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Galerie Nordenhake

Samson Kambalu, Red Country Crosser, 2022, acrylic on canvas, 120 x 120 cm
Samson Kambalu, Red Country Crosser, 2022, acrylic on canvas, 120 x 120 cm

Galerie Nordenhake — A Transnational Model of Curatorial Integrity

Founded in 1976 by Claes Nordenhake in Malmö, Galerie Nordenhake stands as one of the most intellectually consistent and historically grounded contemporary art galleries operating today. From its inception—marked by an exhibition of Olle Baertling—the gallery positioned itself not merely as a commercial venue, but as a long-term interlocutor in the evolution of artistic practice.

From a museological perspective, Galerie Nordenhake exemplifies a durational model of representation, privileging sustained relationships with artists over market-driven immediacy. This approach has allowed the gallery to support complex, research-based practices, including figures such as Mirosław Bałka, David Hammons, and Mona Hatoum—artists whose work resists easy commodification and instead unfolds through conceptual depth and institutional dialogue.

The gallery’s expansion—from Stockholm (1986, within the Royal Academy of Fine Arts) to Berlin (2000), and later to Mexico City—reflects not a strategy of replication, but one of contextual adaptation. Each space operates with a degree of autonomy, responding to its local cultural ecosystem while maintaining a shared philosophical framework. The Berlin space, for instance, historically engaged with post-reunification discourses, while the Mexico City location—situated in Roma Norte and redesigned by Frida Escobedo—introduces an architectural sensibility that mediates between contemporary exhibition-making and regional spatial traditions.

Critically, Galerie Nordenhake’s program can be understood as a negotiation between aesthetic rigor and institutional relevance. Its exhibitions often foreground practices that interrogate perception, materiality, and socio-political structures, aligning the gallery more closely with museum logic than with purely commercial paradigms. This is further reinforced by its sustained collaborations with major institutions, effectively extending the life of exhibitions beyond the gallery space into broader curatorial and academic frameworks.

What distinguishes Galerie Nordenhake in the global landscape is its resistance to homogenization. In an era where many galleries adopt a unified global identity, Nordenhake insists on plurality—of place, discourse, and artistic voice. Its tri-continental presence does not dilute its vision; rather, it amplifies a curatorial methodology rooted in precision, dialogue, and historical awareness.

In this sense, Galerie Nordenhake operates as more than a gallery: it is a transnational platform for critical practice, where the temporalities of art—past, present, and speculative—are continuously negotiated through exhibition, architecture, and sustained intellectual engagement.

http://www.nordenhake.com

Berlin

GALERIE NORDENHAKE GmbH
Lindenstrasse 34
DE-10969 Berlin
T+49 30 20 61 483
berlin(at)nordenhake.com

Tuesday – Friday 11am–6pm
Saturday 12–6pm
Closed during installations and major holidays

CLAES NORDENHAKE
CLAUDIA SORHAGE
FRANZISKA PETERNELL
STEN NORDENHAKE
MIRNA STIELER
NATALIA FIGUIGUI
RONJA KARL
OSCAR ROHLEDER
JURI GNEWTSCHINSKI
GRETA BERGHOFF

Architectural design of the gallery
Gonzalez Haase AAS

Stockholm

GALERIE NORDENHAKE STOCKHOLM AB
Lützengatan 1
SE-115 20 Stockholm
T +46 8 21 18 92
stockholm(at)nordenhake.com

Tuesday – Friday 11am–6pm
Saturday 12–4pm
Closed during installations and major holidays

BEN LOVELESS
ULRIKA PILO
MARÍA QUIROGA
KARL NORIN
NORA CSERHALMI

Architectural design of the gallery
Gerda Persson – Bo Pilo

Mexico City

GALERIE NORDENHAKE MEXICO S de RL de CV
Monterrey 65, Roma Norte
06700, CDMX, Mexico
mexico(at)nordenhake.com

Monday – Thursday 10am–6pm
Friday – Saturday 11am–4pm
Closed during installations and major holidays

TONI SADURNÍ
EDUARDO DÍAZ
SOFÍA HINOJOSA
MARIANA SALAZAR
FELIPE GONZÁLEZ
DIEGO ARAMBURU
ALFONSO ZÁRATE

Architectural design of the gallery
Frida Escobedo Studio

Represented Artists

Aballí, Ignasi
Almeida, Ana Cláudia
Andersson, Christian
Andersson, Torsten
Baertling, Olle
Baker, Teresa
Balka, Miroslaw
Barham, Anna
Bonillas, Iñaki
Böttcher, Ann
Budny, Michal
Byrne, Gerard
Coplans, John
Crowner, Sarah
Dahlberg, Jonas
Damiani, Elena
Durham, Jimmie
Edholm, Ann
Ekström, Thea
Errázuriz, Paz
Fägerskiöld, Paul
Farah, Ayan
Finch, Spencer
Fridfinnsson, Hreinn
Hecker, Zvi
Hlatswayo, Thembinkosi
Hultén, Sofia
Kim, Minjung
Klingberg, Gunilla
Lagomarsino, Runo
Lam, Lap-See
Löfdahl, Eva
Lum, Ken
Männikkö, Esko
Maxim, Georgina
McCracken, John
Meuser
Mirra, Hendl Helen
Mrozowski, Ryan
Namazi, Sirous
Olson, Scott
Olsson, Mikael
Ortwed, Kirsten
Orupabo, Frida
Potrc, Marjetica
Quaytman, Harvey
Ramírez-Figueroa, Naufus
Rautert, Timm
Rehnberg, Håkan
Reinhold, Sophie
Rossell, Daniela
Rückriem, Ulrich
Rüedi, Jerónimo
Schmidt, Michael
Selldén, Mattias
Slotawa, Florian
Smith, Akeem
Tarasewicz, Leon
Thörnqvist, Erik
Thurfjell, Johan
Treib, Patricia
Uglow, Alan
Vital, Not
Wallin, Magnus
Xiyadie
Zaugg, Rémy
Zurier, John


Works Available By

Álvarez Bravo, Lola
Andrade Tudela, Armando
Barajas, José Eduardo
Beltrame, Loudgi
Bernhard, Emma
Bey, Dawoud
Biabiany, Minia
Chaiderov, Alina
Costales, Rometti
Crespo, June
Dalwood, Dexter
Díaz Cedeño, Tomás
Edefalk, Cecilia
Escobedo, Frida
Esper, Johannes
Garcia, ektor
Gruner, Silvia
Herrera, Mili
Hoch, Matthias
Jaar, Alfredo
Kambalu, Samson
Kawara, On
Kim, Minjung
Lamelas, David
Larsson, Karl
Loy Pula, Margaret
Männikkö, Esko & Turunen, Pekka
Morris, Robert
Pedraglio, Francesco
Pérez Córdova, Tania
Reiner, Lucas
Rometti, Julia
Slim, Pedro
Slavs and Tatars
Stuart, Michelle
Whitney, Stanley
Wärn, Lydia Ericsson

Robert Funk Fine Art 

Robert Funk Fine Art — Against the Orthodoxy of the Art Market

Robert Funk Fine Art operates as a deliberate counterpoint to the prevailing logic of the contemporary art market. Rather than aligning itself with trend cycles, art fair visibility, or speculative pricing systems, the gallery advances a position grounded in connoisseurship, historical awareness, and an unapologetically independent eye.

From a curatorial and museological standpoint, Robert Funk’s trajectory is central to understanding the gallery’s ethos. His formation—studying painting with Robert Richenburg and Janet Fish, followed by art historical training under critic E.C. Goossen—situates his vision at the intersection of practice, theory, and criticism. This is further expanded by his professional experience as a photographer and advertising art director, fields that sharpened his sensitivity to image construction, visual persuasion, and the often-overlooked dialogue between commercial and fine art.

Critically, Funk’s assertion that commercial art functions as a primary source for fine art destabilizes a long-standing hierarchy within art discourse. His position recalls, yet diverges from, Pop Art’s embrace of mass culture; instead of aesthetic appropriation alone, Funk foregrounds a systemic dependence—suggesting that visual innovation frequently originates outside institutional validation. In this sense, his gallery can be read as an extension of this thesis: a space where value is decoupled from visibility and reinvested in visual intelligence.

