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FRIEZE LONDON AND FRIEZE MASTERS 2022

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Frieze revealed highlights for both Frieze London and Frieze Masters 2022. Together, the two events bring together galleries from 42 countries, presenting art across the ages, from ancient and old masters to modern classics and the contemporary. Featuring some of the most exciting artists working today, as well as expertly curated selections from art history, both Frieze London and Frieze Masters will celebrate the depth and breadth of London’s creative community.
Taking place from 12-16 October in London’s The Regent’s Park, Frieze London and Frieze Masters are supported by global lead partner Deutsche Bank, continuing a shared commitment to artistic excellence. Eva Langret, Director of Frieze London said, ‘So many of our participating galleries are planning ambitious solo presentations and curated shows that really promise to stimulate, delight and challenge – and I am so excited to see such a diversity of talent all under one roof. Frieze Week also promises to be a major draw, with truly unmissable exhibitions across the city in both galleries and museums. This year’s fairs really reflect our commitment to celebrating the creative life of London.’
Nathan Clements-Gillespie, Director of Frieze Masters added, ‘Following the stellar launch of Frieze Masters in Seoul, we can’t wait to be back in London to celebrate our 10th anniversary. Once again, we will see Frieze Masters’ signature formula of showcasing the very best art throughout the ages. In addition, I am so looking forward to the discoveries that the fair provides each year – particularly in our Spotlight section, curated in 2022 by Camille Morineau and the AWARE team. Beyond the fair, Frieze Masters’ presence will be felt throughout the city – with our talks programme taking place in galleries and museums throughout London for everyone to enjoy.’
The much-celebrated Spotlight section of the fair is this year curated by Camille Morineau and the AWARE team. Featuring 26 solo presentations by female artists of the 20th century, the section will draw attention to previously overlooked names and allow a reconsideration of recent history. Highlights include:
Ab-Anbar will present a solo show of works by Iranian artist Sonia Balassanian
DAG will showcase paintings by self-taught Indian artist Madhvi Parekh
Dirimart will present pioneering modernist Fahrelnissa Zeid, bringing together works that link the artist’s figurative and abstract periods
The Gallery of Everything will present works by Sister Gertrude Morgan, whose work was featured in this year’s Venice Biennale
kó will show rarely-seen work by leading Nigerian artist Nike Davies-Okundaye, featuring embroidery, batik, weaving, patchwork, painting, and mixed media dating from the 1960s to the 1980s
Loeve&Co will focus on Surrealist artist Leonor Fini, bringing together an extended selection of drawings, works on canvas and sculpture, set against the artist’s iconic 1946 Lendemain de fête wallpaper
Pace Gallery will debut Mary Corse’s The Cold Room (1968/2022), showing this iconic work for the first time in Europe. Bringing Corse’s celebrated Light & Space practice into three-dimensions, The Cold Room is a full body, multisensorial experience

Food and Drink
Frieze London and Frieze Masters will once again host pop-ups from the city’s best restaurants, cafés and bars. New to Frieze London is Marleybone’s Jikoni, a vegetarian restaurant that celebrates ‘no borders’ cooking, alongside Frieze favourites Petersham Nurseries Covent Garden, Australia’s oldest family owned winery Yalumba Bar, acclaimed Soho restaurant Rita’s and Company Drinks. At Frieze Masters, Londonbased seafood restaurant Bentley’s Oyster Bar & Grill makes its debut, alongside celebrated British brasserie Ham Yard Restaurant and Michelin-starred chef Skye Gyngell’s Heckfield Place x Spring. Gail’s Bakery returns to both fairs.

