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Friday, April 16, 2010

NIGHTLIGHT: SOFA NEW YORK 2010 Opening Night Preview


The Sculpture Objects & Functional Art Fair has opened its doors for a four-day run at the Park Avenue Armory!  We recommend it.

Last night, Peachy Deegan attended the evening preview on April 15, with cutting-edge modern and contemporary design, decorative arts, and jewelry taking front and center stage. Sixty galleries from the United States, Canada, Belgium, Denmark, England, France, Turkey, Japan, and Brazil came together and pushed the boundaries of medium and genre, reinforcing SOFA’s leading reputation amongst art and design enthusiasts.   

The pieces on offer, produced by artists and designers from around the globe, go far beyond the traditional decorative arts, not only embracing purely sculptural forms and conceptual meanings, but also new materials and processes. 

Whom You Know checked out every booth, and here are the very best:

Schantz Galleries!  And not just because they are from the same place as Norman Rockwell...they had the best pieces with the detail and skill that demonstrated they were the booth we had to keep going back to to check out more.  Their contemporary glass was absolutely exquisite and with Marvin Lipofsky, Sidney Hutter, Steven Weinberg, Charles Miner and Martin Rosol, their talent runs deep.   We want to see some female artists there!

Emel Vardar: Painter/Sculptor.  Not only is she a talented artist, but also she knows how to dress!  We loved her pink and black Tahari suit and she was a pleasure to meet and chat with...Michelle Marie Heinemann wore a fabulous stunning green outfit!

Moderne Gallery of Philadelpha: This boasted three generations of artists-all very nice people too!  

Reflections on Nature at Joan B. Mirviss Ltd was absolutely beautiful.

Loved the polar bear at Galerie Frederic Got, Paris.

Jan Huling the Beadest is quite detail-oriented!  Check out her work in the Lyons Weir Gallery booth.

Joanna Bird pottery from London is worth a gander.

Ferrin Gallery boasted the piggy bankers which we quite liked!

Peachy Deegan was looking for her friend the Croc but couldn't find him at the Lacoste Gallery...

Clark Priftis Art of New York: We like the pink and green angled oval sculpture in the middle of your booth.

Frank Maraschiello of Bonhams!  If you read Whom You Know, you know we love Bonhams.  We talk about them nearly every day so we were pleased to meet Frank.  See Advantageous Auctions.

Shuichi Ichikawa: He is filming for television in Japan!   A nice person to chat with and maybe Peachy will expand her Take a Trip to Asia column if he puts us on TV there?

Valerie and Jean the Idiosyncratic Fashionistas grow old with verve!  Not Peachy's style, but they are tres chic!  Very cool women with flair...

Fabulous job by Marilyn White!

***

Luminaries such as Ruth Duckworth, Beatrice Wood, Lenore Tawney, Betty Woodman, Peter Voulkos, Wharton Esherick, and Lino Tagliapietra, stand beside up-and-coming artists such as Beth Lipman, Chris Antemann, Cristina Cordova, Lola Brooks, Jennifer Trask and Junko Mori. Their medium-based works, including art in glass, silver, ceramics, fiber, metal, wood, as well as unconventional materials from high-tech polymers to recycled rubber are highly sought after by collectors and design enthusiasts worldwide.



Wendy Wahl
browngrotta arts


WENDY WAHL TO CONSTRUCT MONUMENTAL INSTALLATION
AT EXHIBITION HALL ENTRYWAY


Framing the Armory’s entrance will be a monumental installation constructed from discarded and deconstructed encyclopedias by Rhode Island-based artist Wendy Wahl, represented by preeminent textiles dealer Tom Grotta of browngrotta arts (Wilton, CT). Started as a series in 2006, Wahl seeks to explore notions of synthesis, sustainability and the archive by using familiar paper learning tools in sculptural forms. “I hope the work will resonate with the viewer in ways that suggest fundamental and even ancient rhythms of growth, renewal and transformation,” said the artist. This will be her first installation in New York.




Marvin Lipofsky
Schantz Galleries


This year, SOFA NEW YORK adds several new dealers to its roster, including Cross MacKenzie Gallery (Washington, DC), Schantz Galleries (Stockbridge, MA), and Katie Jones (London), with Thea Burger (New York) returning to the fold.