The program at Robert Funk Fine Art is notably eclectic, but not arbitrary. It is unified by an insistence on quality—an evaluative category that resists algorithmic pricing models and database-driven valuations that increasingly dominate the art market. Here, the gallery adopts an almost pedagogical role, encouraging collectors to become students of art history rather than passive participants in speculative economies. This approach aligns more closely with early connoisseurial traditions than with contemporary market behavior.

Moreover, the gallery’s advisory dimension underscores a long-term vision of collecting as an intellectual and cultural act. Funk advocates for the recognition of overlooked works—those existing outside the narrow bandwidth of current trends—thereby challenging the mechanisms through which artistic relevance is constructed and sustained.

In a cultural landscape increasingly governed by metrics, branding, and institutional endorsement, Robert Funk Fine Art reasserts the importance of independent judgment, cross-disciplinary awareness, and historical literacy. It is less a gallery in the conventional sense than a critical position—one that invites both collectors and viewers to reconsider how value, influence, and originality are truly formed within the visual field.

http://robertfunkfineart.com/
Gallery Address:
1581 Brickell Avenue, Suite #2303
Miami, Florida USA 33129
(steps from the Four Seasons Hotel in Miami’s Business District)
Gallery Hours: By Appointment Only
Phone: 305.857.0521

Addams, Charles
Akoto, Kwame (Almighty God)
Alajalov, Constantin
Alaux, Jean-Pierre
Alling Ball, Seymour
Alston, Charles
Alston, Louise
Altschuler, Franz
Anderson, Edward Arthur
Anderson, George
Andreoni, Orazio
Appleton, Honor
Artine Smith, Robin
Atherton, John
August Privat, Gilbert
Baechler, Donald
Baeder, John
Baker, Ernest Hamlin
Ballantyne, Joyce
Barnet, Will
Barton, Harry
Bashkiroff-Valira, Irene
Bauerle, Amelia
Baxter, Doreen
Beckhoff, Harry
Beltrán-Masses, Federico
Bemelmans, Ludwig
Benda, Wladyslaw T.
Benito, Eduardo
Bennett, Elizabeth
Benoit, Rigaud
Benvenuti, Gianni
Berman, Eugene
Beskow, Elsa
Betts, Ethel-Franklin
Bigaud, Wilson
Bill, Max
Binder, Joseph
Blackmore, Katie
Blackshear, Thomas
Blair, Mary
Blanch, Lucile
Blanchard, Carol
Blashfield, Edwin Howland
Blechman, R.O.
Bohrod, Aaron
Bomberger, Bruce
Bombois, Camille
Bonheur, Rosa
Botke, Jessie Arms
Bottex, Seymour Etienne
Bowler, Joseph
Bresil, Henri-Robert
Bridgman, Frederick Arthur
Briggs, Austin
Bradley, Barbara Briggs
Brinkley, Nell
Browne, Byron
Bundy, Gilbert
Burden, Chris
Burton, Tim
Cabanel, Alexandre
Carles, Arthur Beecher
Carlsen, Emil
Carpenter, Mildred Bailey
Carruthers, Roy
Carter, Pruett Alexander
Cashwan, Samuel
Casimir, Laurent
Castellon, Federico
Castle, Philip
Chambers, Charles E.
Chaplin, Charles Joshua
Chermayeff, Ivan
Chestney, Lillian
Christy, Howard Chandler
Chwast, Seymour
Coe, Sue
Coleman, Glenn O.
Content, Dan
Copley, Heather
Corbett Melcher, Bertha
Corcos, Lucille
Cornwell, Dean
Cory, Fanny
Cougnaud, G.
Crockwell, Douglass
Curry, John Steuart
Custis, Eleanor Parke
Dal Fabbro, Mario
D’Andrea, Bernard
Davis, Paul
Davis, Stuart
De Diego, Julio
De Glehn, Wilfrid Gabriel
De Harak, Rudolph
De Kooning, Willem
De Largillière, Nicolas
De Leeuw, Cateau Wilhelmina
Delvaux, Paul
Denison, Ben
Derain, André
DeSoto, Rafael
De Zayas, Marius
Domergue, Jean Gabriel
Drayton, Grace G.
Driben, Peter
Driggs, Elsie
Dryden, Helen
Duffaut, Préfète
Dulac, Edmund
Dumm, Edwina
DuMond, Frank Vincent
Dunlap, Hope
Duval-Carrié, Edouard
East, Alfred
Eastman, Ruth
Edzard, Dietz
Einsel, Naiad & Walter
Eisendieck, Suzanne
Ellenshaw, Peter
Emerson, Edith
Engle, Robert
Enneking, John Joseph
Erdoes, Richard
Ernst, Jimmy
Etty, William
Evergood, Philip
Fabry, Jaro
Feininger, Lyonel
Fellows, Laurence
Fiene, Ernest
Fini, Leonor
Finster, Howard
Fish, Anne Harriet
Fitzpatrick, Art
Flagg, James Montgomery
Flint, Susan
Ford, Dan
Francis, Sam
Freeman, Barbara
French, Annie
Fried, Pal
Friedman, Arnold
Friesz, Othon
Frishmuth, Harriet Whitney
Froud, Brian
Frush, Pearl
Funk, Robert
Gallé, Emile
Galli, Stan
Gannam, John
Garces, Monica
Garrido, Hector
Georgi, Edwin
Gilot, Françoise
Giusti, George
Glaser, Milton
Gomez, Ignacio
Goodnough, Robert
Gould, John
Greenaway, Kate
Grey, Alex
Grippi, Salvatore
Gropper, William
Grossman, Robert
Grosz, George
Gruau, René
Gurvin, Abe
Hane, Roger
Harmon, Lily
Hartley, Marsden
Haucke, Frederick
Hayes, Marvin
Helck, Peter
Henner, Jean-Jacques
Hess, Richard
Hiebel, Adelaide
Highstein, Jene
Hildebrand, George
Hirsch, Joseph
Hollingsworth, Alvin
Hoppner, John
Jacobs, Helen
Jacquette, Yvonne
Jaffee, Al
Janicki, Hazel
Jurres, Johannes Hendricus
Kádár, Béla
Karasz, Ilonka
Kaufman, Joe
Keane, Margaret
Kepes, Juliet Appleby
Kingman, Dong
Kisling, Moïse
Koch, John
Koerner, W.H.D.
Kroll, Leon
Kuhn, Walt
Künstler, Morton
Lachaise, Gaston
Lamotte, Bernard
Landelle, Charles
Larson, Esther
Lathrop, Dorothy Pulis
Laurencin, Marie
Lavroff, Georges
Lebasque, Henri
Lederer, Hugo
Lenski, Lois
Lepape, Georges
Levine, Jack
Lewandowski, Edmund
Leydenfrost, Alexander
Longman, Evelyn Beatrice
Lopez, Antonio
Lovell, Tom
Ludlow, Mike
Luks, George Benjamin
MacDonald-Wright, Stanton
Maier, Vivian
Marin, John
Marsh, Reginald
Martínez, Alfredo Ramos
McCarthy, Frank
McKie, Judy Kensley
McMein, Neysa
Melendez, Robert
Meltzoff, Stanley
Miyake, Issey
Mora, Francis Luis
Moran, Earl
Morgan, Gwenda
Mozert, Zoë
Murphy, Marty
Myers, Jerome
Neiman, LeRoy
Nessim, Barbara
Nevelson, Louise
Newberry, Clare Turlay
Newman, Arnold
Nordfeldt, Bror Julius Olsson
Novoa, Gustavo
Obin, Philomé
Olson, Victor
Orpen, William
Parker, Al
Peak, Bob
Penn, Irving
Peterson, Cleon
Petruccelli, Antonio
Petty, Mary
Piper, Christian
Porter, Fairfield
Pousette-Dart, Richard
Pressler, Gene
Punchatz, Don
Rackham, Arthur
Rand, Paul
Rattner, Abraham
Rebay, Hilla
Reisman, Philip
Rivers, Larry
Romney, George
Rouault, Georges
Saar, Betye
Sarnoff, Arthur
Scarry, Richard
Schreckengost, Viktor
Seltzer, Isadore
Shahn, Ben
Sheets, Millard
Shinn, Everett
Smith, Jessie Willcox
Siskind, Aaron
Steinberg, Saul
Stella, Joseph
Stoller, Ezra
Sundblom, Haddon
Tchelitchew, Pavel
Tooker, George
Tunick, Spencer
Utz, Thornton
Valcin, Gerard
Van Allsburg, Chris
Vargas, Alberto
Vertès, Marcel
Vivin, Louis
Walkowitz, Abraham
Weber, Max
Wegman, William
Wiggins, Guy Carleton
Whitcomb, Jon
Whitmore, Coby
Wyeth, Jamie
Young, Stephen Scott
Zéphirin, Frantz
Zorach, Marguerite
Zorach, William

Adamar Fine Arts

Adamar Fine Arts — Between Market Legacy and Contemporary Relevance

Adamar Fine Arts occupies a distinctive position within the cultural and commercial topography of Miami. With nearly four decades of activity, the gallery represents a hybrid model that bridges modern masters, blue-chip contemporary figures, and mid-career international artists, constructing a program that is both historically anchored and market-aware.

