At Cascadia Art Museum, a noted midcentury photographer gets his due
By Admin in Photography
Every artist’s perspective is in some way shaped by the people who have surrounded them and the places they’re from. But for sculptor and performance artist Rose B. Simpson, painter, printmaker, sculptor, and collagist Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, and photographer Jeremy Dennis, the idea of home plays an especially urgent role in their work. All three are enrolled Indigenous American tribal members, and their practices don’t just honor their individual Native histories, cultures, environments, and traditions, they also seek to ignite conversations about historical oppression and the land theft their communities continue to face.
Both Simpson and Smith have had expansive exhibitions at New York’s Whitney Museum of American Art this year, symbolizing what is an encouraging yet long-overdue shift in how institutions are showcasing and giving platforms to art made by Indigenous artists.
A member of New Mexico’s Kah’p’oo Owinge tribe, Simpson is best known for her mixed-media sculptures of large-scale beings, which she creates using a traditional hand-coiled method that she learned from her mother, a potter. Five such sculptures, part of a larger work called Counterculture, are on view at the Whitney through January 21. Simpson’s next show, Skeena, opening on November 9 at Jessica Silverman Gallery in San Francisco, will debut 10 new beings alongside a hanging wall work.

Smith, a Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribal member, had her first New York retrospective, “Memory Map,” at the Whitney this spring, bringing together nearly five decades of her work. Her latest curatorial effort, “The Land Carries Our Ancestors: Contemporary Art by Native Americans,” on view through January 15 at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., highlights work by a range of artists who deal with Indigenous knowledge of their natural surroundings.
Dennis is the founder of Ma’s House & BIPOC Art Studio, a nonprofit and artist residency located in his childhood home and birthplace on Long Island’s Shinnecock Indian Reservation, which provides a space for marginalized artists to create and engage with one another. His cinematic fine-art photographs, which comment on the misrepresentation of Indigenous people in American media, probe subjects such as identity, cultural practice, and the history of forced Native assimilation. Dennis’s ongoing project On This Site maps out and documents ancestral lands throughout Long Island.
Simpson, Smith, and Dennis recently connected to discuss how their physical and ancestral homes inform their work, effecting change in the art world, and why community-building is inherent to what they do.
ROSE B. SIMPSON: I don’t think I really knew how impacted by home I was as an artist. I had to leave my ancestral homelands where I grew up and was born, in northern New Mexico, to realize how important it is to me—that it is not just the people but the place that is family to me. I feel like that lack of consciousness around our beings, our physical and spiritual and social existence, keeps us from identifying and having respect for home.
“I’m so proud of the place I call home, and I try to bring that with me when I leave the reservation.” —Jeremy Dennis
JEREMY DENNIS: I’m from Shinnecock, born and raised. Everyone there is related. There are about 600 of us, more or less. As an artist and a tribal member, I’m so proud of the place I get to call home, and I try to bring that with me when I leave the reservation. One way I do that as an artist is by making portraits of some of my relatives. I do interviews. Sometimes they share stories of resilience and pride or conflict and strain on the community. There’s so much of our important history that isn’t represented in photos or paintings or inscriptions. So, my work is about showing that history is always relevant and that how we’re living today is informed by the path that our community has traveled and survived.
JAUNE QUICK-TO-SEE SMITH: I am a mixture of Métis-Cree and Salish and am from the northern border of the United States in Montana. I was born at the St. Ignatius Mission on the Flathead Reservation, at a time when one in 10 babies born there lived. My dad was a horse trader and moved around often; when we were down-and-out broke, we had to go to a reservation. My sister was born at Hoopa, and I lived at Muckleshoot and Nisqually. In Nisqually, we had a one-room cabin that didn’t have furniture. There were three families of us in there. We didn’t have indoor plumbing or electricity. I remember being sick all the time and always being hungry. That was a normal upbringing for someone my age. I knew early on that white people had different lives than we Indian people. It was so distinct. I’m still riffing off of that in my work and with all my Native friends. My home is with them. It is on the reservation. But I’ve been living here in New Mexico for quite a few years, and it’s like another home. I have family everywhere when I get together with all the Indian artists because they are my family too.
