Gallery House by Lekker Design

Gallery House by Lekker Design

This combined house and gallery in Singapore by architecture studio Lekker Design comprises a single rectilinear building with another twisted inside it.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

The twisted inner volume towers up through the roof to house the bedrooms and other private spaces of the residence, keeping them separate from the triple-height gallery on the ground floor.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

A boxy staircase leads up from the gallery to the floor above and passes by a perforated metal screen that shields a window to the bathroom.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

The narrow building forms part of an existing row of houses, located in the red light district to the north-east of the city centre.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

Other combined houses and galleries we’ve featured include a residence for Australian artists in Japan and a gallery beneath a pool of water in South Korea.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

Above: photograph is by Eugene Goh/Light Works Photography

Photography is by Darren Soh/FullframePhotos, apart from where otherwise stated.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

The text below is from the architects:


This is a small building, with two programs – a house and an art gallery – squeezed into a very dense envelope, in the midst of Singapore’s red light district.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

The design attempted to balance this programmatic double-life through a play of two volumes. The lower volume contains a triple-height gallery and kitchen.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

Above is a rotated tower, which appears to be partially suspended below the ceiling of the gallery; this holds the bedrooms and private spaces. The building has been designed such that the client may open the gallery to the public, via a separate access.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

The Gallery House is sited in a typical Singaporean lot, between two very long party walls. In order to bring natural light deep into the interior, a series of small gardens have been extracted from the facade and roofline.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

This creates a complex series of nested spaces, merging the interior with tropical landscape.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Rooms are unexpectedly located and strangely formed, partially overlapping with others or sharing views of interior canyon spaces. The largest of these contains the main stair, which winds informally between rooms at front and back.

Gallery House by Lekker Design

Upper floor plan – click above for larger image

Project title: Gallery House
Architects: Lekker Design
Location: Singapore
Size: 3,500 ft sq.
Project year: 2012
Design Team: Ong Ker-Shing, Joshua Comaroff, Germain Goh, Sio Lim, Peter Then, Joshua Feldman

Gallery House by Lekker Design

Section – click above for larger image

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UCCAstore @ DESIGN

Beijing’s 798 Art District gets a design store

UCCAstore @ DESIGN

The Ullens Center for Contemporary Art (UCCA) is the most dynamic art center in Beijing’s 798 Art District, and since 2007 its UCCAstore has been a small temple for vanguard design within the gallery. The original store, now UCCA @ ART.BOOK, is still offering a glut of Chinese art…

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Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Australian architect Andrew Burns has completed a pointy gallery and studio for artists-in-residence in Japan to replace one that was destroyed during the major earthquake of last year (+ slideshow).

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

The first Australia House was created in 2009 inside a 100-year-old farmhouse in Niigata Prefecture to provide a place where Australian artists could engage with Japanese communities in the production and exhibition of their work.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Following the earthquake, a competition was launched to design a replacement that would be completed in time for the fifth Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennale taking place in the region over the summer.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Burns’ design for the new Australia House Gallery and Studio is a two-storey triangular structure with a charred wood exterior and a steep pointed roof.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

The gallery is located in a double-height space on the ground floor and is overlooked from the living quarters on the floor above.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Above artwork: Mountain home – dhirrayn ngurang by Brook Andrew

A strong timber frame increases the stability of the building, so that it can be used as a refuge during any future natural disasters.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Above artwork: Mountain home – dhirrayn ngurang by Brook Andrew

We’ve also featured a series of artists’ studios on the picturesque Fogo Island in Canada – see them here.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

See more stories about studios for artists »

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Photography is by Brett Boardman.

Here’s some text from Andrew Burns:


New Australia House Gallery & Studio Opens in Niigata Prefecture, Japan

Andrew Burns’ new Australia House gallery & studio project has opened to wide acclaim on 28 July 2012 at the start of the 5th Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennale. This is one of the world’s largest international art festivals, held every three years in the Echigo-Tsumari region, encompassing Tokamachi City and Tsunan Town in Niigata Prefecture.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Australia House will be a focus for the special & continuing dialogue between the peoples of Australia and Japan. Its design takes into consideration environmental sustainability and natural disaster-prevention and reflects a merging of Japanese and Australian culture. The building includes galleries and residential space for Australian artists to stay, work and exhibit and will allow collaborative projects between Japanese and Australians.