From a curatorial standpoint, Adamar’s identity is deeply intertwined with the evolution of the Miami Design District itself. Long before its current status as a global luxury and cultural destination, the gallery contributed to the area’s early transformation into a viable art hub. In this sense, Adamar should be understood not only as a participant in the district’s growth, but as an agent in its cultural regeneration—a role often underexamined in narratives of Miami’s art scene.

The gallery’s roster and inventory reveal a strategic alignment with canonical postwar and contemporary art. By presenting works by figures such as Alex Katz, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Damien Hirst, Ai Weiwei, and Keith Haring, Adamar situates itself within a lineage of artists who have defined the visual language of late 20th- and early 21st-century art. Yet, importantly, this is not a purely retrospective gesture; the inclusion of mid-career and emerging artists introduces a dialogue between established art-historical narratives and contemporary production.

Museologically, Adamar operates in a space that oscillates between exhibition-making and collection-building. Its advisory role and long-term engagement with collectors suggest a model closer to that of a private curatorial platform than a traditional rotating gallery. The emphasis on works across media—painting, sculpture, works on paper, and installation—further reinforces a commitment to material and conceptual diversity, rather than adherence to a singular aesthetic direction.

Notably, the gallery’s transition toward an appointment-based and online model over the past decade reflects broader structural shifts within the art market. This move can be read as both pragmatic and strategic: it allows for a more tailored, discursive engagement with collectors while maintaining participation in key art fairs in cities such as New York, Chicago, and Palm Springs. In doing so, Adamar navigates between intimacy and visibility, private consultation and public exposure.

Critically, Adamar Fine Arts embodies a form of continuity within change. It sustains the legacy of modern and contemporary masters while adapting to evolving modes of distribution, display, and collecting. Its program does not seek radical disruption; rather, it cultivates a steady, informed engagement with art history and market dynamics alike.

In an art world often polarized between speculative novelty and institutional canonization, Adamar positions itself in the interstitial space—where historical significance, market knowledge, and curatorial sensibility converge.

http://www.adamargallery.com
Miami, FL 33179
United States
Tel: 3055761355

Works Available by

Marcus Abel

Derrick Adams

Katherine Bernhardt

Miguel Berrocal

Ross Bleckner

Mel Bochner

Djawid Borower

Debbie Carfagno

Ian Davenport

Jim Dine

Jean Dubuffet

Helen Frankenthaler

Red Grooms

Keith Haring

Damien Hirst

David Hockney

Brad Howe

Tolla Inbar

Robert Indiana

Alex Katz

KAWS

Jeff Koons

Sol LeWitt

Roy Lichtenstein

Robert Longo

Gretchen Minnhaar

Mr. Brainwash

Julian Opie

Rene Rietmeyer

Ugo Rondinone

Alison Saar

David Salle

Kenny Scharf

jonathan skow

Frank Stella

Harry Sudman

Donald Sultan

Wayne Thiebaud

Ernest Trova

Gavin Turk

Andy Warhol

Tom Wesselmann

James Yohe

Angelo Zaragovia

Zammy Z. Migdal

EXPO CHICAGO Contemporary Art Fair 2026

EXPO CHICAGO Contemporary Art Fair 2026
EXPO CHICAGO Contemporary Art Fair 2026

EXPO CHICAGO Contemporary Art Fair 2026

EXPO CHICAGO Contemporary Art Fair showcases leading contemporary and modern art galleries each April at Navy Pier’s Festival Hall, alongside a diverse and inventive program of talks, on-site installations, and public art initiatives. Inaugurated in 2012, EXPO CHICAGO draws upon the city’s robust history as a vibrant international cultural destination, while highlighting the region’s contemporary arts community. In 2023, EXPO CHICAGO was acquired by Frieze, the world’s leading platform for modern and contemporary art.

The 13th edition of EXPO CHICAGO takes place on April 9–12, 2026 at Navy Pier’s Festival Hall. 

Highlights of the 2026 edition include a major partnership with the forthcoming Obama Presidential Center, with dedicated sections curated by its Director, Dr. Louise BernardFocus, the emerging galleries section curated by Katie A. Pfohl of the Detroit Institute of ArtsProfile featuring solo booths and focused projects by established international galleries, curated by Essence Harden; and a continued collaboration with the Galleries Association of Korea (GAoK).

Profile presents solo booths and focused projects by established international galleries, curated by Essence Harden. The section builds on EXPO’s institutional relationships and acquisition pathways, highlighting rigorous making and a scholarly impulse that invites sustained engagement over time. 

About the 2026 Profile Curator: 

Essence Harden has curated the Focus section at Frieze Los Angeles since 2024, and will continue to do so in 2026. Most recently, she curated Made in LA, 2025, at The Hammer Museum. Essence is a 2025 recipient of the Teiger Foundation research grant, a 2018 recipient of The Creative Capital | Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant, and is a 2020 Annenberg Innovation Lab Civic Media Fellow. Essence has curated exhibitions at the Southern Guild (Los Angeles), California African American Museum (CAAM), The Orange County Museum of Art (OCMA), Art + Practice, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE), Museum of the African Diaspora (MoAD), and Oakland Museum of California, amongst others. She previously served as a Visual Arts Curator at the California African American Museum. 

2026 Profile

47 Canal, New York

Adegbola Gallery, Lagos

Affinity Gallery, Lagos

Babst Gallery, Los Angeles

Corbett vs. Dempsey, Chicago

Duru Artspace, Seoul*

Gallery FINE, Busan*

Fort Gansevoort, New York

Geary Contemporary, Salisbury

half gallery, New York, Los Angeles

ILY2, Portland, New York

Charlie James Gallery, Los Angeles

Kevin Kavanagh, Dublin

Matéria, Detroit

ANDREW RAFACZ, Chicago

Jessica Silverman, San Francisco

Gary Snyder Fine Art MT, Whitehall

Mindy Solomon Gallery, Miami

Soto Gallery, Lagos

THIRD BORN, Mexico City

Yenwa Gallery, Lagos

Focus highlights emerging galleries and artistic practices, featuring galleries 12 years old or younger. Katie A. Pfohl, Associate Curator of Contemporary Art at the Detroit Institute of Arts and past participant of the Curatorial Forum, will curate Focus in 2026.  

Titled Gathering of Waters, Focus will explore landscape, migration, and adaptive practices of craft and care, connecting artists and galleries from the Mississippi River Basin with work from across the African, Latin American and Caribbean diasporas. Participating galleries are eligible for the prestigious Northern Trust Purchase Prize. 

About the 2026 Focus curator:

Katie A. Pfohl is a curator and writer who works to amplify the voices of artists, foster connections between communities, and create space to engage with the urgent issues of our time. Since 2022, she has served as Associate Curator of Contemporary Art at the Detroit Institute of Arts. At the DIA, she is organizing a major reinstallation of the museum’s 20,000 square foot contemporary galleries, slated to open in 2026. Most recently, Pfohl curated Tiff Massey: 7 Mile + Livernois, the DIA’s most ambitious show for a Detroit artist in its history, which brought almost a quarter of a million visitors to the DIA. From 2015-2022, she was Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the New Orleans Museum of Art, where she curated almost 30 exhibitions, acquired or commissioned over 100 works of art, and reinstalled the museum’s twentieth century and contemporary galleries. In 2014, Pfohl completed her Ph.D. in art history at Harvard University, and in 2006 she participated in the Whitney Independent Study Program in New York. Pfohl has held positions at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the LSU Museum of Art.  