Partners and Collaborations
Deutsche Bank
Deutsche Bank is the Global Lead Partner for Frieze Art Fairs. 2022 marks the 19th consecutive year they have supported the fair in a partnership that has strengthened and developed over time. Works by Shezad Dawood will feature in the Deutsche Bank Wealth Management Lounges at Frieze and on Frieze Viewing Room. The works, consisting of neons, painting, sculpture, and virtual reality, delve into themes of climate change, migration and mental health using a combination of fact and science fiction.
Commenting on his works in the lounge, Dawood said: ‘One of the aims of my installation, in the Deutsche Bank Lounges at Frieze, is to generate discussion around the oceans and to challenge us as a collective humanity to become aware of our interdependencies with the planet and the species we inhabit it with.’
In addition, the next installment of Art:LIVE, a longstanding video series filmed on the opening day of the fair will include interviews with key artworld figures and providing in-depth encounters with significant artworks.
BMW Open Work Commission 2022
Curated by Attilia Fattori Franchini ‘BMW Open Work by Frieze’ invites an artist to develop an ambitious project utilizing BMW design and technology to pursue their practice in innovative new directions. For the 2022 commission, artist Nikita Gale will present 63/22, a sculptural installation comprising a series of electric guitars imagined in collaboration with BMW i7 designers and activated by live performances in the lounge.
Breguet
Breguet will present a specially commissioned artwork by the artist Pablo Bronstein, continuing his panoramic installation series launched at Frieze New York in May, followed by Frieze Seoul in September.
The third iteration for London will reference the art of watchmaking’s endurance since the industrial revolution, whereby visitors will witness Bronstein’s artistic vision. The work will be displayed alongside historical watches from Breguet’s archives, as well as new timepieces from their collections. An artisan from Breguet’s workshop will also be present at the booth performing guillochage demonstrations.
Maison Ruinart
This year for Frieze London, Maison Ruinart has given carte blanche to Jeppe Hein, who will translate his first impressions of Ruinart’s terroir into fragments of matter and emotion that both awaken senses and touch hearts, while placing each of us at the centre of a delightful participatory experience. A collective experience that is unique each time. An artistic installation to live RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW.
La Prairie
At Frieze London, La Prairie will highlight emerging women artists, inviting five young female artists to create digital works inspired by the codes of Bauhaus. The Women Bauhaus Collective by La Prairie celebrates the legacy of the women in Bauhaus and empowers greater equity for future generations of talent.
As part of the collective, Talia Golchin, a London-based artist and recent graduate of Central Saint Martins, has created a digital sculpture entitled „Euphoria“, inspired by the synergy of the body, mind and the universe. A physical representation of „Euphoria“ will be on display within the La Prairie lounge at Frieze London.
LG
Frieze’s global partner LG will join Frieze London with an LG OLED lounge imagined by German sculptor Tobias Rehberger.
Saint Laurent
This year at Frieze, Saint Laurent will build on their commitment to supporting creativity in all its different forms and expression by exhibiting artists selected by Creative Director, Anthony Vaccarello.
Frieze Viewing Room
Continuing the collaboration launched earlier this year, Frieze Viewing Room will once again work with Vortic, the art world’s leading virtual reality platform, employing cutting-edge immersive technology to create VR spaces. These spaces will be integrated within the Frieze Viewing Room platform and viewable on Oculus VR headsets.

FRIEZE LONDON

FL22 Main 
Atul Dodiya
Footprint
2019
Oil and polyester putty on galvanized steel framed photograph printed on archival digital Hahnemühle bamboo paper
137 x 91.5 & 61 x 42 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Vadehra Art Gallery

Elias Sime
Tightrope
2022
Reclaimed electrical wires and components on panel
233.7 x 241.3 x 2.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and James Cohan

Elias Sime
Tightrope
Reclaimed electrical wires and components on panel
162.6 x 121.9 cm
Courtesy of the artist and James Cohan

Elias Sime
TIGHTROPE: ECHO!?
2020
Reclaimed electrical wire and components
365.8 x 320 x 3.2 cm
Courtesy of the artist and James Cohan

Homa Delvaray
Khâsh
2021
Fabric collage on board, wooden pulleys and steel bar
260 x 230 x 25 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Dastan Gallery

Reza Aramesh
Study of the Head as Cultural Artefacts.Action
2017
Hand carved polished staturio and Carrara marble
24 x 33 x 35 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Dastan Gallery

Hew Locke
Hinterland
2013
Acrylic on chromogenic print
265 x 151.5 cm
277.2 x 164.1 x 6.3 cm (framed)
Courtesy of the artist and Hales Gallery

Emma Amos
Flying Circus
1988
Acrylic and fabric on linen
198 x 304 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Ryan Lee Gallery

Emma Amos
Waves
2000
Oil paint on linen canvas, iron-on African fabric borders
146.7 x 67.3 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Ryan Lee Gallery

Emma Amos
Work Suit
1994
Acrylic on linen canvas, photo transfer, African fabric collage and borders
189 x 138.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Ryan Lee Gallery

Jeffrey Gibson
PPPPP OOOOO WWWWWEEEEE RRRRR
2022
Acrylic on canvas, glass beads, artificial sinew, inset to custom wood frame
198.8 x 178.1 cm
221.7 x 201.2 cm (framed)
Courtesy of the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery – Detail

Lea Cetera
Giant Conch
2021-22
Flat screen monitor, powder coated expanded steel, digital video (duration 08’20”)
88 x 150 x 12.7 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Southard Reid

R.M Fischer
Triptych
2015
Vinyl, fabric, thread, polyester fiberfill, steel, rubber, brass
193 x 236.5 x 38 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Southard Reid

Coco Young
Somewhere in Central Park
2022
Oil on canvas
165.1 x 203.2 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Christian Anderson