The SOFA NEW YORK 2009 Designer Breakfast featured architect David Ling


In addition to the dealers’ superb offerings, SOFA’s organizers have partnered with sixty world-renowned interior designers and architects to ensure the fair reaches the largest and most discerning audience possible. The SOFA National Designer Committee is co-chaired by Nancy Epstein, Steven Gambrel, Amy Lau, David Ling, Suzanne Lovell, and Maya and Joyce Romanoff. Together with SOFA founding director Mark Lyman, these men and women will continue to elevate the status of material-based artworks to the most prestigious private, corporate, and institutional collectors.



Joan B. Mirviss, Ltd. Booth at SOFA NEW YORK


“I love SOFA,” said Amy Lau, the New York-based interior designed recognized for her modernist sensibility. “This fair gives collectors and design enthusiasts the opportunity to discover new artists and the many creative ways they conjure up wood, glass, ceramics, metal, fiber, rubber, and anything else they find interesting. If they are looking for the next Beatrice Wood in ceramics or Sam Maloof in wood, chances are they will be discovered at SOFA.”



A SOFA NEW YORK VIP Tour led by David McFadden


David McFadden, Chief Curator and Vice President for Programs and Collections at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York declared, “MAD is delighted to host a special a benefit cocktail party on Opening Night at SOFA, where many of the artists in the Museum’s collection will be showing new work. SOFA is an essential part of New York’s rich cultural life, celebrating contemporary decorative arts and design.”


Among the many highlights of this year’s edition are:



Rachel Woodman
Clare Beck at Adrian Sassoon


Clare Beck at Adrian Sassoon (London, UK)

Two of the world’s pre-eminent dealers in fine ceramics, glass, silver, and jewelry, make a triumphant return to SOFA New York with the delicate glasswork of Rachael Woodman. Educated at the Royal College of Art in London, Woodman employs both blown glass and cold cutting techniques to produce unique objects that beautifully explore intersections of form, color, and function. Her work can be found in major international collections such as the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, and the Corning Glass Museum, New York.



Christa Assad
Ferrin Gallery


Ferrin Gallery (Pittsfield, MA)

Nestled amongst the picturesque Berkshire Mountains, Ferrin Gallery’s cutting-edge roster of artists working in ceramics and sculpture has attracted considerable acclaim for over twenty years. Ferrin, a favorite at SOFA for her themed shows, presents Reobjectification, in which her artists take an existing object and create a new one directly based on it, featuring the work of Gordon Chandler, Christa Assad and many others. Leslie Ferrin is proud to bring a taste of the continuously burgeoning Berkshires cultural scene down to New York.






Shayna Lieb
Habatat Galleries Chicago


Habatat Galleries Chicago (Chicago, IL)

Founder Karen Echt has tirelessly worked to promote contemporary glass art for over a decade and has built a reputation for not only representing artists but also truly nurturing their careers and abilities. She brings the work of six artists to this year’s fair, all under the age of 30, including the mesmerizing new series Andaman by Shayna Leib. Named after a group of islands in the Bay of Bengal, the world’s largest bay, Leib takes the myriad life aquatic forms found there as her major source of inspiration for her colorful and evocative pieces.



Lino Tagliapietra
Heller Gallery


Heller Gallery (New York, NY)

Lino Tagliapietra, the focus of Heller Gallery’s booth, continues to reach new heights in his multi-faceted career as an artist and teacher. From 1955-86 he worked as a master glassblower and designer at Galliano Ferro, Venini, La Murrina, and Effetre International, and his connection to the centuries-old tradition of Venetian glassmaking tradition is immediately apparent in his work, which has grown only more ambitious and thought provoking since his first apprenticeship over 50 years ago. “Mr. Tagliapietra is able to interpret and translate concepts into hot glass that would be impossible without his extraordinary abilities,” wrote Susanne K. Frantz, Curator of 20th Century Glass at the Corning Museum of Glass in New York.



Koike Shôko
Joan B. Mirviss, Ltd.


Joan B. Mirviss Ltd. (New York, NY)

Mirviss has established her gallery as a premier platform for exhibition of Japanese art in New York, especially screens and scrolls, woodblock prints, and ceramics. This year she will mount Reflections on Nature: Ceramic Sculptures by Koike Shôko, featuring 20 painstakingly crafted works by the pioneering woman artist to debut at SOFA. The artist will give a lecture on April 17th at 11:15 am and will also be present at the booth on April 18th at 1:00pm.