2026 Focus

56 HENRY, New York

april april, Pittsburgh

Artemin Gallery, Taipei

Bertrand Productions, Philadelphia

Bienvenu Steinberg & C, New York

Bianca Boeckel, São Paulo, Salvador

Brandt Gallery, Amsterdam

Buffalo Prescott, Detroit

Jonathan Carver Moore, San Francisco

Circle Art Gallery, Nairobi

Contour Art Gallery, Vilnius

COTT, Buenos Aires

dmincubator gallery, New York

Don’t Look Projects, Los Angeles

EMBAJADA, San Juan

Enari, Amsterdam

GOCA by Garde, New York, Japan

Good Weather, Chicago

Hesse Flatow, New York, Amagansett

High Noon, New York

Jacob Arthur Gallery, Los Angeles

Gillian Jason Gallery, London

K:art Studio, London

Knowhere Art Gallery, Martha’s Vineyard

Latinou, Mexico City

M. LeBlanc, Chicago

Lobster Club, Los Angeles

MAĀT Gallery, Paris

Magenta Plains, New York

Marinaro, New York

THE MISSION PROJECTS, Chicago

Mitochondria Gallery, Houston

Mitre Galeria, Belo Horizonte, São Paulo

Megan Mulrooney, Los Angeles

Nature of Things, Dallas

OSMOS, New York

PARISA Projects, San Diego

Patel Brown, Toronto, Montréal

Public, London

Red Arrow, Nashville

re.riddle, San Francisco

Rivalry Projects, Buffalo

Chris Sharp Gallery, Los Angeles

Sibyl Gallery, New Orleans

Situations, New York

SPACE 776 GALLERY, New York, Seoul

Superposition Gallery, Los Angeles

TERN Gallery, Nassau

TIAN Contemporain, Montréal

VERVE, São Paulo

What Pipeline, Detroit

Yehudi Hollander Pappi, São Paulo

The Galleries section features leading international galleries and special partnerships. EXPO CHICAGO continues its collaboration with the Galleries Association of Korea (GAoK), presenting 12 leading Korean galleries within the fair. This initiative builds on the successful synergy established between Kiaf SEOUL and Frieze Seoul. 

An expanded partnership with the forthcoming Obama Presidential Center introduces Embodiment, curated by Dr. Louise Bernard, Founding Director of the Obama Presidential Center Museum, inspired by the architecture and commissioned artists of the Obama Presidential Center, ahead of its anticipated opening in 2026.

Dr. Louise Bernard is a Senior Vice President at the Obama Foundation and the Founding Director of the Obama Presidential Center Museum. Previously, she served as Director of Exhibitions at the New York Public Library, on the exhibition design team for the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture as a Senior Content Developer at Ralph Appelbaum Associates, and as a Curator at the Beinecke Library at Yale. She received a Joint Ph.D. in African American Studies and American Studies from Yale. She currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Lyric Opera of Chicago. 

2026 Galleries

021 Gallery, Daegu*

Gallery 41, Seoul*

Aicon Contemporary, New York

Allouche Gallery, New York

Arcadia Contemporary, New York

Galería Artizar, Tenerife, Madrid

Avant Gallery, Miami

Richard Beavers Gallery, Brooklyn

Bockley Gallery, Minneapolis

BOGENA GALERIE, Saint Paul De Vence, Phoenix

Casterline | Goodman Gallery, Aspen, Santa Fe

Ethan Cohen Gallery, New York, Beacon

Oliver Cole Gallery, Miami

Cynthia Corbett Gallery, London

Gallery Dasun, Gwacheon*

DOCUMENT, Chicago, Lisbon

Ebony/Curated, Cape Town, Franschhoek

Les Enluminures, Chicago, New York, Paris

Robert Fontaine Gallery, Miami

Friedrichs Pontone, New York

GBS Fine Art, London, Somerset

Gefen Gallery, San Francisco

GPG Gallery, New York

GRAY, Chicago, New York**

GalleryGrimson, Seoul*

Richard Heller Gallery, Los Angeles

Hexton Gallery, Aspen

Nancy Hoffman Gallery, New York

Rebecca Hossack Art Gallery, London, Miami, Singapore

Karma, New York, Los Angeles

Sean Kelly, New York**

Anton Kern, New York**

Keumsan Gallery, Seoul*

LEE & BAE, Busan, New York*

A Lighthouse called Kanata, Tokyo

David Lusk Gallery, Memphis, Nashville

McCormick Gallery, Chicago

Miles McEnery Gallery, New York

moniquemeloche, Chicago

MH Contemporary, New Orleans, Los Angeles

Gallery MOMO, Johannesburg

Galerie Myrtis, Baltimore

Night Gallery, Los Angeles

Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco**

Claire Oliver Gallery, New York

Opa Projects, Miami

Paik Hae Young Gallery, Seoul*

PATRON, Chicago

Galerie Pici, Seoul, New York*

Pontone Gallery, London

Qualia Contemporary Art, Palo Alto

Regen Projects, Los Angeles**

Nara Roesler, São Paulo, New York, Rio De Janeiro

Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York

Secrist | Beach, Chicago

Marc Straus, New York

Sun Gallery, Seoul*

Suppoment Gallery, Seoul*

Sundaram Tagore Gallery, New York, London, Singapore

TAI Modern, Santa Fe

Ting Ting Art Space, Taipei

Vielmetter Los Angeles, Los Angeles

Tanya Weddemire Gallery, Brooklyn

Weinstein Hammons Gallery, Minneapolis

Wizard Gallery, Milan

Zemack Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv

Zidoun-Bossuyt Gallery, Luxembourg, Dubai, Paris

Mindy Solomon Gallery

Mindy Solomon Gallery — An Incubator for Contemporary Visual Language

848 NW 22nd Street
Miami, FL 33127
United States
Tel: 786-953-6917

Mindy Solomon Gallery has, since its founding in 2009, established itself as a significant node within Miami’s contemporary art ecosystem—particularly in the Allapattah district, where a new generation of galleries has redefined the city’s cultural geography. The gallery’s program is distinguished by its sustained commitment to emerging and mid-career artists, positioning it as both a platform for discovery and a site of critical development.

From a curatorial and museological perspective, Mindy Solomon Gallery functions as an incubator of artistic voices. Its exhibitions foreground practices that traverse painting, sculpture, photography, and video, often collapsing the boundaries between narrative figuration and non-objective abstraction. This duality is not incidental; rather, it reflects a broader curatorial interest in the instability of visual language—how meaning is constructed, disrupted, and rearticulated through form, material, and context.

A defining characteristic of the gallery is its long-standing engagement with material experimentation, particularly within ceramics and sculptural practices. In this regard, the gallery contributes to the ongoing revaluation of mediums historically positioned at the margins of fine art discourse, aligning itself with a broader institutional shift that recognizes craft-based processes as sites of conceptual rigor.

Equally significant is the gallery’s intersection with design. By working closely with interior designers, advisors, and curators, Mindy Solomon extends the life of artworks beyond the exhibition space into lived environments. This approach challenges the conventional separation between art as autonomous object and art as integrated experience, suggesting a more fluid relationship between aesthetic production and spatial inhabitation.

Critically, the gallery’s role exceeds that of a commercial venue. It operates as a mediating structure—connecting artists, collectors, and design professionals while fostering a discourse that is both accessible and intellectually grounded. Its advisory services reinforce this position, encouraging a mode of collecting that is informed, intentional, and responsive to the evolving trajectories of artists’ practices.

In the context of Miami’s rapidly expanding art scene, Mindy Solomon Gallery distinguishes itself through a balance of risk and continuity. It invests in artists at pivotal moments in their careers while maintaining a coherent curatorial vision that privileges experimentation, material intelligence, and cross-disciplinary dialogue.

