Riffs on Classical Sculpture, Ceramics, and Sex Work at This Year’s Frieze London
The 2017 edition of the Frieze art fair opens today in London. With more than 160 galleries participating in the main exposition—add another 130 if you count its sister fair, Frieze Masters, across Regents Park—the work on offer is unsurprisingly varied. We visited yesterday’s preview and snapped a few highlights, including a smaller but better organized Focus section, highlighting emerging galleries selected by curators Ruba Katrib and Fabian Schoeneich, and an exhibition called "Sex Work: Feminist Art & Radical Politics" for which a cluster of galleries, under the oversight of curator Alison Gingeras, turned over their booths to solo presentations of work by women artists. The fair runs through Sunday, Oct. 8.
By Surface October 5, 2017- Toby Ziegler
At Galerie Max-Hetzler
- Eric N. Mack (foreground) and Jeff Elrod
At Simon Lee Gallery
- Sarah Lucas
At Sadie Coles
- Los Carpinteros
At Peter Kilchmann
- Thomas Ruff
At Galerie Rudiger Schöttle
- Thomas Ruff
At Galerie Rudiger Schöttle
- Thomas Ruff
At Galerie Rudiger Schöttle
- Dorothy Iannone
At Air de Paris (part of “Sex Work: Feminist Art & Radical Politics”)
- Penny Slinger
At Blum & Poe (part of “Sex Work: Feminist Art & Radical Politics”)
- Troika
At Galería OMR
- Jose Dávila
At Galería OMR
- Mary Reid Kelley
At Pilar Corrias
- Mary Reid Kelley
At Pilar Corrias
- Mary Reid Kelley
At Pilar Corrias
- Zilla Leutenegger
At Peter Kilchmann
- Zanele Muholi
At Stevenson
- Suzanne Treister
At PPOW
- Suzanne Treister
At PPOW
- Suzanne Treister
At PPOW
- Peter Halley
At Stuart Shave/Modern Art
- Alicja Kwade
At Kamel Mennour