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Indian Madonna Enthroned, 1974, Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Purchased with funds from the Director’s Discretionary Fund, Fabricated by Andy Ambrose
JD: One experience that keeps recurring for me, unfortunately—and I’m sure we all share it—is I’ll get invited to do a show during November, Native American Heritage Month, and then it’s quiet the rest of the year. I’m always trying to advocate for Indigenous inclusion. We can participate anytime. It’s so important for our art to be institutionalized. When I think about themes of joy and beauty in Indigenous art, I think they come out of approaching difficult subjects and conflicts in our history. When we talk about these things, it’s a form of healing. The arts, especially, bring together different communities, so when I see work about colonization or suffering, I think it’s a step in moving toward a better future.
JS: In all my 50 years of traveling and lecturing and sharing slides of contemporary art by Native people, George Floyd, Black Lives Matter, and Standing Rock have all changed the scene. All of a sudden, museums and galleries were like, “Oh, we’re not including everybody.” We’ve been saying that for 50 years now! All of a sudden, though, arts institutions have started giving out fellowships and grants to Native people, and my younger brothers and sisters are all having big, major museum exhibitions. That is so incredible. That never was there for us. Before I curated “The Land Carries Our Ancestors” for the National Gallery of Art, the museum hadn’t had a show on Native art in 30 years. When the Whitney contacted me, I think they were nervous about it. But it actually was a good exhibition; it brought people to the museum, and we got a lot of press, which was shocking to me. I don’t know how long this is going to last, it’s like manna from heaven. But I’m doing it, and I’ll keep doing it if I can get the door cracked so that I can bring my community in with me.
“We are so dynamic, and we come from so many different stories.” —Rose B. Simpson
RS: I think often about how those artists that came before us really did wedge that door. Someone said to me recently, “The water is rising for us all.” It’s rising, and we’re all floating together. I have the privilege to question whether the institution is the source of all power. Why do we give those colonial institutions the right to say we are someone and what we say is important? The reason that I feel grateful to be included in these exhibitions and spaces is that they reach the people I’m trying to have the conversation with. My work isn’t directed at my community here at Santa Clara; I’m trying to communicate something across a line that hasn’t been open to communication for a really long time. There are all these things—exploitation, stereotyping—that we all have to combat. I’m not Shinnecock, you know what I mean? I am not Salish. I’m a Pueblo person, and I’m from a specific pueblo, and I’m from a specific family. We are so dynamic, and we come from so many different stories. It’s so important to have that full spectrum of Indigenous experience in those spaces.
Installation view of “Rose B. Simpson: Counterculture” (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, October 4, 2023–January 21, 2024)
JS: They stereotype us. I remember when I was going around to all of these galleries and museums, talking about contemporary art by Native people, and they said, “What is that?” And I said, “Well, we are not what you would call traditional. We are not weaving blankets, and we’re not making silver jewelry, but we are making art from our own experience.” That’s the point. We make art from our own experience just like all the white artists do. And there isn’t one style for white artists, but they expect it to be one style for us. Jeremy’s making art and creating Ma’s House and doing all those wonderful things that are community-building. I think each of us in our own way realizes that we have to do some of that, we have to do both things. We tend our work, and then at the same time we reach out to each other and make plans to do stuff together. Part of it is having each other’s backs. Part of it is being a support system. Our lives and our work are so fragile because there aren’t millions of us.
“Our lives and our work are so fragile because there aren’t millions of us.”—Jaune Quick-to-See Smith
RS: The pieces at the Whitney right now are five from an original series of 12. They are set up outside on the museum’s roof, and they’re called Counterculture. The original spot for them was [supposed to be] at Plymouth Rock. What I wanted to say with the pieces was, “You’re being watched.” Most people forget that we’re being watched by things that we deem inanimate. I think one of the main reasons that colonization happened in the way that it did was that colonizers had forgotten they were being held accountable by beings beyond people. I had qualms about putting my work at Plymouth Rock. I felt like I didn’t have the right to speak on behalf of all Native people. The organizers were approached by the Wampanoag community, which said to them, “This isn’t who we want making this work there.” That was a blessing for me. Who am I, a Pueblo person from New Mexico, having this conversation about an experience that was very much not mine? The work then got installed in Williamstown, Massachusetts, in 2022, where we built some programming around it with the Stockbridge-Munsee Mohican community. It felt really good to move it to where it was wanted. Now the other seven pieces are at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center in Wisconsin. After they were moved, we took some of the clay from where the pieces were originally installed in Williamstown and made beads with the Wisconsin Stockbridge-Munsee community. We sat around and told stories and then fired the beads and made necklaces. That felt like the most important part of the whole exhibit. That piece taught me a lot about how to trust the art itself and where it needs to go.