The new building replaces the original Australia House which collapsed soon after a powerful aftershock on 12 March 2011.

Burns’ design proposal for Australia House was selected unanimously from among 154 international entries in an international design competition by judges Professor Tom Heneghan, Fram Kitagawa, General Director of the Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennale and Tadao Ando, Jury chair and Pritzker Prize winner. The design reflects the Triennale’s theme of “Human Beings are part of Nature”. Other entries included Brit Andresen, Sou Fujimoto, Peter Stutchbury with Janet Laurence, Sean Godsell, John Wardle.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

‘This building extends our focus as a practice on developing innovative, contemporary, socially engaged processes that go beyond the everyday to explore how we relate to our world, and build communities,” said Andrew Burns.

“I am particularly in the cross-over between culture, art and design, and what that says about who we are today. I see enormous potential to take these ideas and further develop them in an international context,” he added.

Artist Brook Andrew was selected as the Australian artist to present in the Echigo-Tsumari Triennale this year, leading to an exciting and rare collaboration between architect and artist during the final resolution of the building design.

The Australia House project is supported by the Tokamachi City Government, International Culture Appreciation and Interchange Society, Inc., the Australia-Japan Foundation, and the Australian Embassy Tokyo.

Andrew Burns Architect collaborated with accomplished Japanese architects Souhei Imamura of Atelier Imamu and Sotaro Yamamoto, Atelier Sotaro Yamamoto for the delivery of the project.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

About the design of Australia House

‘It has been an extraordinary privilege to design this important cross-cultural centre, and to be part of the Echigo-Tsumari Triennale, one of the leading visual arts festivals in the world,“ says Burns.

‘Architecture is not simply about shelter, or building, or fashion, or the person who designed it – architecture fundamentally shapes the way we live, how we experience the world, and our place within it.”

Australia House – literally – physically manipulates the way the visitor connects with the landscape, using large screens and windows. Its triangular form obviates the traditional four walls concept, and blurs the lines between artwork and gallery space.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Site plan – click above for larger image

‘My hope is that this humble wooden building, part farmhouse, part gallery, and part site specific artwork, gives each person who enters it the opportunity to glimpse the world around him or her, and him/herself within it, a in new way, ‘ Andrew Burns said.

Oneʼs perception of the building alternates between the dynamic appearance of an art object and the familiar presence of a rural dwelling. The roof rises steeply to the daikoku-bashira, which becomes a charged element within the gallery space. The triangular form creates a long dimension and widening perspective within compact space. The internal spaces are calibrated to amplify the experience of landscape.

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

Ground floor plan

The building provides opportunities to alter the physical experience of place and time by shifting panels and walls, against the background of a landscape and its dramatic changes over the four seasons. This is a deep rural landscape which changes throughout the year – from intense heat and green in the summer months, to up to 3 metres of snow in the winter.

The appointment of Melbourne-based artist Brook Andrew has resulted in a close collaboration on the final aspects of design. ‘Brook’s interpretation of the architectural design has uncovered further possibilities for the project, “ says Burns. “

‘Throughout, we have sought to establish a dialogue between the visitor, the building, the artwork and its site, so that each person takes away from it a different experience.”

Australia House Gallery and Studio by Andrew Burns

First floor plan

Judges comment:

Here is what Tadao Ando, Chair of the judging panel for the Australian House competition, said in September 2011:

‘It is difficult to form a triangle. However, that difficulty can create interesting architecture. I find the approach to this house attractive and the different elements well arranged. The idea of dealing with snow is thoughtful, considering that the site is located in a heavy snowfall region. It would be fantastic if only the triangular roof was visible as the rest of the house is covered with three-metre-high snow.’