Ultimately, Mindy Solomon Gallery embodies a model of contemporary practice where emergence is not a category, but a condition—a continuous process of becoming that unfolds across exhibitions, collaborations, and the broader cultural landscape.

Mindysolomon.com

Represented Artists

Arbelaez, Natalia
Barkley, Glenn
Casto, Andrew
Cohn, Genevieve
Contreras, Alejandro
Daniel, Melanie
Future Kid, Super
Gill, John
Hayes, Donté
Hayon, Jaime
Hicks, David
Hoque, Asif
Howard, Lanise
Jimenez, Sydnie
Johnson, Ezra
Kincaid, Basil
Kobayashi, Osamu
Kunin, Julia
Kvapil, Jay
Leonard, Virginia
Lopez, Linda
MacDowell, Kate
Miller, Adam D.
Moon, Jiha
Olson, Jeremy
Phillips, Matt
Pocetti, Ornella
Salazar Tlatenchi, Moises
Sanchez, Ernesto Garcia
Schweiger, Zoe
Smith, Ali
Stacklab
Temba, Malaika
Trombly, Frances
Yang D’Haene, Jane
Yehezkelli, Shai


Works Available By

Alcaide, Ricardo
Ando, Yuki
Baxter, Xavier
Billet, Joyce
Buckman, Zoë
Canevari, Marcelo
Cardozo, Eduardo
Casella, Jonathan
Casey, Autumn
Clements, Dee
Collado, Yanira
Cowan, Amber
Davis, Damon
Edmondson, Stan
Fanning, Brittany
Fraleigh, Angela
Friedman, Terri
Generic Art Solutions
Gomez Paz, Daniela
Guo, Shuling
hettler.tüllmann
Jimenez, Haylie
Kabangu, Jack
Kaneshiro, Kiyoshi
Karpov, Darina
Lee, Jaiik
Lee, Minkyu
Lee, Siennie
Lefort, Jennifer
Martinez, Victoria
McGaughey, Sean
Merriweather, Murjoni
Mojo, Brittany
Montgomery, Lindsay
Ortiz, Anna
Partington, Claire
Petersen, Gary
Rebhuhn, Christine
Rodriguez-Casanova, Leyden
Rubinstein, Heather Bause
Rudolph, Kelsie
Ruiz-Berman, Christian
Sanchez, Gabriel
Sierra, José
Tessi, Juan
Turner, Vadis
Tyler, Russell
Valenzuela, Rodrigo
Vasquez Yui, Celia
Wright Sr., Jamele
Yoon, Justin

Zemack Contemporary Art

Zemack Contemporary Art — A Platform Between Local Urgency and Global Circulation

Tel Aviv  •  West Palm Beach  •  Tel Aviv-Yafo  •  Hong Kong  •  Miami  •  Chicago  •  Basel

zcagallery.com
[email protected]
+972 3-691-5060

Zemack Contemporary Art (ZCA) has, since its تأسablishment in 2010, positioned itself as a dynamic force within the Israeli contemporary art landscape—operating at the intersection of local artistic production and international visibility. In a relatively short period, the gallery has demonstrated an accelerated institutional maturity, marked by an ambitious exhibition program, consistent participation in global art fairs, and a sustained engagement with publishing as a curatorial extension.

From a critical and curatorial perspective, ZCA’s program reflects a deliberate balancing act: it champions both established and emerging artists, constructing a dialogue across generations that mirrors the evolving identity of contemporary Israeli art. This dual commitment is not merely strategic; it signals a broader understanding of the gallery as a discursive platform, where continuity and rupture coexist within the same curatorial framework.

One of the gallery’s most significant contributions lies in its role as a cultural incubator. Through its annual exhibitions of recent graduates from leading Israeli art institutions, ZCA actively participates in shaping the next generation of artists. This initiative situates the gallery within a lineage of spaces that extend beyond representation into pedagogical and developmental territory, reinforcing the idea that galleries can function as early-stage institutions of validation and visibility.

Museologically, ZCA’s activities—particularly its production of artist books and catalogs—expand the exhibition into the realm of documentation and scholarship. These publications serve not only as records but as interpretive frameworks, contributing to the construction of artistic narratives that persist beyond the temporality of exhibitions. In this sense, the gallery aligns itself with institutional practices typically associated with museums, while maintaining the agility of a commercial space.

The gallery’s participation in over 45 international art fairs further underscores its commitment to global circulation. Yet, rather than dissolving into the homogenizing tendencies of the global art market, ZCA retains a distinct sensitivity to its local context. The works it presents often engage—directly or indirectly—with questions of identity, geopolitics, memory, and place, reflecting the complexities of contemporary Israeli society.

Critically, Zemack Contemporary Art can be understood as a mediating structure between periphery and center. It negotiates the tension between a geographically specific art scene and the demands of international recognition, enabling artists to operate within both spheres without losing conceptual integrity.

In an era defined by rapid market expansion and cultural convergence, ZCA distinguishes itself through a model that is both responsive and rooted—a gallery that not only reflects its context but actively participates in shaping the intellectual and aesthetic contours of contemporary art in Tel Aviv and beyond.

Represented Artists

Arsenyuk, Elisheva
Arsenyuk, Sara
Assaf, Kobi
Balilty, Oded
Ballen, Roger
Bandaid, Dede
Boog, Piet van den
Brunsher, Sharon
Caillard, Léo
Feuerman, Carole A.
Harari Navon, Neta
Herbst, Martin C.
Hofshi, Orit
Kislev, Haran
Koren, Michal Baratz
Levinson, Avner
Mintz, Nitzan
Ozeri, Yigal
Pasqua, Philippe
Rubinstein, Tamar
Sher, Angelika
Shor, Shirley
Verginer, Willy
Yairi, Yuval
Yanor, Lee
Young, Russell
Zaltzman, Dana
Ziv, Tal


Works Available By

Aboudia
Adoni, Nir
Azoulay, Shai
Bakal, Rubi
Balaklav, Leonid
Ballen, Roger
Baranga, Ronit
Baruch, Ilan
Basquiat, Jean-Michel
Ben Cnaan, Matan
Ben Dov, Osnat
Ben-Or, Anne
Bernhardt, Katherine
Brainwash, Mr.
Brunsher, Sharon
Butman, Roma
Calder, Alexander
Chelbin, Michal
Chen, Li
Chen, Yarden
Cohen-Kedar, Dvir
Colbert, Philip
Condo, George
Dafna, Reut
Dana, Yves
Dennis, Marc
Dryzin, Yael
Dryzin Reboh, Yael
Feuerman, Carole A.
From, Bar
Fuchs, Orit
Fuhrer, Michal
Geva, Tsibi
Gershon, Adi
Gershuni, Aram
Gilliam, Sam
Golani, Tal
Gold, Jonathan
Gold, Maya
Goldman, Jonathan
Gorynin, Aleksandr
Gunther, Katrin
Harari Navon, Neta
Hemed, Dror Yisrael
Herbst, Martin C.
Hirst, Damien
Indiana, Robert
Jacobi, Liya
Kandel, Ella
Kaiss, Mahmood
Katz, Alex
KAWS
Kedmi, Ron
Keller, Aviv
Koons, Jeff
Koren, Michal Baratz
Koren, Killy
Kroll, Liron
Kusama, Yayoi
Lellouche, Ofer
Lemay, Eugene
Lichtenstein, Roy
Liv, Lena
Markus, Iddo
Milchan, Elinor
More, Eti
Muniz, Vik
Murakami, Takashi
Nipo, David
Nov, Raz
Oliva, Osnat
Opie, Julian
Pasqua, Philippe
PESH
Picasso, Pablo
Pilpeled
Rauchwerger, Jan
Raz, Ronen
Reboh, Yael Dryzin
Ronen, Dubi
Romberg, Osvaldo
Rozenson Ben-Hur, Anat
Rubinstein, Tamar
Salem, Refael
Salustiano
Sasportas, Yehudit
Scharf, Kenny
Senior, Haim
Shakine, Eran
Shanan Dery, Fatma
Shamir, Elie
Shani, Assaf
Shor, Shirley
Someck, Ronny
Stanley, Arinze
Sultan, Donald
Takele, Nirit
Tal Inbar, Zohar
Tarka, Moshe
Tirosh, Hagar
Tzur, Ayala
Vaadia, Boaz
Verginer, Willy
Vitkon, Eitan
Warhol, Andy
Weiwei, Ai
Wiley, Kehinde
Worke, Michal
Yaheli-Sarbagili, Osnat
Yairi, Yuval
Yanor, Lee
Yoel, Gaia
Young, Russell
Zaltzman, Dana
Zeng, Fanzhi
Zimbalista, Ofra
Ziv, Tal