Jeremy Dennis, untitled from “Sacredness of Hills,” 2020, Archival Inkjet Print, 30 x 40 in
JD: I do landscape photography, portraiture, and staged photography. I have a personal series from 2018 called “Rise,” and it’s all about reoccupying ancestral lands. It asks, what if Indigenous people never left? What if they’d continued to maintain their footprint and witnessed the transformation of the land, the colonization, the desecration of sacred sites? I also explore home in terms of expansion and abundance rather than being confined to the reservation. That’s just one of the unfortunate realities of growing up on a reservation; there are pluses, but at the same time, many tribal members never leave the territory. It becomes a small bubble of where we’re supposed to belong. We’re supposed to be not only invisible, but also non-existent. I think about what is owed to us and what we can still do to grant us that sense of home. Part of how I do that is through Ma’s House, which we started in 2020. It’s in an old family home on the Shinnecock reservation that was built in the 1960s by my grandfather, Peter Silva Sr. My mom and her five siblings grew up in it, and I did too, with my older sister. Probably 90 percent of my photography work gets done at residencies, so I wanted to offer that resource and space to other artists. Of course, it opened during a time of racial awakening in the nation, so it became a focus to support BIPOC artists. Since opening, we’ve had about 30 artists come through. We’ve had a couple of major exhibits. We’ve also had weekly workshops by my mother, including a leather-belt-making workshop. As we’ve been saying, new spaces are very much needed. Jaune, tell us about the show you curated this fall.
JS: The National Gallery of Art contacted me to curate a show there through my
gallery. For two years, I worked on every committee that they offered, whether it was for the catalog, installation, or design. I had a road map in my head. For one, I wanted to make it about land, because the Land Back movement is front and center right now. I wanted the show to have parity between men and women and ages. There were limitations on the size of the space, so I came up with this idea: At home in Montana, we have checkerboard land. In 1887, the government came to the Flathead Reservation and divided up our land, which had been communal, and gave us allotments, which is not our way of life. Then they took the leftover land, put ads on posters for it in New York City, and invited people to come and farm it for free. So, for the exhibition, I made a checkerboard wall. It was my way of getting almost 50 people in the exhibition instead of 25. That’s our secret.
By Admin in Printmaking
By Admin in Photography
When Artemis III lands near the South Pole of the Moon in a few years, the astronauts will be equipped with a brand-new camera for images and even videos. The prototype currently being tested is made from off-the-shelf camera parts, high-quality lenses, and NASA’s bespoke modifications to make it Moon-proof. It can operate in temperatures from -200 to 120°C (-328 to 248°F), has protections against dust, and buttons designed to be used by astronauts wearing chunky space gloves.
The Handheld Universal Lunar Camera (HULC) was tested by astronauts Thomas Pesquet from the European Space Agency, NASA’s Jessica Wittner, and Takuya Onishi from the Japanese Space Agency as part of the PANGAEA training course which provides astronauts with the knowledge and skills to be good field scientists in the future exploration of the Moon and Mars.
The trio were completing their training on the volcanic island of Lanzarote in the Atlantic in both broad daylight and in dark volcanic caves to simulate potential future extreme scenarios for lunar photography.
“The engineers have done a really good job reconfiguring the buttons and arranging them in a simple yet reliable protection for the camera,” Pesquet said in a statement.

ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet holding the HULC.
Image Credit: ESA–A. Romeo
The Apollo teams had standalone mechanical Hasselblad cameras and across the entire mission, 1,407 photos were taken on the Moon. The Artemis III mission alone is likely to take more pictures than that – not because the astronauts will have more sightseeing time, most of it will be science work, but because the camera will allow for a lot more images to be captured and stored.
“The lunar camera will be one of many tools they will need to handle on the Moon, so it should be easy to use. The human factor is a big deal for us, because you want the camera to be intuitive and not taxing on the crew,” explained Jeremy Myers, NASA’s lead for the HULC camera.
“We are trying to choose the best lenses for the Moon shots and optimize the settings in a smart way. We want astronauts to be able to take a detailed image of a crystalline structure in a rock and to capture landscapes, all with the right exposure.”
