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May 21 2021

Pause and Refresh: Weekly News Roundup

by The Editors

Due to a recent spike in Covid-19 cases in Taiwan, the Taipei Fine Arts Museum is closed until at least May 28. Image via Wikicommons.

Amid the latest surge in Covid-19 cases in Asia, art communities continue to evolve and rise up to challenges. Cultural spaces in Taiwan are shutting down for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, and Sharjah Biennial has decided to postpone again. Teams are reorganizing and new blood is being introduced through appointments and awards. Here’s a look at these changes this week.

Taiwan Shutters Cultural Spaces

Taiwan’s Central Epidemic Control Center instructed a number of Taipei cultural venues to remain closed from May 15 to 28, in accordance with the latest official public health measures. In Taipei and New Taipei City, the restriction level was raised to level three, meaning non-essential businesses, including major galleries, must shutter. The municipal art museums, Taipei Fine Arts Museum and Taiwan Contemporary Culture Lab, as well as the private Liang Gallery, Chi-Wen Gallery, Double Square Gallery, TKG+, among others, have temporarily closed their doors to the public. Until recently, Taiwan had largely contained the spread of Covid-19, with a total of 2,530 cases and 14 deaths to date.

Sharjah Biennial 15 has been pushed back to 2023. Courtesy Sharjah Art Foundation.

Sharjah Biennial 15 Postponed to 2023

The 15th Sharjah Biennial (SB15) has been postponed for the second time, from March 2022 to March 2023, due to the “relentless devastation of Covid-19” as well as “uneven access to vaccines and restrictions to travel,” according to the May 18 announcement by Sharjah Art Foundation (SAF). Originally scheduled to open in March 2021, SB15, titled “Thinking Historically in the Present,” marks the Nigerian curator Okwui Enwezor’s final curatorial project prior to his death in March 2019. Led by SAF director and curator Hoor Al Qasimi, SB15’s curatorial team includes independent curator Tarek Abou El-Fetouh; NTU CCA Singapore director Ute Meta Bauer; and art historians Salah M. Hassan and Chika Okeke-Agulu. In line with Enwezor’s original proposal, 30 international artists including Australian photographer Destiny Deacon, British artist and film director John Akomfrah, Cuban-American interdisciplinary artist Coco Fusco, among others, have been commissioned to create new works for the forthcoming edition, which also celebrates the 30th anniversary of Sharjah Biennial.

From left to right: MAX MOORE, Sotheby’s new head of contemporary art, Asia; ALEX BRANCZIK, chairman of modern and contemporary art; and YUKI TERASE, outgoing head of contemporary art, Asia.

Sotheby’s Revamps Asia Team

On May 18, Sotheby’s Asia announced that the fine arts leadership team will undergo multiple changes, as part of the company’s proposal to invest in one of its fastest growing regions. Yuki Terase, the current head of contemporary art, Asia, will leave in July. During Terase’s decade-long tenure, the Hong Kong office has achieved record-breaking sales, in addition to sales of pieces from the famed collections of K-pop star Choi Seung Hyun (also known as T.O.P.), Japanese designer Nigo, and billionaire entrepreneur Yusaku Maezawa. She will be succeeded by Max Moore, vice president and co-head of the contemporary art day auction at Sotheby’s New York, where he recently led the sale of NFT artist Pak’s “The Fungible Collection.” Concurrently, Alex Branczik, head of contemporary art at Sotheby’s Europe, will assume the new role of chairman of modern and contemporary art, Asia. Branczik was pivotal in facilitating the USD 23 million sale of Zeng Fanzhi’s The Last Supper (2001) at Sotheby’s Hong Kong in 2013, as well as multiple auction records for contemporary Asian artists such as Liu Ye, Liu Xiaodong, and Liu Wei throughout his career. 

EMILY MCDANIEL is the Powerhouse Museum’s inaugural First Nations director. Photo by Daniel Boud. Courtesy Powerhouse Museum, Sydney.

Powerhouse Museum Appoints First Nations Director

Sydney’s Powerhouse Museum announced on May 20 the appointment of curator, educator, and writer Emily McDaniel, from the Kalari clan of the Wiradjuri nation, to be the inaugural director, First Nations. McDaniel will establish a First Nations team during the renovation of the Powerhouse Museum, which also oversees the development of the new Powerhouse Parramatta. Working closely with chief executive Lisa Havilah, McDaniel will be responsible for policy-making, strategy formulation, research, and academic engagement with the First Nations community, as well as supervising First Nations projects and programs. McDaniel has decades of curatorial experience at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra, and the Sydney-based Art Gallery of New South Wales and Museum of Contemporary Art, Australia. She represented New South Wales as Aboriginal Emerging Curator in the 2017 Venice Biennale Professional Development Program.

KATE BOHUNNIS is the winner of the 2021 Ramsay Art Prize. Courtesy Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide.

Ramsay Art Prize 2021 Goes to Kate Bohunnis

On May 21, Adelaide’s Art Gallery of South Australia (AGSA) conferred the AUD 100,000 (USD 77,600) Ramsay Art Prize to sculptor and printmaker Kate Bohunnis. The biennial acquisitive prize is the highest-valued open to artists under the age of 40 in Australia. Bohunnis was selected for her kinetic sculpture edges of excess (2021), comprising a long, pink silicone form on suspended metal pendulums referencing “divination tools used in spiritual healing” that she came across as a child in South Australia. A recent graduate of Flinders University, Bohunnis explores the limitations of one’s self-definition through her prints and installations. Members of the jury this year included Wiradjuri artist Karla Dickens; Daniel Mudie Cunningham, director of programs at Sydney’s Carriageworks; and Rebecca Evans, curator of decorative arts and design at AGSA.

From left to right: JULIEN CREUZET, KELVIN KYUNG KUN PARK, and ALICE WANG, the three artists shortlisted for the 2021 BMW Art Journey. Courtesy BMW Group.

BMW Art Journey Shortlist Released

On May 20, during Art Basel Hong Kong, the German automobile company BMW named sculptor Julien Creuzet, video artist Kelvin Kyung Kun Park, and multimedia artist Alice Wang as the finalists for the 2021 BMW Art Journey initiative, which supports an emerging artist to conduct research overseas for a new project. The jury this year includes Claire Hsu, director of Asia Art Archive; Matthias Mühling, director of Munich’s Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus; Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, president of Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo; Phillip Tinari, director of the UCCA Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing; and artist Samson Young, the inaugural winner of BMW Art Journey. The shortlisted artists are now drafting their proposals and the winner will be announced in mid-2021. Meanwhile, the 2020 winner Leelee Chan’s resulting sculpture, Circuit (New Moon) (2021), is on view at BMW’s Wanchai Showroom in Hong Kong.

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