Fugitive Gestures: Jean-Michel Basquiat and the Trans-Caribbean Visual Tradition

Boy and Dog in Johnnypump-1982
Boy and Dog in Johnnypump-1982

The Johnnypump and the Stop and Search:

Jean-Michel Basquiat, Banksy, and the Enduring Politics of the Street

An Essay Inspired by Richard J. Powell’s Talk at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden

Presented in Tandem with Basquiat × Banksy (September 29, 2024 – October 26, 2025) Organized by Betsy Johnson, Assistant Curator, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Part of the Hirshhorn’s 50th-Anniversary Season

Prologue: Two Paintings, One Wall, One Argument

When the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden — the Smithsonian’s national museum of modern and contemporary art, situated with particular authority on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. — chose to mark its fiftieth anniversary by placing two paintings in conversation, the choice was itself a critical act. On one side: Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump (1982), a monumental canvas nearly fourteen feet wide and eight feet high, executed in acrylic, crayon, and spray paint, in which a skeletal Black boy and his equally skeletal dog are rendered in the midst of an open fire hydrant’s spray. On the other: Banksy’s Banksquiat. Boy and Dog in Stop and Search (2018), a work on birch wood panel in which the same two figures from Basquiat’s painting are now being frisked by stenciled officers of London’s Metropolitan Police, their joyful raised hands reframed in an instant as the universal gesture of surrender.

For Richard J. Powell — the Distinguished John Spencer Bassett Professor of Art and Art History at Duke University, one of the foremost authorities on African American and African diasporic visual culture, and the scholar invited by the Hirshhorn to deliver the major public lecture accompanying this exhibition on October 10, 2024 — this pairing is not simply a curatorial conceit. It is a crystallization of the argument that has animated his scholarly career across more than three decades: that the art of the Black Atlantic diaspora, from the street to the canvas to the museum wall, operates within a continuous set of cultural, political, and aesthetic negotiations that mainstream art history has persistently failed to read with sufficient rigor or sufficient care.

This essay follows in Powell’s intellectual wake, using the Basquiat × Banksy exhibition as its primary occasion and its two central paintings as its central texts.

I. 1982: The Zenith of a Landmark Year

Basquiat himself said it plainly: looking back on 1982 from an interview with The New York Times in 1985, he observed that he had made the best paintings he had ever made during that period. The historical record supports the self-assessment. The year 1982 is widely recognized as Basquiat’s most artistically concentrated and most critically significant, a year in which the translation from street to studio — from SAMO© on the walls of SoHo and the Lower East Side to paintings that commanded galleries from New York to Modena to Los Angeles — was fully and irreversibly accomplished. It is the year that produced the skull painting Untitled (1982), which would later sell for $110.5 million, and it is the year that produced Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump, which sold for over $100 million in 2020.

But these auction figures, arresting as they are, tell us almost nothing about the painting itself. Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump is, on its surface, a scene of childhood: a boy and his dog playing in the spray of an open fire hydrant on a New York City summer day. “Johnny pump” is New York vernacular for a fire hydrant opened in summer for children to cool off in the heat — a genuinely democratic urban pleasure, free, improvisational, communal, available to whoever happened to live on the block. The scene is, in that sense, an idyll.

But Basquiat paints it with the formal vocabulary of his full Neo-Expressionist power: skeletal figures rendered with jagged, rapid brushstrokes, the boy’s three-pointed hair already gesturing toward the recurring crown motif that runs through his entire body of work. The figures are placed at the center of a polychromatic field — warm oranges and reds suggesting summer heat, the colors of a Pan-African tricolor investing the background with a political resonance that the surface innocence of the scene might otherwise obscure. The skeletal rendering of the Black figure does not suggest death or danger. It does something more complex: it simultaneously evokes the anatomical drawings of Gray’s Anatomy that captivated Basquiat since childhood and asserts a kind of structural clarity, a refusal of sentimentality, an insistence that the Black body be seen for what it is — sovereign, present, fully itself — without the mediating softness of idealization.

In this, as Powell’s framework helps us understand, Basquiat is working within a tradition of representing Black figures not as victims or exotica but as what the poet Robert Farris Thompson called “epic heroes,” kings in ordinary circumstances, crowned — if only by three-pointed hair — even in the simple act of playing in a hydrant’s spray.

II. From Graffiti to Gallery: The Street Art Lineage

To place Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump in the Hirshhorn is to enact the very argument the painting implicitly makes. Basquiat came out of the street. His earliest significant practice, beginning in the late 1970s, was as a graffiti artist and street poet under the tag SAMO©, a collaboration with Al Diaz that produced enigmatic, aphoristic messages on the walls of SoHo, the Lower East Side, and beyond. SAMO© was never merely decorative vandalism: it was a critical practice, a form of public poetry that used the most democratic possible medium — the city’s own exterior surfaces — to deliver philosophical and political observations to whoever happened to pass by.

The move from that practice to the canvas was not, Powell would insist, a rupture or a conversion experience. It was a continuous extension of the same impulse: to make marks on surfaces that communicate with maximum directness, that refuse the gatekeeping protocols of official culture, that assert the legitimacy of voices and forms that the mainstream art world has historically ignored or suppressed. When Basquiat began exhibiting at galleries — the Fun Gallery in the East Village in 1982, the Annina Nosei Gallery, the Larry Gagosian Gallery in Los Angeles — he brought the energy of the street with him. The paintings were never entirely domesticated by the white cube. They retained the explosive, improvisational force of the wall, the door, the found surface.

It is this lineage that connects Basquiat to Banksy — and that makes the Hirshhorn’s exhibition, organized by curator Betsy Johnson, not merely an exercise in comparative aesthetics but a genuine inquiry into the social and institutional meanings of street art’s journey into the museum. As Hirshhorn Director Melissa Chiu has observed, positioning Basquiat with Banksy “brings into focus elements of Basquiat’s legacy, notably the movement of street art tropes into museums through his studio practice.” Both artists began on walls. Both became internationally celebrated. Both have seen their work command extraordinary prices at auction. And both have been, in their different ways, artists whose primary subject is the relationship between power and the powerless, authority and insurgency, the official and the illicit.

III. Banksy Reads Basquiat: The Critical Transformation

On the night of September 16–17, 2017, in the early hours before dawn, Banksy made his way to the Barbican Centre in central London and stenciled a new image onto its exterior wall. His timing was deliberate: Basquiat: Boom for Real — the first major retrospective of Basquiat’s work in the United Kingdom since his death — was opening at the Barbican that week. Banksy announced the new work on Instagram with characteristic wit: “Major new Basquiat show opens at the Barbican — a place that is normally very keen to clean any graffiti from its walls.” The image he left on the wall — and later translated, in 2018, into the panel work Banksquiat. Boy and Dog in Stop and Search that now hangs across from the Basquiat at the Hirshhorn — showed the two skeletal figures from Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump being frisked by officers of the Metropolitan Police.

The formal operation Banksy performs on Basquiat’s painting is precise and devastating. He retains the figures — the boy and the dog, rendered in a faithful echo of Basquiat’s gestural, painterly style — but strips away Basquiat’s warm polychromatic background, leaving the figures against a largely monochromatic field. The boy’s raised hands, which in the original might be read as the exuberant gesture of a child playing in water, are now unmistakably the hands of someone complying with a police command — the “hands up, don’t shoot” gesture that has become the universal visual language of unarmed Black people confronting armed state authority. The Barbican’s light stone walls provide their own ironically charged backdrop: as Zora Neale Hurston once wrote, “I feel most colored when I am thrown against a sharp white background.”