The camera will continue to be tested and improved, but the team is confident that Artemis III will have the best possible product to shoot incredible photography and footage on the Moon.
By Admin in Photography
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Vibrant colors, soft lighting and varied textures are just a few reasons why fall is a great time to take photos. And the beauty of south-central Kentucky this autumn will be the focus for members of Somerset Community College’s Fruit of the Lens photography club.
“Fall Into Nature” is the theme for this fall’s exhibit. It is the club’s 23rd show since its first in 2012.
“The transformation of landscapes during fall is dramatic,” says Cindy Burton, faculty advisor for the club. “Trees lose their leaves, revealing new perspectives and features that were previously hidden. This changing scenery allows photographers to capture the beauty of nature’s cycles.”
Burton said that entries to the exhibit will be accepted until Sunday, Nov. 19 and that a premiere showing of the presentation will be held Tuesday, Nov. 28 at noon in the Citizens National Bank Community Room located of in the Rogers Student Commons. All members are encouraged to attend this showing.
While Fruit of the Lens photography club is an SCC student organization, anyone with an interest in taking digital images is invited to join and participate. To become a member, simply email Burton at cindy.burton@kctcs.edu and ask to be in the club.
“The main criterion for joining the club is just to enjoy taking photographs,” Burton said. She noted that members can use any type of camera, even the camera on their phone, for their submissions.
Additional information on the club is available on Facebook at “Fruit of the Lens photography club.” This page will also include links to past exhibits.
Exhibit rules and guidelines
All club members are eligible to submit entries to this exhibit. To be a member, send a request to cindy.burton@kctcs.edu.
Any camera, including on phones, can be used.
Entries must pertain to “Fall Into Nature” theme. All photos must be appropriate, tasteful and taken in south-central Kentucky.
Limit entries to your favorite ten (10) photos. Photo size should be 1 to 5 MB.
Photos manipulated in program such as Photoshop will be disqualified. (Normal color adjustments are perfectly acceptable.)
Name image files in consecutive order, such as “MaryE-1, MaryE-2, MaryE-3, etc.”
E-mail entries using the above naming system to: fruitofthelens@gmail.com.
Deadline for submitting photos for this exhibit is Sunday, November 19 at 12 midnight.
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By Admin in Photography
The American photographer Dorothea Lange (1895-1965) is regarded as one of the great documentary photographers of the 20th century, but a new exhibition at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, makes the case that her revolutionary style of reportage was rooted in her early experiences making formal portraits in commercial photography studios during the 1910s and 20s. Dorothea Lange: Seeing People, curated by Philip Brookman, brings together 101 of Lange’s photographs spanning half a century, from early studio portraits to images from her wide-ranging travels in the 1950s and 60s.
“She apprenticed with a series of portrait studios,” Brookman says. “Probably the best known would be Arnold Genthe’s studio in New York, and it was there she learned not only how to run a portrait studio, but also the importance of a pose—the hands, the face, the light—and how to embody who somebody is through how you pose them, how they’re lit. When she then went out into the world, and began to photograph people, she took all that with her.”

Lange’s Human Erosion in California (Migrant Mother) (1936)
The exhibition draws heavily on a 2017 gift of 143 gelatin silver prints from the Los Angeles collectors Daniel Greenberg and Susan Steinhauser. These are supplemented with key loans from institutions including the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, the Oakland Museum of California and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Many of Lange’s most famous images will be on show, including her 1936 image of a white plantation owner and five Black field hands in Mississippi, and her indelible portrait of a California agricultural worker framed by her young children, Migrant Mother (1936), which Lange made while working for the US government’s Resettlement Administration. But there are also many images that are rarely shown—and some that push the boundaries of the portraiture theme, like her 1942 image of an “I am an American” sign that a Japanese American store owner put in his window amid rising xenophobia following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour.
“I really wanted to think about the notion of portraiture as something that has to do with the formation of identity and I saw those words, ‘I am an American’, as being a statement of identity that one could consider to be a portrait—this is who I am—even though it’s not a picture of a person,” Brookman says. “It’s a much more contemporary way to think about portraiture.”

