Making Heads and Tails of Collectors—Art Taipei 2013 Report

Celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, the Art Taipei 2013 opened its doors to the largest contingent of galleries from Hong Kong and the Mainland ever. Many locals therefore more or less came with the expectation that the quality seen in Art Basel Hong Kong (May 2013) would serve as a positive model for Taipei. After all, the main galleries were practically the same ones in attendance in May; moreover, this was the first time for many galleries to exhibit in Taiwan.

Amid all this, the familiar family-run space, de Sarthe Gallery looked busy at their booth. However, compared with last year when numerous galleries reaped a generous harvest as early as opening day, this year only the veterans were able to entice collectors.

This year’s fair also brought about a little heated debate when a work by Jim Lambie, originally arranged to be situated in the middle of the walkways between the booths, was rumored to be removed due to pressure from a local gallery, though the fair organizers cited security concerns [update: see below]. Instead, there was Takeshi Murakami’s “6 Princess,” offering a fantastic opportunity for Kaikai Kiki gallery booth to harness foot traffic with hordes of tourists huddled around taking photos with the cosplay-inspired piece.

It is not difficult to notice that Art Taipei’s PR approach clearly differed from Hong Kong (its natural competitor), with local institutions benefitting from their connections to the fair. Asia Art Center, for instance, got the publicity machine fired up for several films made about their artists by the Discovery channel. Meanwhile, Eslite Gallery, a member of the Art Taipei Executive Committee, enjoyed a home-field advantage with a booth for its own bookstore, where the best-selling book was naturally about Daido Moriyama — an artist promoted by this year’s organizers of the fair. As well, a large number of works seen in May in Hong Kong emerged in smaller formats here. Meanwhile, many impressive works were shown in more low-key format and somewhat marginalized positions at this regional fair [note correction below]. One of these was Su-Mei Tse’s stone installation, “The Source,” standing in one corner of the Eslite booth. The rolling ink quietly, flowed continually from the fountain and circulated over and over again.

[Corrections: the previous version may have led to confusion that Su-Mei Tse’s work was presented in Hong Kong. It was not, and the current version makes it clearer.]

[update: Though the fair organizers cited security concern, one Taiwanese press reported that Tina Keng was observed to publicly complain that the work “hindered entry and viewing.” When the fair organizers removed the installation on the opening night, Tina Keng was reported to have expressed relief at finally “being able to get some fresh air.” See link—in Chinese only.]

Su-Mei Tse, “The Source,” 2012 [Eslite Gallery]
谢素梅,《源起》,2011[诚品画廊]

Some say that Art Taipei has always been a magnet for Japanese galleries; however, this mainly refers to the medium and lower-priced works. In fact, Silverlens from the Philippines, having received much interest during the Hong Kong fair, was well rewarded for participating in the fair; after all, artists from this region still fetch quite reasonable prices. Yet some galleries with higher-priced works, like Ben Brown Gallerywhere Andreas Hecker manned the booth himself, had a harder time due to the reticence of the local audience. Though Mainland galleries generally did not repeat their good fortune from last year, works in the right price categories still managed decent outcomes.

ShanghART’s curious booth nearly doubled in size from their first time last year. However, the selection this year was rather carefree in mixing the new and the old, and had hints of their Shanghai exhibition “Clutch.” But in terms of footfall, it was certainly not as crowded as last year when their booth featured the works of Sun Xun and other ShanghART notables.

Robin Rhode, “The Point of Vanishing”, 2012-13 [Lehmann Maupin Gallery]
Robin Rhode,《The Point of Vanishing》,2012-13,[乐曼慕品画廊]

Opposite ShanghART, side by side, were Lehmann Maupin Gallery and Urs Meile Gallery, two members of the selection committee for the last iteration of Art Basel Hong Kong. The former showed Robin Rhode’s small, poetic piece “The Point of Vanishing” inside its pleasing booth. The artist employed his well-known forms of various gang-related symbols: the street graffiti shot one after the other referencing the structure of film. Meanwhile, Urs Meile’s rather more modest booth displays Yan Xing’s black-and-white tinted photos. Most first-time galleries tried to test the waters with a range of media. Indeed, some Hong Kong or Mainland professionals could be heard eliciting advice about the character of the local audience at a few local gallery vernissages on the opening night.

Overall, this fair had an unusual number of two-dimensional works, and was therefore judged to be a more conservative edition. In fact, even local galleries known for their video works displayed paintings by such artists as Yan Pei-Ming in their booths. In my long stubborn attempt to discover video works, I managed to make my way to Edouard Malingue Gallery, situated on the edges of the hall. Though they had last year exhibited a large-scale installation by Laurent Grasso, this time, they only displayed a 12’30’’ single-channel video, “Psychokinesis” (2008). While the cathode blinkered, the image of  a boulder levitating over a barren field was shown. Such a concrete object ended up being read very non-concretely here—as though any reference of time was being lost. In a way, this also symbolized how since Art Basel landed in Hong Kong, the Taipei fair feels a bit up in the air.

Shi Jinsong, “Scenes from an Unpredictable Theatre”, 2012-13 [MOT/ARTS]
史金淞,《不可预知的戏剧现场》,2012-13,[MOT/ARTS]
Zhou Wendou, “100 Books One Must Read in a Life Time, No. 2″, 2013 [de Sarthe Gallery]
周文斗,《一生必读的100本书(二)》,2012-13,[德萨画廊]
Xu Qu, “Energy Crystal I”, 2013 [Tang Contemporary Art Center]
徐渠,《能量晶体I》,2013,[当代唐人艺术中心]
Yang Jian, “Are We More Stupid Than Before?”, 2013 [White Space Beijing]
杨健,《Are We More Stupid Than Before?》,2013,[空白空间]

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