Sidsel Meineche Hansen
Inner Child
2021
Letters cast in tin
55 x 44 x 0.3 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Christian Anderson

Rayan Yasmineh
Le songe de Gilgamesh
2021
Oil on canvas
135 x 195 cm
Courtesy of the artist and mor charpentier

Jonathan Baldock
Loll
2022
Stoneware and glaze filled with yarrow flower
52.1 x 32 x 32 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Nicelle Beauchene

Jordan Kasey
Boat at Night
2021
Oil on canvas
172.7 x 243.8 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Nicelle Beauchene

Hayv Kahraman
Entanglements with torshi
2021
Oil and torshi on linen
177.8 x 177.8 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias

Hayv Kahraman
Entanglements no.1
2021
Oil on linen
177.8 x 177.8 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias

Petrit Halilaj
RU
2017/2022
Wood, soil, glue, brass, resin, earth, 26 objects
170 × 350 × 95 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Chert Lüdde

Petrit Halilaj
RU
2017/2022
Wood, soil, glue, brass, resin, earth, 26 objects
170 × 350 × 95 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Chert Lüdde – Detail

Karla Black
Protective Edge
2009/2021
Polythene, chalk dust, thread
75 x 50 x 30 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Gisela Capitain

Ximena Garrido Lecca
Protomorphisms: ACG Rope driver module
2022
Steel structure, copper plates, steel plates, terracotta, rubber, alpaca wool, sheep wool, cotton
223 x 310 x 60 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Gisela Capitain

FL22 Focus
Mahmoud Khaled
For Those Who Cannot Sleep
2021
Wood, leather, metal, carpet, Bird of Paradise leaves, brass, speaker, framed reproduction of A Glove: Anxieties by Max Klinger 1st ed. (plate 7 from the series Fantasies over a Found Glove, Dedicated to the Lady who Lost It, pub.1881), looping soundtrack Kay’s Theme by David Julyan
Installation view at KUK Trondheim, Norway
Courtesy of the artist and KUK Trondheim

Maren Karlson
Guardian Angel
2021
Oil on canvas
40 x 110 cm
Courtesy of the artist and In Lieu

Rania Stephan
In My Mind’s Eye
2022
Video loop (4’) colour with stereo sound 16:9
Courtesy of the artist and Marfa

Joy Labinjo
Feeling less than peachy
2021
Oil on canvas
200 x 180 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Tiwani Contemporary

Tarek Lakhrissi
BETRAYING FEELINGS
2021
Steel and steel chains
44 x 35 x 0.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and VITRINE

FL22 Editions
Paul Hutchinson
glaub an nichts nicht an dich nicht an irgendwen
2022
Silkscreen print
73.5 x 47 cm
80.5 x 54 cm (framed)
Courtesy of the artist and Knust Kunz Gallery

Cornelia Parker
Coffee Pot Hit by a Monkey Wrench
2016
Polymer photogravure etching on Fabriano Tiepolo Bianco 290 gsm paper
56 x 68 cm
Edition of 30
Courtesy of the artist and Cristea Roberts Gallery

Cornelia Parker
Nightfall
2020
Polymer Gravure etching on Fabriano Tiepolo 290 gsm
Paper: 56.4 x 82.9 cm
Edition of 15
Courtesy of the artist and Cristea Roberts Gallery

Cornelia Parker
Silver Jug From: Thirty Pieces of Silver (Exposed)
2015
Polymer Gravure etching on Fabriano Tiepolo Bianco 290 gsm paper
66.3 x 54.3 cm
Edition of 20
Courtesy of the artist and Cristea Roberts Gallery

Rana Begum
92C
2022
Colour changing lenticular acrylic panel mounted on 3 mm Dibond
40 x 40 cm
Edition of 25
Courtesy of the artist and Cristea Roberts Gallery

Etel Adnan
Vertige
2020
Etching
38 x 45.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Cristea Roberts Gallery

FL22 Indra’s Net

Chandraguptha Thenuwara
Covert 4
2022
Ink on Paper
30 x 42 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Saskia Fernando Gallery

Chandraguptha Thenuwara
Covert 6
2022
Ink on Paper
42 x 30 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Saskia Fernando Gallery

Muhanned Cader
Modaragala
2022
Oil on wood
21.5 x 21.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Saskia Fernando Gallery

Oscar Santillán
Antimundo 00G
2022
Oil paint on canvas
120 x 80 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Copperfield, London – Detail

FRIEZE MASTERS
FM22 Main
Company School Painting of Two Ducks (with Persian inscription)
India
19th century
Watercolour on paper
29 x 18 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Amir Mohtashemi

Company School Painting of Two Ducks (with Persian inscription)
India
19th century
Watercolour on paper
29 x 18 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Amir Mohtashemi – detail