The transformation is a form of art-historical commentary as much as political commentary. Banksy is arguing that the politics were always there in Basquiat’s painting — that the “urban idyll” was always a conditional idyll, available to the Black boy in the hydrant spray only until the moment when authority decided to intervene. The johnnypump becomes a stop and search. The summer afternoon becomes a confrontation. The joy is revealed to have been, all along, precarious.

What Banksy adds that was not explicit in Basquiat’s original is the police — the direct embodiment of the structural violence that threatened Basquiat throughout his own life, from his years on the streets of New York to his documented experience of racial profiling, to the death of his contemporary Michael Stewart at the hands of the New York City Transit Police in 1983. In Defacement (The Death of Michael Stewart) — painted directly onto the wall of Keith Haring’s studio in the immediate aftermath of Stewart’s death — Basquiat made that violence explicit and personal. In Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump, the violence is structural and latent, present in the social conditions that produced the scene even if not visible within it. Banksy makes the latent manifest, the structural literal, the implicit viscerally direct.

IV. Homage, Appropriation, and the Ethics of Citation

The relationship between Banksy’s work and Basquiat’s raises questions that Powell, as a scholar with deep expertise in both African American art and the politics of representation, is uniquely positioned to address. The Hirshhorn’s exhibition stages the encounter between them under the rubric of “homage and appropriation” — two terms that exist in productive tension with each other and that the work itself refuses to allow us to separate too cleanly.

Banksy is a white British artist of anonymous identity. Basquiat was a Black American artist of Haitian and Puerto Rican descent. When Banksy appropriates Basquiat’s figures and recontextualizes them as the subjects of a police stop-and-search, he is simultaneously honoring Basquiat’s legacy and performing an act of citation that has to be read carefully, particularly given the history of white artists and institutions appropriating Black creative work without adequate acknowledgment or compensation. To his credit, Banksy is explicit in naming his debt: the work’s title, Banksquiat, incorporates Basquiat’s name into his own authorial signature, and the ironic description of the piece as “an (unofficial) collaboration with the new Basquiat show” acknowledges the transatlantic, transgenerational nature of the artistic conversation.

The question of what Banksy adds to Basquiat — what his act of citation produces that was not already available in the original — is ultimately the question that the Hirshhorn exhibition asks its visitors to answer for themselves. Powell’s contribution, in his lecture accompanying the exhibition, is to provide the art-historical framework within which that question can be posed most rigorously: the tradition of African American and diasporic art that Basquiat inherited and transformed, the social conditions that made his practice both necessary and dangerous, the legacy that now continues to inspire artists across the globe — including an anonymous British street artist who paid tribute not by producing a pallid imitation but by producing a genuinely new work, one that uses Basquiat’s own visual language to say something that Basquiat, working in 1982, was perhaps not yet saying explicitly.

V. The Museum as Site: Institutional Stakes at the Hirshhorn

The fact that Basquiat × Banksy is on view at the Hirshhorn — presented as part of the museum’s fiftieth-anniversary season, marking it as the first time works by either artist have been exhibited at the nation’s museum of modern and contemporary art — is itself a statement of institutional reckoning. The Hirshhorn’s acknowledgment that it had not previously exhibited Basquiat is, in retrospect, a striking admission: one of the most significant American artists of the twentieth century, dead for more than three decades, was reaching the Smithsonian’s modern and contemporary museum for the first time through a loan of a single painting organized around his relationship to a British street artist.

This is not merely a logistical curiosity. It reflects the larger institutional history of American museums’ fraught and belated relationship with African American art — a history that Powell has documented and analyzed across his career. As Betsy Johnson’s curatorial vision for the exhibition recognizes, what the pairing of Basquiat and Banksy illuminates is precisely this institutional dynamic: the way in which the movement of street art into the museum is always a negotiation between the subversive energies that produced it and the legitimizing apparatus that displays it.

Basquiat experienced this negotiation in his own lifetime with acute discomfort. He was celebrated by the art market and by blue-chip galleries, but he was also subjected to the commodification of his practice and the exoticization of his person. He was the young Black artist who emerged from the streets and was welcomed into the gallery — and who understood, with painful clarity, the difference between being welcomed and being absorbed, between recognition and appropriation, between fame and dignity. The crown he wore in his own self-portraits — that three-pointed mark of sovereignty — was as much a defiant assertion against a market and an institution that he knew might consume him as it was a celebration of Black creativity.

To see Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump in the Hirshhorn, finally, forty-two years after it was painted, is to feel the full weight of that delay.

VI. Legacy Alive: Basquiat’s Continuing Resonance

Richard J. Powell has described Basquiat as one of the most significant artists of the twentieth century whose work remains a pivotal source of inspiration for artists today. The evidence for the second half of that observation is everywhere: in the work of painters, graffiti artists, installation artists, musicians, and filmmakers across the globe who cite Basquiat as formative to their own development; in the influence his visual language has had on the street art tradition from which Banksy himself emerged; in the continued scholarly and curatorial attention that his work attracts from every major art institution in the world; and in the sustained auction market that has made his paintings among the most expensive ever created by an American artist.

But Powell’s more significant contribution is the insistence on the first half of the observation: that Basquiat was not simply a wildly talented individual who made striking paintings, but one of the most significant artists of the twentieth century — a claim that rests on a rigorous understanding of the cultural and historical context in which he worked and the transformations his practice effected on the visual language of late modernity. His fusion of graffiti and Neo-Expressionism, his integration of writing and painting, his deployment of sign and symbol in the service of a counter-history of Black achievement and Black suffering, his polychromatic intensity drawn from both Caribbean muralism and commercial print culture, his sustained engagement with the body as both anatomical fact and political site — these constitute not the eccentric output of an outsider prodigy but the achieved expression of an artist who knew exactly what he was doing and why.

The small works on paper and wood from the collection of Larry Warsh — made between 1979 and 1985 and included in the Hirshhorn exhibition — provide crucial evidence for this claim. They demonstrate, as the Hirshhorn notes, Basquiat’s deep familiarity with art history, his disciplined use of language, and the systematic development of his signature motifs. The crowns and skulls that appear across his career are not accidental or arbitrary; they are elements of a carefully constructed visual vocabulary, deployed with the precision and intentionality of a painter who had studied the history of art with genuine seriousness and was fully conscious of the tradition within which he was working — and the tradition against which he was pushing back.

Epilogue: What the Johnnypump Holds

A fire hydrant opened in summer is a democratic miracle: it belongs to the street, to whoever lives on that block, to the children who play in it without permission or purchase. It is, in the vocabulary of urban life, a site of unclaimed pleasure, temporary freedom, the small sovereignty of the ordinary. Basquiat painted it in 1982 as exactly that — a moment of Black childhood delight, given epic scale and chromatic force by an artist who understood that the ordinary is never merely ordinary, that the boy in the hydrant’s spray is a king in his own right, that dignity does not require a gallery or an auction house or a fiftieth-anniversary exhibition at the Smithsonian to exist.

Banksy, thirty-six years later, reminded us of what that dignity is always up against. He did not contradict Basquiat’s painting; he completed it — or rather, he revealed that it had always already contained within it the conditions of its own undoing, that the joy is real and the threat is real and the two have always coexisted in the same body, on the same street, in the same country.

Richard J. Powell — who has spent his career insisting on the rigor, the complexity, and the historical depth of African American and diasporic visual culture — brings to both paintings the scholarly apparatus they deserve: an apparatus rooted not in the mythology of the overnight sensation or the market’s verdict, but in the long, unfinished, trans-Atlantic history of which both Basquiat and his inheritors are a part. To encounter Basquiat × Banksy at the Hirshhorn is, through Powell’s lens, not merely to attend an exhibition. It is to participate in a reckoning with that history — with what it has cost, what it has produced, and what it continues to demand of us as viewers, as scholars, and as citizens.


This essay was written in dialogue with Richard J. Powell’s lecture delivered at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden on October 10, 2024, and with the exhibition Basquiat × Banksy (September 29, 2024 – October 26, 2025), organized by Betsy Johnson, Assistant Curator, made possible with generous support from Kenneth C. Griffin and Griffin Catalyst, and presented as part of the Hirshhorn’s 50th-anniversary season. It draws additionally on Powell’s Black Art: A Cultural History (Thames & Hudson, 1997, 2002, 2021) and on the published record of Basquiat’s life and work.

