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A North American Message Crosses the Atlantic

Bruises Gallery, Emma Scully Gallery, Jacqueline Sullivan Gallery, OF THE CLOTH, Studio IMA, TIWA Select, Marta and NOON Projects will reside at Frieze’s No.9 Cork Street Gallery from June 22 through June 24 for The North American Pavilion. Inside, the exhibition features over 40 artists, and the space is divided into eight sections for each gallery, and the gallerists are allowed full discretion as to how they utilize their space to express their unique take on North American narratives and cultures. Curator and gallerist Alex Tieghi-Walker has selected these young galleries to explore the cultural messages emanating from each gallery’s geographical setting in North America. To expand the reach of this message, galleries were also selected since ‘they all straddle design, craft and art which made it easier to choose,’ says Tieghi-Walker, allowing for audiences to read the works in a variety of mediums and states.

Brecht Wright Gander “Illumination Machine,” Simone Bodmer-Turner “Tulip Lamp II,” Rooms Studios “Mirror 3” “Mirror 4” and “Mirror 5,” EJR Barnes “Sandolo Biposto” for Emma Scully Gallery

The element of storytelling comes through in various ways, developing a palette which shifts to differing tastes and different substances presented. On the first floor Minjae Kim’s sculptural furniture appears foreign and certainly not what you’d expect to find behind the glass of a cobblestone street in Mayfair. But that's the point, the pieces are meant to feel alien. A painting (Ben Borden’s excavation, residue, 2023) grows on one of the walls of NOON Project’s space, facing the Marta Gallery section where Kristen Wentrcek and Andrew Zebulon’s Small Bench I & II (Hamburger), 2021 sits, looking right back. Upstairs, Elliot Camarra’s Grape Soft Sculpture, 2023 splays across the floor of New York’s Jacqueline Sullivan Gallery room. Behind a diaphanous white linen sheet, Mexico City’s Studio IMA loads up on brilliant clay vessels and tactile ceramics while Fernando Laposse’s Luffa Divider, 2020 (made from real Loofah Fiber) edges into the corner like the unused dressing screen that it in fact is based on. The smooth white walls of OF THE CLOTH’s room is struck by day from Mayfair’s renowned Cork Street, yet in one corner Henry Rolnick’s Angel, 2023 (made from a combination of textiles and threads) occupies a top corner of a room like a silk and cotton cobweb sprayed by light. Alex Tieghi-Walker of TIWA Select curated the exhibition, and his own gallery sits at the back of the first floor. The day before opening he entrusted the gallerists to ‘do their thing’ and spent his time laboring away at installing the works for his gallery. The hands-on-deck reality of an installation of this scale is frightening. There are many moving parts and many people involved. ‘Everyone has their own little army’ says Tieghi-Walker. But the outcome is boundless. His gallery is showcasing embroidery, quilts and weavings, a medium with a rich history in the United States, such as Annie E. Pettway’s Housetop (Nine-Block Variation) 1930, which has the same textural elements and focus on geometric pattern as the early Amish quilters from the 1870s.

Kristen Stain “Mugg Planter,” “Necking Ring Pot,” and “Adorned Mugg,” Henry Rolnick “Karma” for OF THE CLOTH

Like siblings in a new home, the galleries (all of which are under five-years-old) settled into the space, molding their profiles and perspectives as North American galleries in their own way. They come from Los Angeles, New York City, Atlanta, Montréal and Mexico City. Some of the artists they represent haven’t exhibited overseas before, while for others it is their first time exhibiting with their gallery.

 

In the hectic world of art and its constituent galleries and artists, there is hardly a moment to spare between exhibition openings and gallery storefronts ramming your eyes like swallowed oyster down a fearful gullet. Sometimes, they work, but sometimes they are not that great (and perhaps a bit too tangy and metallic). However, The North American Pavillion allows an audience to experience galleries without the mayhem of a fair. It is cohesive and precise, and the galleries and their constituent artists have the space to flourish on this side of the pond, telling their stories to a world unexposed to the immensity of America’s past.

 

Rather than a feast, the show is an amuse-bouche. It’s delicious, intimate and succinct, but keeps us hungry. Regardless of their differences, each of the eight galleries have put on a show that works in unison with each other, inspiring viewers and triggering desire.

Jacqueline Sullivan Gallery at The North American Pavilion
Trevor Bourke ‘Untitled’ and Florence Provencher ‘Fishbone Chair’ for Bruises Gallery
Marta at The North American Pavilion
Marta at the North American Pavilion
. David Shull “Palm and Shadow,” Maddy Inez Leeser “Ghostpipe,” Ben Borden “Candelabrum” and “Excavation, Residue” for NOON Projects
Mitch Iburg “Ember Buried Vessel #242,” Fernando Laposse “Luffa Divider” for Studio IMA
Jacqueline Sullivan Gallery
Ella Mae Irby “Housetop (Twelve Block Variation),” Ishi Glinsky “Sedentary Sky” for TIWA Select
Unknown Artist, Appalachian quilt for TIWA Select
No.9 Cork Street with custom bench by Random Studio for Ecco

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