Company School Painting of Two Ducks
India
19th century
Watercolour on paper
29 x 18 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Amir Mohtashemi – detail

BUDDHA AMOGHASIDDHI
Tibet
13th century
Distemper on cloth
94.9 x 71.6 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Carlton Rochell Asian Art

Pair of Makara
Tibet
c.13th century
gilt copper repoussé
43.25 cm tall.
Courtesy of the artist and Carlton Rochell Asian Art

Carlos Cruz-Diez
Fisicromía 3
1959
Paint, cardboard and wood
51 x 51 cm
Courtesy of the Artist and Galleria Continua SRL

Carlos Cruz-Diez
Couleur Additive
1983
Silkscreen on paper
60 x 46 cm
68.5 x 48.5 cm (framed)
Courtesy of the artist and Galleria Continua SRL

F.D. Oerder
Portrait of a Zulu
1897
Oil on canvas
53 x 42.9 cm. (20 3⁄4 x 16 3⁄4 in.)
Courtesy of the artist and Frans David Oerder

William Shakespeare
Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies. Published according to the true
Originall Copies.

1632
32.4 x 21.9 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Peter Harrington Rare Books

Leonor Fini
Portrait de femme
c. 1948
Watercolour and ink on paper
34.8 x 24.7 cm
44 x 34.3 cm (framed)
Courtesy of the artist and Tommaso Calabro

Leonor Fini
Femme oiseau
c. 1958
Watercolour and gouache on paper
21.5 x 20 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Tommaso Calabro

Dorothea Tanning
Untitled
1956
Collage on paper
25.3 x 32 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Tommaso Calabro

James Gillray
The Fall of Icarus
1807
Hand-coloured etching
35.8 x 26 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Andrew Edmunds


James Gillray
John Bull Taking a Luncheon or British Cooks Cramming Old Grumble-Gizzard with Bonne-Chere
1798
Hand-coloured etching
25.5 x 36.2 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Andrew Edmunds

Romare Bearden
All the Things You Are
1987
Watercolour and collage on paper
101.6 x 76.2 cm
Courtesy of the artist and ACA Gallery

Faith Ringgold
Jazz Stories: Mama Can Sing, Papa Can Blow #8: Don’t Wanna Love You
2004
Acrylic on canvas with pieced fabric border
205.7 x 162.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and ACA Gallery

Nikki de Saint Phalle
Sphinx
1975
Painted polyester
30 x 28 x 48 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Miterrand

Frans David Oerder
Portrait of a Zulu
1897
Oil on canvas
53 x 42.9 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Elliott Fine Art

Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d’Alembert
Encyclopédie, ou Dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers, par une Société de gens de lettres
1751-1780
Courtesy of the artists and Stéphane Clavreuil Rare Vooks

Ilona Keserü
Hengerpalást / Cylinder Jacket
1978
Stitched, chemically dyed linen and metal rings
176 x 55 x 55 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery

Joan Mitchell
Pastel
1991
Pastel on paper
38.7 x 27.0 cm
57.2 x 47 cm (framed)
Courtesy of the artist and Barbara Mathes Gallery

Pablo Picasso
Partition, guitare, compotier
1924
Oil on canvas
97.1 x 130.1 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Helly Nahmad Gallery

Pieter Breughal
Series of tondi representing the seasons:
Spring: Peasants making Merry outside a Tavern
Summer: Peasants Dance  
Winter: View of a Village in the Snow  
After 1616
Oil on wood
24.5 cm (diameter)
Courtesy of the artist and De Jonckheere

Georges Braque
Pichet noir et limande
1942
50 x 61 cm
Oil on canvas
Courtesy of the artist and Bernard Jacobson Gallery

Cesare Fracanzano
The Liberation of Saint Peter
Late 17th century
Oil on canvas
153 x 227 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Artur Ramon Art

Attr. Francesco Antonio Franzoni
Panther with her Cubs
Late 18th century
Giallo tigrato marble
19.5 x 27.5 x 8 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Artur Ramon Art

Joaquín Sorolla
Portrait of María Planas de Gil with black mantilla
1906
Oil on canvas
209.5 x 91.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Artur Ramon Art


Head of a Man
South Arabian
3rd century BC to 1st century AD
Alabaster
13 cm high
Courtesy of the artist and Ariadne

William Tillyer
Ten Vases and Arrangements
1979
Acrylic on wire and card
132 x 13 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Bernard Jacobson Gallery

Frieze Masters 2022 entrusts Spotlight to Camille Morineau and AWARE

The renowned Spotlight section of Frieze Masters, made up of solo presentations of the pioneers of avant-garde art from all around the world, will celebrate its 10th anniversary in October 2022 at Regent’s Park. To mark this occasion, Camille Morineau (co-founder and Research Director of AWARE – Archives of Women Artists, Research, and Exhibitions) and AWARE have been invited to curate this special section, dedicated to women artists.