When the Body Speaks in Color

Andrea Cardenal
When the Body Speaks in Color: Emotion, Memory, and the Creative Brain a talk by Andrea Cardenal

When the Body Speaks in Color:
Emotion, Memory, and the Creative Brain

a talk by
Andrea Cardenal

CEO & Founder, Art for Your Heart | Therapeutic Art Practitioner | Artist & Educator | Arts & Culture Leader | Creative Wellness Advocate

The Museum of Central American Art (MoCAArt.org)
Curator Suzanne Snider
[email protected]

Sunday, May 17, 2026 
2:00 – 5:00 pm

Delray Beach, Florida – Andrea Cardenal, a self-taught, third-generation Latin American artist and therapeutic art instructor, grew up in a family of opera singers, painters, and writers. 

Born in the USA to a Salvadoran mother and Nicaraguan father, her childhood in El Salvador during its civil war shaped her early connection to art as a means of emotional expression. Today, her work focuses on advancing creativity as a form of emotional wellness, community-building, and cultural expression; art as a tool for resilience, meaning, and connection.

MoCAArt at the Annex
290 SE 2nd Avenue, Delray Beach, Florida
Open by appointment Wed-Sat 12 noon to 5:00pm.

RSVP 
Email [email protected]. Or call 561-808-8587.

United States Artists Awards 2026 Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship to Five Artists

United States Artists Awards 2026 Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship to Five Artists
United States Artists Awards 2026 Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship to Five Artists

United States Artists Awards 2026 Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship to Five Artists
Five artists redefining media art through collaboration and critical engagement with technology awarded $50,000 each

United States Artists announced the awardees of the 2026 Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship, an annual initiative that supports five artists with unrestricted grants of $50,000 to further their disciplines, practices and innovative approaches in technology and new media.

Supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship awards artists who are expanding the boundaries of creative practice through emerging technologies — from augmented and virtual reality to immersive installations across sound, textile, digital fabrication and software-based work. Fellows use these tools in thoughtful, radical or poetic ways, pushing the field forward and critically engaging its possibilities.

“Through the Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship, we aim to not only strengthen the arts and technology ecosystem through long-term investment in the individuals and artistic practices that fuel innovation, but also foster a community among artists and cultural workers and continued growth across the field,” said Kristina Newman-Scott, Vice President for Arts at Knight Foundation. “Working across various disciplines and mediums, this year’s Fellowship class offers an examination of how evolving technological systems shape our environments, behaviors and forms of connection. Their work inspires consideration for innovation as a site of relational and communal possibility. We are thrilled to support each of these artists and we welcome their arrival and participation within our community.”

The 2026 Knight Arts + Tech Fellows works across media art, technology, performance and community practice, united by a deep commitment to reimagining technology as a social, cultural and embodied system rather than a purely technical or commercial one. Across their varied practices, their work collectively explores technology’s capacity to function as an active participant in shaping or redefining our human relationships and environments.

The 2026 Knight Arts + Tech Fellows are:

  • LIZN’BOW (Miami) – LIZN’BOW (Liz Ferrer and Bow Ty) are a collaborative duo whose practice spans performance, video, music, immersive installation and new media. Rooted in pop aesthetics and cultural critique, their work constructs environments that operate simultaneously as installations, performances and digital interfaces
     
  • Miguel Novelo (San Jose) – Miguel Novelo is an interdisciplinary artist and researcher whose work combines computational media with philosophical inquiry. Novelo’s artistic expressions include sculptures, interactive moving images and immersive installations that make use of computer vision, custom software, photogrammetry and game engines.
     
  • Rhonda Holberton (San Jose) – Rhonda Holberton is a new media artist whose multimedia installations integrate digital and interactive technologies with traditional methods of art production. Through these works, Holberton uses materials and platforms that physically connect human bodies via technology, revealing how the signals of digitally engineered worlds have tangible, destabilizing effects on our planet. 
     
  • Taeyoon Choi (Detroit) – Taeyoon Choi is an artist, writer and educator who explores the poetics of technology and human relations. He works with images, text and code oftentimes in collaboration with fellow artists, experts and community members.
     
  • Wesley Taylor (Detroit) – Wesley Taylor is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice combines installation, video art and sound to make a world. His decades-long practice hones the lessons and sharpens sensibilities learned from Detroit artists who came before him, shaping his craft of sampling, referencing and recontextualizing to demonstrate themes of placemaking, histories of entanglement with the present and the future and the necessity of Black imagination.

The 2026 Fellows were selected by Knight Foundation, United States Artists and a national panel of field leaders, including: Mindy Seu, Associate Professor, UCLA Department of Design Media Arts (Los Angeles, CA); Wade Wallerstein, Associate Curator, Gray Area (San Francisco, CA); and Leo Castañeda, Multimedia Artist and Video Game Designer (Miami, FL). 

To date, the Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship program has awarded 25 artists, each cohort working among various practices, disciplines and mediums, yet remaining grounded in storytelling, speculative thinking, knowledge sharing and education, and community engagement. This year’s cohort continues to reflect that legacy, emboldened by a spirit of collaboration, collectivism and experimentation across art and technology with a shared sense of care and consideration for our communities and environments. 

For more information on the Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship and the 2026 cohort of recipients, please visit this link.

ABOUT THE JOHN S. and JAMES L. KNIGHT FOUNDATION
We are social investors who support a more effective democracy by funding free expression and journalism, arts and culture in community, research in areas of media and democracy, and the success of American cities and towns where the Knight brothers once published newspapers. For more, visit kf.org.

ABOUT UNITED STATES ARTISTS
United States Artists plays a pivotal role in America’s cultural ecosystem, advancing the well-being of artists through unrestricted funding and tailored professional services, amplifying artists’ work, and improving conditions that support their essential roles in society. Founded in 2005 and based in Chicago, IL, United States Artists has awarded over 1,000 individuals with over $50 million of direct support across its flagship Fellowship program and its special Initiatives.

USA collaborates with foundations, philanthropists, and other field leaders to create pathways of support for artists across the nation, working closely with our partners to conduct research, design programs, and administer funds in response to their missions and the needs of artists.

ABOUT THE KNIGHT ARTS + TECH FELLOWSHIP
The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation launched the Knight Arts + Tech Fellowship in 2021 to celebrate and support artists working with innovative approaches to technology and new media. Knight Arts + Tech Fellows use emerging technologies and media, including software and coding, immersive installation, sound art, bioart, AI, augmented and virtual reality, digital fabrication and more, in thoughtful, radical or poetic ways to expand the field and critically contribute to its discourse. Technology may be a tool, platform, by product or end product within an artist’s practice.

PRESS CONTACTS
Rachel Roberts
Senior Account Executive, Cultural Counsel
[email protected]

Colleen Rodgers
Account Coordinator, Cultural Counsel
[email protected]

opa projects Presents “Warmth in TwoTones”

opa projects

opa projects Presents “Warmth in Two
Tones” — a Solo Exhibition by Camilla
Marie Dahl.

Exhibition from 16 April 2026 at opa projects, 7622 NE 4th CT, 33138 Miami

Opa projects is pleased to present Warmth in Two Tones, a solo exhibition by Camilla Marie Dahl.

Working between painting and sculpture, Dahl creates richly textured surfaces in which carved foam, crushed marble, and oil paint converge to form images that feel both constructed and intimate.

In this new body of work, the artist reflects on the idea of home—not as a fixed place, but as an emotional landscape shaped by memory and daily rituals. Motifs drawn from Dahl’s lived environments reappear throughout the exhibition: barns recalling her childhood in New England, the cypress trees lining the driveway of her home in Spain, and tulips marking the arrival of spring. These elements function less as representations than as fragments of familiarity, filtered through recollection.

A parallel series revisits the interiors of the artist’s childhood dollhouse, transforming miniature domestic spaces into quietly theatrical scenes. Together, these works construct environments where texture, color, and light evoke the warmth of spaces both remembered and imagined.

opa projects
+1 516 807 5419 – [email protected]
7622 NE 4th CT, Little River, 33138 Miami

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