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Paul Kasmin Gallery, 27th Street by studioMDA

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

Architects studioMDA have completed an aluminium-clad gallery in New York where all the artworks on show are visible from outside (photographs by Roland Halbe).

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

As the second Paul Kasmin Gallery to open in Chelsea, the building has a simple rectangular layout with white walls and a concrete floor.

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

A gabled skylight is screened behind parapet walls and allows light to filter into the gallery through a louvred ceiling.

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

When the gallery is closed, a grid of metal shutters slides down over the glazed facade for security.

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

Click above for larger image

Other New York galleries we’ve featured include one by Foster + Partners that has just been nominated for the 2012 RIBA Lubetkin Prize.

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

See more galleries on Dezeen »

Here’s some information from architect Markus Dochantschi:


Paul Kasmin Gallery

Located in the densely populated gallery neighborhood of Chelsea in Manhattan, the Paul Kasmin Gallery seeks to create a new dialogue between pedestrian, visitor, and art. The design of the gallery creates a clean open space connecting the street to the inside. The gallery features a floor to ceiling glass façade, allowing over sized pieces of art to be delivered. The interior space benefits from a large skylight, flooding the space with natural light.

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

The façade has two defined architectural attributes: the storefront glazing system and the full height aluminum façade. While the perforated gate of the aluminum loading dock gate provides security, the open design allows art to be showcased even when the gallery is closed.

This is the first Chelsea Gallery to open its façade in its entirety to the public, breaking the typology of the traditionally visually disconnected gallery.

Paul Kasmin Gallery 27th Street by studioMDA

studioMDA has also redesigned the entrance of Paul Kasmin’s Gallery at 293 Tenth Avenue, as well as the new store on 27th Street. This is the third location in Chelsea for Paul Kasmin Galleries.

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The Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Narrow glass openings provide glimpses through the rampart-like facade of this property showroom in Singapore by architects Ministry of Design (+ slideshow).

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Named the Edge Gallery, the building contains a double-height sales gallery and two show apartments for developer UOL, who are constructing three residential towers on a former hotel and theatre site nearby.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

The walls of the two-storey building comprise a series of L-shaped columns that wrap over the roof, while doors and windows fill the gaps between.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Unlike most showrooms, there are no signs or advertisements on the exterior of the building at all.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Other projects we’ve featured by Ministry of Design include a monochrome hotel and an extremely pointy pavilion.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

See all our stories about Singapore »

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Photography is by CI&A Photography.

Here’s some text from the architects:


The Edge Gallery
Architecture + Interiors + Furniture Design
910 sqm | Singapore | Completed 2012

Scope

The Edge Gallery explores and redefines the typology of the Singaporean condominium show gallery on several fronts.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Commissioned by a reputed Singaporean developer, the project for the design of a sales gallery and two show flats of a 244 unit residential development is located at a major intersection along Singapore’s eastern city fringe.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Explorations

Firstly, the design synthesizes unique characteristics of the site context with the client’s programmatic requirements.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Key site issues included the unique semi-circle shaped site, noisy surroundings and a distant vehicular drop off point.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

On another front, the design also sought to challenge conventional Singaporean show gallery precedents which seem to ignore the potential for unique architectural solutions as a valid and powerful marketing device.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

In contrast to this, the Edge Gallery departs from the formulaic combination of staid glass boxes and over-sized billboards.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Click image above for larger image

Relying instead on the inherent branding value of an iconic architectural statement as a more relevant, subtle & sophisticated form of advertisement.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Click image above for larger image

Incidentally, the project met with significant sales success within its first week and has established a possible new alternative model for the Singaporean show gallery.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Click image above for larger image

Solution

The building can be understood as a series of white L-shaped walls paired with interstitial vertical glass strips contouring in harmony with the shape of the site to form the overall building.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Click image above for larger image

The glass strips are intentionally turned away from the oncoming traffic flow but allow for views ports and entry portals.

Click image above for larger image

The alternating rhythm of wall and glass is continued in the building’s section, peaking at over 7m to form a double-height internal space into which the show flats and balconies face, simulating high-rise living.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Click image above for larger image

The interior design takes its cues from the overarching design language, applying it to floor and wall patterns or finishes.