Chien-Wei Chang
Joanna Bird Pottery


Joanna Bird Pottery (London, UK)

Joanna Bird brings 30 years of experience of showcasing contemporary and vintage ceramics to SOFA. Artists such as Chien-Wei Chang and Fernando Casasempere bring a profound sense of simplicity and precision to their explorations of the medium’s vitality in contemporary culture. Pieces such as these challenge the pejorative and all too limited label of ‘craft’ often ascribed to ceramics and other media found throughout the fair.



Koji Hatakeyama
Katie Jones


Katie Jones (London, UK)

Another expert in Japanese art and antiques, Katie Jones, is pleased to present an exciting cross section of recent sculpture. Among the works on view are the evocative and challenging pieces by sculptor Koji Hatakeyama, who makes cast bronze lidded boxes that are not always meant to be functional. His work is in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, and the Victoria & Albert Museum, London.



George Nakashima
Moderne Gallery


Moderne Gallery (Philadelphia, PA)

Gallery director Robert Aibel sets high-quality pieces aside throughout the year just to bring out for SOFA. This year his focus is vintage work from the American Craft and Studio Furniture Movement, featuring designers Sam Maloof, Wharton Esherick, and George Nakashima. German Architectural Digest recently called Aibel the “world’s leading [George] Nakashima dealer.” The organic yet polished forms of a walnut end table from 1968 are characteristic of Nakashima’s highly sought after vintage furniture pieces, which have been exhibited at such venues as the American Craft Museum in New York, where the designer was labeled a “Living Treasure” shortly before his death in 1990.



Ruudt Peters
Ornamentum


Ornamentum (Hudson, NY)

Stefan Friedemann showcases avant-garde jewelry from myriad American and European designers, primarily from Germany and the Netherlands, in his upstate New York space. Dutch designer Ruudt Peters, whose eye-catching pieces explore such disparate themes as religion, beauty and space, will figure prominently at the gallery’s SOFA NEW YORK booth, in addition to stunning new work by New Paltz-based Sergey Jivetin. Peters will lecture at the SOFA NEW YORK Lecture Series on Friday, April 16.



Ruth Duckworth
Thea Burger


Thea Burger (New York, NY)

Chicago-based, German-born sculptor Ruth Duckworth, whose illustrious career as teacher and artist spanned several decades passed away at the age of in 90 in October. As a tribute, her long-time dealer Thea Burger will mount an exhibition of carefully selected pieces at this year’s fair, largely produced during the artist’s final years and many chosen from her personal collection. A prominent fixture at previous SOFA fairs, Thea Burger’s booth will cement Duckworth’s legacy as a true master of clay.



SOFA NEW YORK Opening Night Preview will be held Thursday, April 15, 2010


“SOFA is by far my favorite show of the year,” added Chicago-based textile designer Suzanne Lovell, “as the artists are of the highest quality available at any show in the country. Attending SOFA NEW YORK is such a pleasure as I am always guaranteed to
find a fantastic new artisan or a fresh and
exciting from one of my favorites.”




Listing Information SOFA NEW YORK 2010:


Location: Park Avenue Armory // 643 Park Avenue at East 67th Street, New York City 10065

Subway: 6 Train to 68th Street/Hunter College; Bus: M101, M102, or M103 to Lexington Ave & 68th Street.


Opening Night: Thursday, April 15: Invitation-only 5:30 – 7 pm, Public Preview: 7 – 9 pm, Tickets: $100.00. Opening Night attendees may also support New York’s Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) by purchasing a ticket to attend a private cocktail/dinner event in the Armory’s Tiffany Room.
To purchase tickets call Stephanie Lang at 212-299-7729.


Exposition hours: Friday, April 16: 11 – 7 pm; Saturday, April 17: 11 – 7 pm; Sunday, April 18: noon – 6 pm; Monday, April 19: 11 – 5 pm.


Tickets: $25 for a single day of general admission and $40 for a four-day pass; both include catalog.


General information: Visit www.sofaexpo.com; call 800-563-SOFA (7632) or 773-506-8860; or email info@sofaexpo.com

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