Frieze London...
7:14 p.m.
14/10/19 - As every year, the first weekend of October means Frieze London, the Contemporary Art Fair that opens the season of Winter exhibitions in Europe. The most important galleries in the world are gathered together under one same roof in Regent’s Park to tempt us with the best they’ve got.
What was it this year? Difficult to say, because Contemporary Art, as mankind, is infinitely unpredictable and still harder to read. And although the fair aims to sell, the pieces on display are there to provoke us, activate our senses and awe us with their manufacture. That’s when we understand that art is a constant reminder that the possibilities of our imagination are endless. All these mixed feelings are possible because this fair brings together, side by side, almost all the contemporary artists we see individually in galleries or museums. In Frieze they bring some of their most popular works or, even better, some authentic novelties.
Gazing Ball, by Jeff Koons
Kiss, by Elizabeth Peyton (2019)
Technique: oil on wood board / Measures: 30.5 x 22.9 cm
Frieze 2019
Collier cobalt et Alessandrita, by Jean Michel Othoniel (2019)
Materials: Murano glass and stainless steel / Measures: 100 x 45 x 15 cm
Bronze eroded bicycle, by Daniel Arsham
Material: bronze
Yellow Smile Flower, by Takashi Murakami (2019)
Technique: acrylic on canvas mounted on board / Measures: 66 cm diameter
Couple, by Elmgreen & Dragset
Materials: panels of MDF, PVC, aluminium and stainless steel / Measures: 220 x 48 x 32 cm each
Laura II, by Jaume Plensa (2013)
Material: alabaster / Measures: 166 x 61 x 69 cm
Head, by Nicolas Party (2018)
Technique: oil on laminated polystyrene / Measures: 200 x 90 x 115 cm
Maple Road Sunflower (small head), by Daphne Wright (2019)
Mixed technique / Measures: 250 x 50 x 60 cm
Untitled, by Cindy Sherman (2019)
Technique: dye sublimation metal print / Measures: 215.3 x 195.6 cm
Delta, by El Anatsui (2014)
Materials: found aluminium and copper wire / Measures: 281 x 290 cm
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