Edge Gallery by Ministry of Design

Click image above for larger image

The show flats question the notion of contemporary luxury, eschewing typical elements of ostentation for more understated luxury and authentic material richness.

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Ministry of Design
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The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

Architects Herzog & de Meuron have uncovered three underground concrete tanks at the Tate Modern gallery in London to create new spaces for art and performance, which open this week (+ slideshow).

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

The huge industrial cylinders previously held oil that fuelled the turbines of the former power station, but have lain empty since the building was decommissioned in 1981 and later converted into a gallery.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

The eastern tank reopens with an exhibition of light and movie projection by Korean artist Sung Hwan Kim, while the southern tank is hosting an ongoing programme of performance art and the western tank has been subdivided into dressing rooms and other ancillary spaces.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

Glass doors lead visitors through from the turbine hall into the cylinders, where the raw concrete structure is left exposed.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

The Tanks are the first phase in the construction of a new wing at the gallery, scheduled to complete in 2016 – see images in our earlier story.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

Herzog & de Meuron also collaborated with Ai Weiwei on the design of the Serpentine Gallery, which is currently open in London’s Kensington Gardens. See images here or watch the tour we filmed with Jacques Herzog here.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

See all our stories about Herzog & de Meuron »

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

Photography is by Tate Photography.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

Here’s some more information about The Tanks:


New Tate Modern Tanks Open to the Public

A new commission by Korean artist Sung Hwan Kim was unveiled today in The Tanks at Tate Modern. This major new work is the first installation to be created especially in The Tanks, the world’s first museum galleries permanently dedicated to exhibiting live art, performance, installation and film works. In Kim’s work, visitors are plunged into a fantastical world of optical illusions that draws on a rich history of performance and film. The commission for the Maja Hoffmann/Luma Foundation Tank is supported by Sotheby’s and runs from 18 July to 28 October. The launch is part of the London 2012 Festival, the culmination of the Cultural Olympiad.

The Tanks are the first phase of the Tate Modern Project, which is being made possible by a number of significant donations from public funders and foundations including a £50m investment from the Government, £7m from the Greater London Authority, an important donation from the Blavatnik Family Foundation and generous gifts from The Deborah Loeb Brice Foundation and The Dr Mortimer and Theresa Sackler Foundation.

On the occasion of the opening of The Tanks, Tate has announced a group of major individual donations. These include gifts to support The Tanks, new galleries, learning spaces and other areas of the new building. The donors include a number of Tate’s current and former Trustees among them Lord Browne, Mala Gaonkar, Maja Hoffmann, Elisabeth Murdoch, Franck Petitgas and John Studzinski as well as other individual donors including Christina and John Chandris, James Chanos, Ago Demirdjian and Tiqui Atencio Demirdjian, George Economou, Lydia and Manfred Gorvy, Noam Gottesman, Catherine Lagrange, Pierre Lagrange, Allison and Howard W. Lutnick, Barrie and Emmanuel Roman and others who wish to remain anonymous.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

The generosity of early donors to this phase, Maja Hoffmann and John Studzinski, is recognised through The Maja Hoffmann/Luma Foundation Tank and The Studzinski Galleries.

Tate Members have also supported the project and altogether over three quarters of the total capital costs of £215 million has been raised.

Art in Action, a fifteen-week festival celebrating performance, film and installation and the historical works that have shaped these art forms, will run in The Tanks until 28 October. The festival allows audiences to explore new developments in art practice and learning, see bold new work being developed by artists, and engage more deeply with the programme. The Tanks are raw, industrial spaces which provide an anchor and home for the live art and film programmes which have previously been presented in diverse spaces around Tate Modern.