Frieze Week London will return to Regent’s Park between October 12th and 16th 2022. This year, for a Spotlight dedicated to pioneering women artists of the 20th century, Frieze Masters has called on AWARE, an association which has been working, since its creation in 2014, to shed light on women artists of the 19th and 20th centuries. The section, curated in collaboration with Matylda Taszycka, Head of AWARE’s Research Programme, and Eléonore Besse, Research Programmes Assistant, will present major modern masters as well as highlight the work of artists who are still little known, showing that galleries are today at the forefront of the rediscovery of, and research on, women artists. Artists featured will include Orlan, Nike Davies-Okundaye, Leonor Fini, Sylvia Snowden, Wook-kyung Choi and Sonia Balassanian.
In all, 26 artists born between 1900 and 1951 will be foregrounded by as many galleries from around the world, presenting half a century of art history in a new light. AWARE will bring together artists with practices linked to specific artistic movements and currents and more singular styles and techniques. The section takes into account the recent attributions and insertions of certain artists in historical movements and avant-gardes and reveals the echoes between the practices of artists across diverse geographies: an engaged approach directly related to AWARE’s primary mission of championing women artists from around the world through the dissemination of free and bilingual content on the association’s website.
Through this series of solo presentations, AWARE seeks to highlight the singularity of each artist, whilst outlining their common commitments. While some stands will question the way in which women artists deconstruct the body, rethinking its representation through drawing, collage, and photomontage, others will present a range of different types of abstract, geometric, or gestural art, even going beyond pictorial practice.
«We are honoured to be the curators of Frieze Masters Spotlight 2022. This is a prestigious and particularly special partnership this year, as the section will be exclusively dedicated to women artists. This is a unique opportunity to increase the visibility and presence of women artists whose artistic careers have not been fully celebrated and it is in line with AWARE’s primary ambition to rewrite the history of art in a more equal way » says Camille Morineau, AWARE’s co-founder and Research Director.
Camille Morineau, heritage curator and art historian specialising in women artists is the co-founder and Director of Research at AWARE (Archives of Women Artists, Research and Exhibitions). She is President of the Board of Directors of the École du Louvre and was promoted to Chevalière de la Légion d’honneur in January 2020.
With degrees from both the École normale supérieure and the Institut national du patrimoine, Camille Morineau has worked for twenty years in public cultural institutions in France, including ten years as curator of the contemporary collections at the Musée national d’Art moderne – Centre Georges-Pompidou (Paris). She curated numerous exhibitions there, including Yves Klein (2006), Gerhard Richter (2012), Roy Lichtenstein (2013), and the hanging elles@centrepompidou (2009-2011) dedicated solely to female artists from the collections of the Musée national d’Art moderne. She has also curated several exhibitions as an independent curator, including Niki de Saint Phalle at RMN – Grand Palais (Paris, 2014) and Guggenheim Bilbao (2016), Ceramix: From Rodin to Schütte, about the use of ceramics by artists of the 20th and 21st century, at Bonnefanten Museum Maastricht (2015) and La maison rouge, Fondation Antoine de Galbert, with Manufacture de Sèvres (Paris, 2016). From 2016 to October 2019, she was the director of exhibitions and collections at Monnaie de Paris, where she curated the following exhibitions: Women House, also shown at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington (2017-2018), Floor-naments, an exhibition marking the 40th anniversary of the Centre Pompidou (2017), Subodh Gupta (2018), Thomas Schütte (2019), Kiki Smith (2019-2020).
In 2021, Camille Morineau curated the first French retrospective of Françoise Pétrovitch at the Fonds Hélène & Édouard Leclerc in Landerneau, Brittany. In 2022, she co-curated Pionnières with Lucia Pesapane at the musée du Luxembourg in Paris.

