In a Shaky Market, Art Basel 2016 Delivers Impressive Sales

Dealers reported a flurry of sales within the first hour of the fair.

Flashback to 2016: Hauser & Wirth's presentation of Paul McCarthy's Tomato Head (Green) (1994) in the Unlimited section of Art Basel. Image: Courtesy Hauser & Wirth.
Visitors speak in front of the entrance of Unlimited at Art Basel. June 14, 2016. Image: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images.

Visitors speak in front of the entrance of Unlimited at Art Basel. June 14, 2016.
Image: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images.

Art Basel in Basel opened its doors to First Choice and VIP ticket holders this morning, who lined up in the rain outside the Messsehalle to slowly pass through the fair’s new security screening.

Some sought shelter from the rain inside Oscar Tuazon‘s wooden installation Zome Alloy, an adaptation of Steve Baer’s 1972 Zome House.

Once inside the fair, visitors were greeted with one of the better editions of the European fair in memory. In particular, the Gianni Jetzer-curated Unlimited sector, dedicated to institution-sized works, offered a thoughtful array of strong and at-times difficult and political works.

Collectors responded with enthusiasm: Gallery Chemould sold the Unlimited project by Mithu Sen, titled Museum of Unbelongings, for an undisclosed amount, and Hauser & Wirth sold Paul McCarthy‘s Tomato Head (Green) (1994) to an American private collection for $4,750,000.

Paul McCarthy's

Paul McCarthy’s Tomato Head (Green) (1994) in the Unlimited section of Art Basel. Image: Courtesy Hauser & Wirth.

The gallery also sold two more McCarthy works from their booth, including Michael Jackson Inflatable Drawings (2003) for $650,000 and the unique sculpture WS, White Snow Flower Girl #3 (2016) for $575,000.

At higher price ranges, Vija Celmins’s drawing Sea Drawing with Whale (1969) sold in excess of $1,500,000, and Maria Lassnig‘s paintings Macht des Schicksals (The Power of Fate) (2006) and Das Traumpaar (The Dream Couple) (2004) sold for $1.2 million and €550,000 ($616,824) respectively.

Mnuchin Gallery could also boast some six-figure sales: Brice Marden‘s First Window Painting, for $4.5 million, and John Chamberlain‘s Honest 508, for $3 million.

Skarstedt Gallery sold Mike Kelley‘s Reconstructed History, another highlight of the Unlimited section, for $1.5 million.

On the whole, gallerists clearly trotted out the most stellar works that they could get their hands on, a level of quality that was evident even at a first glance.

We spotted work by Romanian artist Adrian Ghenie—a recent auction darling—at Pace and at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac. Ropac also wowed with a large 1983 mixed-media Robert Rauschenberg collage, Untitled (Spread), featuring an image of a bald eagle and calling to mind his controversial “Combine” work Canyon, which became unsaleable years after it was created because of a stuffed bald eagle on the canvas.

Ropac also showed arresting, large-scale paintings by Georg Baselitz and Alex Katz.

Visitors swarmed the Gagosian Gallery booth, where the blue-chip works on offer included Jeff Koons gazing ball sculptures, a huge Damien Hirst steel pill cabinet, and works by Ed Ruscha. Blue-bereted security guards (provided, according to a press rep, by the fair itself) were particularly conspicuous here.

During the packed press conference on Tuesday afternoon, fair director Marc Spiegler addressed reporters: “This show takes place within a much more dynamic moment than last year’s. There are political elections and major referendums coming at us, mass migration within Europe, and economic uncertainties. My experience tells me that these kinds of times—these interesting kinds of times—generate a much stronger type of art. Indeed, you see a lot of great political work throughout the show.”

Marian Goodman Gallery, which also had a stellar booth featuring work by Steve McQueen, William Kentridge, Julie Mehretu, and Tacita Dean, reported strong sales within the first few hours.

William Kentridge, Untitled (Patrice Lumumba III) (2016). Courtesy Goodman Gallery.

