receiving similar international attention. This year’s ArteBA, which closed Tuesday, featured approximately 800 Latin American artists from 90 primarily South American galleries, plus a few visitors (two from the U.S.; three from Spain). One of the few fairs to operate as a nonprofit, with a clear mission to foster artists rather than profit off of galleries, ArteBA succeeds in overcoming the commercial and money-driven stigma of the typical art fair and brings in a diverse public. More than 120,000 visitors poured into Buenos Aires's La Rural Stadium and Exhibition Hall, opposite the Opera Pampa, during the fair’s five-day run, and the significant percentage of non-buying visitors made the fair feel like an eclectic, and well-curated, Latin American exhibition, spanning early 20th century to contemporary works. “Because we are a nonprofit, we have assumed this objective of bringing contemporary art to people,” says Fundacion ArteBA board member Marga Munez-Vargas de Macaya. “We really look forward to many people visiting the fair. It’s not only for collectors. This is a very open fair.” And open it was. Weaving in and out of the spacious booths were not just high-profile collectors and curators — Ella Fontanals-Cisneros, Anibal Jozami, Eduardo F. Costantini, Tate Modern Latin American art curator Julieta Gonzalez, Carmen Ramírez, Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, and Alberto de la Cruz, son of Rosa de la Cruz — but also a sea of mostly Spanish-speaking families, couples, and hip-looking 20-somethings. Teenagers with PoMo haircuts convened in the graffiti-adorned, Chandon Winery–sponsored Barrio Joven (or “Young Neighborhood”) section, where 20 hand-selected galleries displayed work ranging from advertising graphics to illustration, street art, installations, and multimedia art. Barrio Joven took up approximately one-fifth of the airy L-shaped convention, and about a third of the fair’s total $30,000 in prize money was bestowed on the most promising young artists and galleries included there. As you walked around ArteBA, a few boldface artists stood out, many of whom would have been barely known outside of South America only a few years ago. Léon Ferrari’s calligraphic paintings drew attention, as did works by fellow Argentinians Antonio Berni, Luis Felipe Noé, Luis Fernando Benedit (who simultaneously had a show at the Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires), Xul Solar, Emilio Pettoruti, Eduardo Stupía, Julio Le Parc, Jorge Macchi, Leandro Erlich, and Flavia da Rin, as well as Uruguay’s Joaquín Torres García and Chile’s Samy Benmayor. But the fair also beamed a spotlight on less familiar members of the South American avant-garde, especially emerging talent from Chile and Argentina.
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