A rolling series of projects will take place in the southern Tank addressing the history of performance, film and interdisciplinary work alongside new work. The renowned choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker has worked with visual artist Ann Veronica Janssens to adapt Fase: Four Movements to the Music of Steve Reich 1982 to be the first performance staged in The Tanks. Two recent acquisitions to Tate’s collection also go on display for the first time: Suzanne Lacy’s The Crystal Quilt 1985-87 and Lis Rhodes’ Light Music 1975. From the 16th to the 27th August The Tanks will also host Undercurrent, a programme specially created by and for young people involving sound, performance, film and the digital. In addition to three major symposia, Art in Action will include interventions and participatory events for visitors of all ages. The opening programme is supported by The Tanks Supporters Group.

The Tanks at Tate Modern by Herzog & de Meuron

Over 40 established and emerging artists from around the world are taking part in Art in Action, including Ei Arakawa (Japan), Jelili Atiku (Nigeria), Nina Beier (Denmark), Tania Bruguera (Cuba), Boris Charmatz (France), Keren Cytter (Israel), Tina Keane (UK), Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker (Belgium), Liu Ding (China), Jeff Keen (UK), Anthea Hamilton (UK), Sung Hwan Kim (Korea), Rabih Mroué (Lebanon), Eddie Peake (UK), Yvonne Rainer (US), Lis Rhodes (UK), Aura Satz (UK), Patrick Staff (UK), Aldo Tambellini (US), Kerry Tribe (US) and Haegue Yang (Korea).

The new development, by internationally celebrated architects Herzog & de Meuron, will create a spectacular new building adjoining Tate Modern to the south. This will be Britain’s most important new building for culture since the creation of the British Library in 1998. The new building will increase Tate Modern’s size by 60%, provide more space for contemporary art and enable Tate to explore new areas of visual culture involving photography, film, video and performance, enriching its current programme for a broader audience.

The first phase of the new development begins with the opening of Tate Modern’s spectacular Tanks dedicated to exhibiting live art, performance, installation and film works. These massive industrial chambers have lain unused since Bankside Power Station was decommissioned in 1981. They have now being transformed into some of the most exciting new spaces for art in the world.

The opening programme for The Tanks is curated by Catherine Wood, Curator of Contemporary Art and Performance, Kathy Noble, Curator of Interdisciplinary Projects and Stuart Comer, Curator of Film in collaboration with Learning colleagues including Marko Daniel, Convenor (Adult Programmes) and Mark Miller, Convenor (Young People’s Programmes).

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Movie: Daeyang Gallery and House by Steven Holl Architects

Movie: we take a walk through the Steven Holl-designed Daeyang Gallery and House in South Korea in this second movie by architectural filmmakers Spirit of Space.

Daeyang Gallery and House by Steven Holl Architects

Spaces include a gallery and recital room beneath a pool of water and two copper-clad pavilions that rise above the surface.

Steven Holl gives a guided tour of the building in the first of the two movies, or for more images see our earlier story.

Daeyang Gallery and House by Steven Holl Architects

Another movie we’ve published features a pavilion at Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo – watch it here.

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by Steven Holl Architects
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Movie: Steven Holl on Daeyang Gallery and House

Movie: architect Steven Holl gives a tour of the gallery beneath a pool of water he designed at the Daeyang Gallery and House in South Korea in the first of two movies by architectural filmmakers Spirit of Space

Daeyang Gallery and House by Steven Holl Architects

Holl explains how he was inspired by the patterns of a musical score and how daylight floods into the underground rooms to create “a perfect light”.

Daeyang Gallery and House by Steven Holl Architects

See more images of the building in our earlier story, and see more projects by Steven Holl here.

Daeyang Gallery and House by Steven Holl Architects

Another movie we’ve published by Spirit of Space features a pavilion at Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo – watch it here.