Lange’s Hand of Dancer, Java, Indonesia (1958) © The Dorothea Lange Collection, Oakland Museum of California, City of Oakland. Gift of Paul S. Taylor
The show gives a snapshot of Lange’s life and times, from the poverty and activism in the Bay Area in the early 1930s to the plight of agricultural workers during the Great Depression and the forced detention of people of Japanese descent during the Second World War. “The issues that she was engaged with—migration and climate change, land use, racism—all of those things are still with us today,” Brookman says. “She defined a form of documentary looking that has to do with wanting to understand not just who a person is and what they look like, but what’s around them and how their situation came to be what it is.”
• Dorothea Lange: Seeing People, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, 5 November-31 March 2024
By Admin in Art World News

High-net-worth (HNW) women outpaced men’s spending on art in the first half of 2023, following a trend of the past two years. Women collectors spent a median of $72,500 compared with $59,400 by men, according to The Art Basel and UBS Survey of Global Collecting in 2023 released on Thursday.
However, HNW men reported higher average spending, with values driven up by a few extravagant male spenders, including twice as many men shelling out $1 million in each period, the survey found.
Still, spending by women continues to grow in value, already reaching a higher level than in 2022.
The survey of HNW collectors is primarily based on survey data gathered and analyzed directly by Arts Economics (a research and consulting firm focused exclusively on the art economy founded in 2005 by Dr. Clare McAndrew, a cultural economist specializing in the arts, antiques and collectibles markets) in collaboration with UBS.
This year’s survey is the largest to date, with participation from 2,828 HNW collectors from 11 key regions around the world.
Women collectors outpaced men in the first half of 2023.
The Art Basel and UBS Survey of Global Collecting in 2023
Despite the surge in women collectors, HNW individual’s collections continue to be dominated by works by male artists, with a ratio of 61% men to 39% women, and the share of works by women in collections decreased by 3% year-on-year to 39% in 2023. However, collectors who spend more than $10 million each year both tended to have a higher share of works by women in their collections (54%) and their proportion of spending also increased from 46% in 2021 to 55% in 2023. This may indicate that some of the spending at the very highest levels was on women artists, even if only by very few top collectors.
“Wider studies have shown that female artists are still underrepresented in exhibitions and sales, both in the dealer and auction sectors. Despite being over-(represented) or equally represented at many art schools, there is still well-documented evidence of inequality in terms of career longevity and commercial success. However, some research has found that due to the seemingly more rigorous quality filters and other issues faced by women in their careers as artists, while the number of their works reaching the market is less, the minority that sell do so at a premium rather than a discount for artists at similar levels,” McAndrew wrote.
“This is an important issue to explore, as it implies that some of the biases women face relate to institutions and other aspects of their career paths rather than simply the market itself, with the issue still being the lack of progress in commercial careers rather than only a gender discount for female versus male artists once they are on the market,” McAndrew added.
The market share of women artists is lower, but their pieces tend to sell at a premium rather than a … [+] discount.
The Art Basel and UBS Survey of Global Collecting in 2023
A considerable plunge last year, in the share of collectors most commonly focused on buying works of art priced at over $1 million, may be rebounding. After tumbling from 12% in 2021 to 4% in 2022, spending at a higher price in the first half of 2023 was 9%.
Despite this year’s rebound, levels were below those of 2021 and previous years, suggesting possible buyer caution and fewer high-end collectors following the strong post-Covid-19 jump in sales.
The average allocation to art in the wealth portfolios of HNW collectors dwindled to 19% in 2023, from a peak of 24% in 2022, another sign of caution amid bolstered focus on more liquid financial assets or less willingness to make discretionary purchases. Nonetheless, the size of the HNW portfolio allocation to art rose positively with collector wealth, ranging from an average of 15% for those with wealth of less than $5 million to nearly 30% for ultra-high-net-worth (UHNW) collectors with wealth of more than $50 million.
By Admin in Art World News
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Collectors are allocating a lower proportion of their wealth to art, according to this year’s Art Basel and UBS survey of global collecting. Although a “significant majority” (72 per cent) of the 2,828 collectors surveyed still allocate more than 10 per cent to art, their average share has fallen from 24 per cent last year to 19 per cent so far this year. The report finds that the share of those allotting a relatively high proportion of their wealth (more than 30 per cent) fell to its lowest level in four years.
The fall “may be indicative of a more cautious approach to collecting, with a greater focus on the need for more liquid financial or income-producing assets”, writes the report’s author Clare McAndrew, founder of Arts Economics. She notes that high interest rates, which make the cost of borrowing to buy art significantly higher, “could also have a negative effect”. More than 40 per cent of collectors reported using credit or other types of loan to buy art — higher than McAndrew expected — including 30 per cent in 2022 and 2023 to date.