William Kentridge, Untitled (Patrice Lumumba III) (2016). Courtesy Goodman Gallery.

South Africa’s Goodman Gallery also found success, selling Kentridge’s Patrice Lumumba (2016) for $120,000 and a full set of his Shadow Figure Bronzes (2016) for $320,000. Other works that found buyers included Walter Oltmann‘s Caterpillar Suit IV (2016) for €25,000 ($28,000), Kudzanai Chiurai’s painting Untitled (Office for the Enregisterment of Slaves) (2016), for $30,000, and Nolan Oswald Dennis’s ink and collage on paper, No conciliation is possible I (2016) for €3,500 ($3,900).

On the fair’s second level, contemporary art dealers did not disappoint either, nor did they shy away from daring, experimental presentations.

Roman Ondak's Clockwork at Esther Schipper.

Roman Ondak’s Clockwork at Esther Schipper.

Esther Schipper showed Pierre Huyghe’s Name Announcer, an actual human attendant who called out the names of visitors as they entered the booth, or ascribed them random “roles.” The gallery also showed Roman Ondak‘s Clockwork, in which a performer writes visitors’ names next to the time of day when they entered the booth. After only a couple of hours, a long column of names filled one wall.

Huang Yong Ping, <em> De celui qui mange est sorti ce qui se mange</em> (2015). © ADAGP Huang Yong Ping. Photo: Julie Joubert & archives kamel mennour. Courtesy the artist and kamel mennour.

Huang Yong Ping, De celui qui mange est sorti ce qui se mange (2015). © ADAGP Huang Yong Ping. Photo: Julie Joubert & archives kamel mennour. Courtesy the artist and kamel mennour.

Kamel Mennour, who recently opened his third space in Paris, reported “fantastic” sales for paintings and sculptures by Camille Henrot, ranging from €22,000–28,000 ($24,700–31,400). Mennour was especially excited about a sculpture by Huang Yong Ping, who is currently featured at Monumenta in Paris’s Grand Palais, with a giant skeleton of a snake. The work on offer was created from a mistake in the Monumenta cast of the work, which the artist has transformed into a new piece. A foundation was interested in the work, which goes from €300,000 ($336,600).

Galerie König, which also represents Henrot, staged an exciting presentation, including sculptures from various gallery artists arranged around an open floor plan. There’s only a single wall erected for the booth; large-scale paintings change every day. For the preview, König opted for Katharina Grosse.

The ambitious idea seemed to speak to collectors. Within the first two hours, the gallery sold a sculpture by Jeppe Hein (€60,000, or $67,300), two by Henrot (€45,000, or $50,500), two by David Zink Yi (€42,000, or $47,000), and new work by Elmgreen & Dragset, with whom the gallery has only recently started working, for €85,000 ($95,300).

Barkley L. Hendricks, <em>The Twins</em> (1977). © Barkley L. Hendricks. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York.

Barkley L. Hendricks, The Twins (1977). © Barkley L. Hendricks. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York.

Over at Jack Shainman, most works sold within the first hour. The gallery placed Barkley Hendricks‘s The Twins (1977) with a private collector for $450,000, a painting by Kerry James Marshall for $350,000, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye‘s Peregrine (2016) with a European collector for $100,000.

At Casey Kaplan’s, the atmosphere was relaxed, as the gallery had already sold most of the booth, with works by Jonathan Gardner, Kevin Beasley, and Matthew Brannon, for undisclosed amounts. “We’re not rehanging,” Kaplan told artnet News when asked if the booth would include new works the following day. “The context of the gallery is important, the design is specific, and we wouldn’t want to lessen the experience.”

Spotted at the booth was Norwegian collector Erling Kagge, publisher and author of A Poor Collector’s Guide to Buying Great Art, who was on the hunt. “I bought drawings by Matias Faldbakken, a new work by Reena Spaulings and Ian Cheng, and I’ve got my mind set on a piece by Trisha Donnelly that I’m hoping to get,” he told artnet News.


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