Since its creation in 2014, AWARE has worked to make women artists of the 19th and 20th century visible by producing and posting free bilingual (French/English) content about their work on its website.
The biographies published online largely originate from the Dictionnaire universel des créatrices (Universal dictionary of female creators), published in 2013 thanks to a partnership with the Éditions des Femmes – Antoinette Fouque. The website’s database brings together women artists born between 1790 and 1972, working in the field of visual arts, with no limitations on medium or country. The partnerships developed with museums, universities and art historians, as well as with sponsors and cultural events in France and abroad have contributed to the development of AWARE’s online database, updated weekly with new artist profiles and research articles.
Special attention is also paid to the accessibility of quality information. Thematic courses on major art history subjects, animated series for children, and podcasts all offer entertaining ways to discover or better understand the lives and work of women artists.
In order to widely disseminate research on women artists, AWARE organises symposia, round tables and seminars in France and abroad in collaboration with universities and museums. It also participates in various fairs and biennials around the world in order to increase the visibility and presence of women artists (Art Paris Art Fair, The Armory Show in New York, etc.).
In order to pay tribute both to women whose artistic careers have not been fully celebrated and to promote artistic creation, each year the AWARE Prizes for Women Artists are presented in partnership with France’s Ministry of Culture to one mid-career and one long-established artist.
AWARE also gives a voice to women artists not only by supporting their production through open calls for projects, but also through book-length interviews, as is the case for the AWARE Outstanding Merit Prize winners.
AWARE publishes its own publications: events organised by the association, such as symposia and seminars, have been edited into books. The transcriptions are accessible on its website and printed on demand.
Bibliographic resources on women artists and feminist art are also available. A certain number of these resources are available for consultation by appointment at AWARE’s Documentation Centre in Paris – which contains more than 3000 books – as well as online.
To accompany it in its missions, AWARE has set up and coordinates two types of networks throughout the world:
TEAM: Teaching, e-learning, Agency, Mentoring is an international academic network, coordinated by Maura Reilly, whose goal is to collect and publish resources on women artists produced by academics. It allows AWARE to enrich its website, with priority given to geographical areas which are still under-represented, and to support the training of a new generation of art historians sensitive to gender issues and the place of women artists.
AMIS: AWARE Museum Initiative and Support is the first initiative that brings together museums from around the world to collect and share research on women artists produced for exhibitions and acquisitions.
Frieze Week London
From October 12 to 16, 2022
Regent’s Park, London
https://www.frieze.com/fairs/frieze-london

AWARE
Villa Vassilieff
21 avenue du Maine
75015 Paris
awarewomenartists.com

Frieze London and Frieze Masters 2022 To Show Ambitious Curated Programme

Highlights include special artist projects, with Emma Talbot at Frieze London and Tyler Mitchell for Frieze Masters
Frieze Masters Talks to feature speakers: Kamala Ibrahim Ishag, Anthea Hamilton, Andra Ursuța, and more, celebrating the fair’s tenth anniversary

Frieze detailed further programming highlights for Frieze London and Frieze Masters 2022, which both take place from 12 to 16 October in the Regent’s Park, London. Central to this year’s line-up are two special artist projects with Emma Talbot showing at Frieze London and Tyler Mitchell at Frieze Masters. Frieze Masters Talks will once again be curated by Dr. Nicholas Cullinan (Director of National Portrait Gallery) and feature major names such as Kamala Ibrahim Ishag, Anthea Hamilton and Andra Ursuța. Key institutional-led initiatives for 2022 include the Contemporary Art Society’s Collections Fund; Camden Art Centre Emerging Artist Prize at Frieze and the Frieze Tate Fund supported by Endeavor.
Frieze London and Frieze Masters are supported by global lead partner Deutsche Bank, continuing a shared commitment to artistic excellence.
Eva Langret, Director of Frieze London said: ‘The 2022 edition of Frieze London will continue the fair’s commitment to presenting ambitious artist-led projects with major new works from Emma Talbot and Abbas Zahedi. Another highlight, this year’s curated section, Indra’s Net will give a platform to Sandhini Poddar’s remarkable curatorial vision and tackle pressing ideas around our relationship to one another and to land. The programme will showcase the heart of the London art scene, while also foregrounding artistic discovery and expanded geographic horizons, showcasing the work of artists from Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Ecuador and Peru among others.’
Nathan Clements-Gillespie added: ‘This year, we celebrate the tenth anniversary of Frieze Masters and I am delighted by our appropriately stellar line-up, including a major milestone by Tyler Mitchell, which marks the first time a contemporary work has featured in the fair. A central tenet of Frieze Masters has been to provide a contemporary perspective on the historical and Tyler’s project, a portfolio of new images that interpret historical motifs and imagery, will extend this aim, reframing material from the past anew – I can’t wait for everyone to see it.’