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Gallery and House
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iPortraits

Masterpieces on iPhone

iportraits-2.jpg iportraits-1.jpg

Even from a few feet away, you can see the bold strokes that Sao Paulo artist Roberto Lautert applies to his portraits of iconic art figures, but step closer and you’ll notice that brush lines are strangely missing. That’s because there were no brushes—these works are enlarged versions of the portraits Lautert “paints” by fingertip on his iPhone 3G, using the Finger Draw app. The pieces are currently on display at Loja do Bispo in Sao Paulo in his first-ever solo show.

iportraits-3.jpg iportraits-4.jpg

Lautert, an art and creative director at his own agency, has always loved doing portraits of friends and family, which in the past were made by pencil, acrylic or watercolor. So when Lautert discovered the Finger Draw app in 2009, he knew that his first stab would be a portrait. He painted his wife, who later gave him the idea of doing a six-image series of the artists he admired most—David Hockney, Lucien Freud, Avigdor Arikha, Alex Katz and Elizabeth Peyton.

Painting on such a small screen as the iPhone is challenging in itself, but Lautert finds putting in the details to draw the eyes and the shape of the face the most difficult to achieve. “Every new portrait becomes a drama because it seems like it’s not going to turn out right,” he said. “You suffer until the results start to excite you. But even so, every time you hit save and return hours afterward, you see there’s so much still left to do.”

iportraits-5.jpg iportraits-6.jpg

Because the digital size of the Finger Draw portraits are so small, the images had to be put through a vector process to enlarge them before they’re printed on canvas. “What’s beautiful about Finger Draw on the iPhone is that you can put in your pocket, as if it were a Moleskine,” says Lautert.

Lautert is looking to bring his pieces to other major cities in Brazil, and the current show runs through 25 May 2012.


The Artis Shuk at NADA NYC

NADA debuts its first NYC art fair with a rooftop marketplace
artis-shuk-5.jpg

Popping up in Miami during Art Basel for nearly a decade now, New York-based NADA (New Art Dealers Alliance) brought the show closer to home this year. The non-profit wisely timed their alternative art fair to run alongside the NYC debut of Frieze, London’s major art event that drew dealers and collectors from all over the world to Randall’s Island for the first time. NADA offered a great antidote to the frenzy of Frieze, taking place in a four-story building in Chelsea that made good use of the rooftop with a Phaidon book booth, coffee shop and a showing from Artis—a nonprofit that supports contemporary Israeli artists.

artis-shuk-6.jpg

Instead of presenting work in a booth, Artis hosted The Artis Shuk, a playful rendition of traditional Middle Eastern marketplaces, or shuks (also known as souks). Works from more than 20 artists were available for sale, but unlike in the gallery booths at the rest of the fair, prices were listed on small cards displayed next to each piece. Most were less than $500 and all the proceeds went to the Artis Grant Program, which awards more than $125,000 to artists and nonprofits every year.

artis-shuk-4.jpg

The undeniable standout at the shuk was an untitled sculpture of a glass of Turkish coffee sliced in half by Gal Weinstein. Turkish coffee, known in Israel as “mud” coffee, is an iconic Middle Eastern image. “Coffee can act as an invitation to a conversation or as reprieve from routine. Shown using the scientific visual language of a cross section, it also speaks to the gap between the efforts to analyze the Middle East and its complex reality,” explains Weinstein.

artis-shuk-3.jpg

Another highlight, “Rolodex” by Zipora Fried is a real Rolodex the artist found. Fried went through it page by page and covered up all the names and numbers with archival tape, emphasizing the sense of loss that a discarded history of a person’s entire network would represent. Fried’s work often features covered faces as well as “drawings so dense they rebuff any illustrative meaning” and sculptures that are altered to deprive them of their functionality.

artis-shuk-1.jpg

Working in a somewhat similar vein, Naomi Safron Hon seems to revel in making objects useless. “Straining, Mixing, Grating” and “Cement Grater”, two of her clay-clotted kitchen tools, were on display at the shuk. Hon uses these objects to symbolize how politically-motivated creation and destruction impact our daily lives, but on a more basic level, the delightful way the clay oozes out of the implements is aesthetically quite satisfying.

artis-shuk-2.jpg

“D.I.Y: Fold Your Own Skull” is a kit by Itamar Jobani that you can use to construct a 3D skull from paper or plastic sheets. The pieces come pre-cut and pre-scored—all you need is glue. Jobani didn’t just want to make a cute rainy day project, he wanted to engage the buyer in a hands-on, art-making process.