Nevertheless, the report finds overall that median expenditure on art and antiques reached $65,000 for the first half of 2023, the same level as for all of 2022, “indicating a potentially substantial rise for the year if spending continues”. The most popular purchase and highest average spend was on fine art, with paintings still the preferred medium (58 per cent). In-person shopping continues to appeal, with 84 per cent of collectors buying at a gallery in the first half of this year (up from 73 per cent in 2022), though art fair purchases were down from 74 per cent to 58 per cent. Overall event attendance — including exhibitions and biennales — was down from an average of 41 per year in the pre-pandemic year of 2019 (including five fairs) to an expected 32 this year (four fairs).
Changes are afoot at Cromwell Place, the Grade II-listed, south-west London gallery hub that opened in 2020. Helen Nisbet, recently appointed chief executive and artistic director, has outlined plans for a £2mn refurbishment that would include the opening of a street-level, 80-seat restaurant and a more accessible and visible entrance. The plans take out two of the hub’s 14 gallery spaces, including its 74 sq m and prized Gallery 11, a sacrifice that “will make the whole building more enticing with all galleries of equal prominence”, says membership and business development director Elizabeth Dellert. Architect Tom Croft likens the impact of the new restaurant on the hub to Spring, which opened in Somerset House in 2014.
The building works, which are still subject to planning approval, are slated for summer 2024, when the hub would close, with an expected reopening in time for next year’s autumn season in London — though to be on the safe side, management is not taking bookings from September 2024.
Isabella Icoz, a partner at Lehmann Maupin, which has had a permanent gallery in Cromwell Place since its opening, says that while “there is never an ideal time for disruption”, the plans will “make it much more user-friendly and bring a beautiful and striking building more to life”. She confirms that the gallery is committed to Cromwell Place for next year and has also secured two pop-up exhibition spots on London’s Cork Street in June and September 2024.

Bonhams has started offering the $8mn estate of American broadcaster and journalist Barbara Walters, who died last year, and will host a live sale of 11 pieces of American fine art in New York on the evening of November 6. Top-billing is John Singer Sargent’s 1891 “Egyptian Woman (Coin Necklace)”, $1.2mn-$1.8mn, while the collection also includes Frank W Benson’s glamorous portrait of one of his sisters, “Firelight” (1893). Walters bought this painting for a below-estimate $165,000 in 1988 and it now comes to market for between $400,000 and $600,000.
Walters became the first female co-host of a US network, on NBC’s Today show in 1974, and went on to interview every US president and first lady during her career. Bonhams has nearly 400 items from her estate, including several pieces of designer jewellery, clothes and furniture, the cream of which will also be offered live on November 6. A separate online-only sale, including more furniture, tableware and handbags, started on Sunday and runs until November 7.

London’s Soft Opening gallery will take over Paul Soto’s space in Los Angeles’ Arlington Heights neighbourhood for 10 months, starting on November 19 with a group show organised by its LA-based German artist Maren Karlson and including work by Jasmine Gregory and Sarah Pucci. Soto, who last week opened a 1,500 sq ft space in New York’s Flower District, is taking the opportunity to focus on this second location.
“Smaller galleries in particular try not to spread ourselves too thinly and need to plan things carefully,” says Antonia Marsh, founder of Soft Opening, of the collaboration. She has always been attracted by California and the “intoxicating” art scene around Hollywood, she says, having earned her masters in curating in the Golden State.
She plans about five exhibitions in LA, while maintaining a similar programme in her east London gallery. Marsh will remain UK-based but, she says, will do fewer international fairs to help manage the new project. “It seems a good time for a different rhythm, when the market is a bit more unpredictable,” she says.

The Hong Kong and Shanghai gallery Pearl Lam now represents British artist Maggi Hambling in Asia and will include a recent painting from her Wall of Water series in a mixed booth at next week’s West Bund Art & Design fair in Shanghai (November 9-12). Lam says Hambling will “further enrich” her gallery’s “diverse portfolio of internationally recognised artists” and plans a solo show in her Hong Kong space next year. Hambling had her first museum show in China at Beijing’s CAFA Art Museum in 2019.
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