PROGRAMMING HIGHLIGHTS
This year Frieze London and Frieze Masters will both feature a special artist-led project, Emma Talbot will install a new work at the fair that stretches the length of Frieze London’s entrance corridor. Titled 21st Century Herbal, Talbot’s work will take ‘Herbals’, medieval illustrated manuscripts that describe the healing properties of plants, as a starting point to create a 28-meter-long painted silk hanging garden. For Frieze Masters, Tyler Mitchell will debut new works including photographs, works on fabric, and installations, that reflect on the status of historical images and their tropes, which will be published in Frieze Masters magazine.
Sandhini Poddar (Adjunct Curator at the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi) will curate this year’s special section, Indra’s Net, which is a term derived from Buddhist and Hindu thought and refers to an ethics of being in which an individual atom holds within it the structure of reality. Indra’s Net’ will feature 10 dedicated presentations, as well as a number of cabinet-style displays scattered throughout the main section of the fair, and will feature artists including Dorothy Cross, Jamilah Sabur, Oscar Santillán, Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio, Clarissa Tossin, Martha Atienza, Teresita Fernández, Claudia Andujar and more.
In addition, 2022 Frieze Artist Award winner Abbas Zahedi will realize an ambitious new commission which will be situated immediately outside the fair, adjacent to the entrance. The installation will consist of a wooden structure co-designed with Harley Gray, Bassam Ibellini and Neurofringe. Over the course of the fair, this structure will host a series of live activations each of which will be broadcast, via a DIY radio, both online and into the heart of the fair. Zahedi will appear in conversation with Mariam Zulfiqar (Director of Artangel) on Thursday 13 October, 6pm GMT at No.9 Cork Street.
The winner of the 2022 Camden Art Centre Emerging Artist Prize at Frieze will be announced during Frieze London 2022. Launched at Frieze London 2018 and now in its fourth year, this annual prize awards an emerging artist under the age of 40 and exhibited at Frieze London in the Focus section of galleries, Tenant of Culture (Soft Opening) was the last recipient of the prize and currently has a major solo installation at Camden Art Centre (8 July – 18 September 2022) Previous winners of the award include artists Wong Ping (Edouard Malingue Gallery, Hong Kong) and Julien Creuzet (High Art Paris).
The Contemporary Art Society’s Collections Fund is designed to support the acquisition of significant contemporary works for Contemporary Art Society Museum Members across the UK. This year CAS has selected Norwich Castle Museum as the recipient of the Collections Fund at Frieze 2022. The work selected will explore issues of Climate Change and its impact on the environment and the movements of human populations. A key aim of the scheme is to draw together the knowledge, experience and expertise of private collectors with that of museum curators in a programme of research leading to an acquisition, which in turn can influence and ignite future collecting policy.
For the seventh year running, the Frieze Tate Fund Supported by Endeavor will provide £150,000 for the acquisition of works by emerging and leading international artists at Frieze for Tate’s collection. This year’s selection panel includes Maria Balshaw (Director) Polly Staple (Director of Collection, British Art), Gregor Muir (Director of Collection, International Art), Dominique Heyse-Moore (Senior Curator, Contemporary British Art), Valentine Umansky (Curator, International Art), Nathan Ladd (Assistant Curator, Contemporary British Art), Tamsin Hong (Assistant Curator, International Art), Habda Rashid, (Curator of Modern & Contemporary British Art at Fitzwilliam Museum and Kettle’s Yard), and Carolyn Lazard (Artist). To date more than 150 works by over 90 artists have been acquired, contributing to many displays that have taken place across Tate’s four galleries.

FRIEZE MASTERS TALKS
Dr Nicholas Cullinan (Director, National Portrait Gallery) returns to curate Frieze Masters Talks exploring the connections between historical art and contemporary practice. The talks will take place online as well as in person at a series of London galleries and institutions, speakers include Anthea Hamilton at Studio Voltaire, Kamala Ibrahim Ishag at The Royal College of Art, Tyler Mitchell at Burlington Arcade, in partnership with Gagosian and Andra Ursuța at David Zwirner London.

FRIEZE DEUTSCHE BANK EMERGING CURATORS FELLOWSHIP
Launched in 2020, the Frieze x Deutsche Bank Emerging Curators fellowship aims to increase accessibility, representation and social mobility within the arts. The initiative brings together artists and organizations across the non-profit and private sectors and creates an opportunity to grow and deepen curatorial practice within the UK’s leading public art institutions.
On the occasion of Frieze London 2022, fellowship alumni Amina Jama, Curatorial Fellow at Chisenhale Gallery and Kinnari Saraiya, Curatorial fellow at BALTIC Center for Contemporary Art, will each present a project.
Amina Jama will collaborate with this year’s Frieze Artist Award Winner, Abbas Zahedi, who as part of the activations accompanying his commission, will broadcast a poetry reading by Jama online and into the fair via a DIY radio.
Kinnari Saraiya will present Prequel / Sequel, a project utilizing a bespoke digital Bioscope to screen a selection of films at Frieze London. A form of traveling cinema, the traditional Bioscope functioned through a reel of images that were cranked by hand to create the illusion of a moving film. Popularized in the 1890s, the Bioscope found favour in the global south and is still used in India. The project, as Kinnari describes ‘is an attempt to hold on to the ingrained presence of these traveling cinemas, the experience of watching films in the interstices of everyday life with an organic unity of communal experiences. It is an attempt to protect its simple values as passed down to me in oral accounts by a generation that witnessed its decline’.

Liste d’images envoyées à Frieze:
Section «surréaliste»
Leonor Fini, Portrait de Lino Invernizzi (1944-1945)

Section «politique» / «féministe»
Sonia Balassanian, Hostages #35 (1980) et Hostages #12 (1980) collage politique (Iran, hostage crisis)
Romany Eveleigh, Tri-Part (1974) minimalisme féministe/écriture féminine

Section «abstraction»
Fahrelnissa Zeid, Loch Lomond (1948) et Angel Foot (1958) abstraction géometrique

Pat Passlof, Untitled (1960) abstract expressionism

Mary Corse, Cold Room (1968/2017) Installation d’une artiste abstraite

Exemple «hors mouvement artistique» (rattachée à notre section «surréaliste» dans le parcours)
Madhvi Parekh, Sea God (1971)

Plus âgée
Gertrude Morgan, Untitled (Dan 7:4), (c.1960-1970) aussi hors mouvement

Plus jeune
Nike Davies-Okundaye, Untitled (1960) art textile

FM22 Spotlight

Marthe Wéry
Ligné
1973
Acrylic on toile
2 x 355 x 27 cm, diptych
Courtesy of the artist and Bernard Bouche

Susana Rodríguez
Escritura Nro 10 (serie de las semillas
1979
Pencil and ink on paper
47 x 45 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria & Herlitzka + Faria

Katie van Scherpenberg
Furo
2004
Chine collé a la poupee polymer gravure on rives BFK 280 grams paper
55 x 226 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Cecilia Brunson – Detail

Leonor Fini
Untitled
1940
Watercolour, gouache and ink on paper
35 x 25 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Loeve & Co

Lucia Marcucci
Ecologia
1973
Acrylic on emulsified canvas
123 x 84 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Frittelli arte contemporanea

Lucia Marcucci
Buongiorno signora, come va?
1965
Collage on cardboard
50 x 35 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Frittelli arte contemporanea

Lucia Marcucci
Non possomus
1971
Collage on cardboard
66 x 48 cm
Courtesy of the artist, APALAZZOGALLERY and Frittelli arte contemporanea

Lucia Marcucci
I segreti della stampa
1971
Collage on cardboard
66 x 48 cm
Courtesy of the artist, APALAZZOGALLERY and Frittelli arte contemporanea

Margit Szilvtzky
Flags 1-6 / Zászlók 1-6
1970
Sewn collage on canvas
6 pieces, each 59 x 110 cm
Courtesy of the artist and acb Galéria

Margit Szilvtzky
Gömbgyűrődés | Wrinkled Sphere I
1976
Linen
20 x 20 x 20 cm
Courtesy of the artist and acb Galéria


Orshi Drozdik
Adam and Eve
1982-3
Oil on canvas
185 x 137 cm, diptych
Courtesy of the artist and Einspach Fine Art & Photography

Orshi Drozdik
Blink and Sigh
1976
Gelatin silver photographic print
48.6 x 70.4 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Einspach Fine Art & Photography

Orshi Drozdik
Blink and Sigh
1976
Gelatin silver photographic print
48.2 x 70.3 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Einspach Fine Art & Photography

Orshi Drozdik
Adventure in Technos Dystopium – Dystopium Infinite Triptych
(Part of the Installation: Manufacturing the Self: The Pathological Body)
1984 / 1995
Gelatin silver photographic prints
Each 250 x 123 cm, overall size 250 x 369 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Einspach Fine Art & Photography

Colette Brunschwig
Sans titre (untitled)
c. 1960
Oil and acrylic on canvas
60 x 60 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Jocelyn Wolff

Nike Davies-Okundaye
The palmwine tapper and ayo game
1969-1970
Bead on board
137 x 259 cm
Courtesy of the artist and kó Gallery

Nike Davies-Okundaye
Animal World
1968
Embroidery
78.7 x 68.6 cm
Courtesy of the artist and kó Gallery

Nike Davies-Okundaye
Osun
1972
Embroidery
69.9 x 78.7 cm
Courtesy of the artist and kó Gallery

Mary Lucier
Paris Dawn Burn
1977
Seven-channel synchronous video installation, free-standing sculptural form, black and white video, colour slide projection, sound
Courtesy of the artist and Christin Tierney

Sylvia Snowden
Miss Lesie Mae
1982
Acylic and oil pastel on Masonite
121.9 x 121.9 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Franklin Parrasch Gallery

Pat Passlof
Cherokee
1959
Oil on linen
175.3 x 129.5 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Eric Firestone Gallery

Pat Passlof
Two Winters
1961
Oil on linen
203.2 x 269.2 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Eric Firestone Gallery

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