Untitled Art Miami Beach Unveils Dynamic Programming for 12th Edition

Untitled Art, Miami Beach, is thrilled to announce its comprehensive programming for the 12th Edition, from Wednesday, December 6 through Sunday, December 10, 2023. The fair will once again transform the sands of South Beach into a vibrant hub for artistic exploration and discourse, featuring a captivating lineup of new artist projects, performances, panel discussions, and more.

This year’s programming delves into the interconnected themes of “Gender Equality in the Arts” and “Curating in the Digital Age,” reflecting Untitled Art’s commitment to fostering inclusive and innovative artistic practices. The fair will showcase the work of emerging and established artists pushing contemporary art’s boundaries, exploring themes of identity, representation, and the ever-evolving digital landscape.

Highlights of the Untitled Art Miami Beach 2023 programming include:

  • New Artist Projects: A curated selection of site-specific installations, performances, and immersive experiences by emerging artists, offering fresh perspectives and innovative approaches to contemporary art.
  • PerformaArts: Engaging and thought-provoking performances that challenge perceptions, spark conversations, and expand the boundaries of artistic expression.
  • Panel Discussions: In-depth discussions with leading artists, curators, and arts professionals, exploring critical issues and emerging trends in the contemporary art world.
  • Untitled Art Podcast: A series of insightful conversations with artists, curators, and thought leaders, delving into the creative process, the role of art in society, and the impact of technology on skills.

Untitled Art Miami Beach 2023 is committed to providing a platform for artists and audiences to engage in meaningful dialogue, foster creativity, and explore the transformative power of art. The fair Art programming will evolve as the 12th edition approaches, ensuring a dynamic and engaging experience for all.

About Untitled Art

Untitled Art is a lead Art contemporary art fair that presents a curated selection of emerging and established galleries, artist-run spaces, and non-profit organizations worldwide. Known for its innovative programming and commitment to fostering dialogue and discovery, Untitled Art has become a cornerstone of the Miami Beach art scene.

Untitled Art, Miami Beach 2023 Programming includes new artist projects and performances, as well as panel discussions as part of the Untitled Art Podcast, among others. The schedule will continue to be updated with new events as the 12th edition approaches.

Thursday 30 Nov

  • 7–8:30pm Fountainhead Residency Open House

Monday 4 Dec

  • 6–9pm Marquez Art Projects: “José Delgado Zuñiga: Cusp” Opening Reception

Tuesday 5 Dec

  • 6–9pm Locust Projects: Meet the Artists Reception and Performance

Wednesday 6 Dec

  • 9–11am The Bass: Curator Culture | A Conversation with Stuart Comer, Barbara London, and Legacy Russell
  • 9:30am–4:30p mde la Cruz Collection: “House in Motion / New Perspectives”
  • 11:30am–12:30 pm Performance: Awilda Sterling-Duprey, “Blindfolded” (2020 and ongoing). Presented by El Kilómetro
  • 12:30–1:30pm Panel: Fly Over Passed Over. Curated by Kalup Linzy, with the support of The Tulsa Artist Fellowship
  • 2–3pmPanel: Art Unveiled – Navigating the Ecosystem of Creativity. Presented by NXTHVN
  • 3–3:30pmPerformance: Trueson Daugherty, “Absolute Obedience” (2023). Curated by Kalup Linzy, with the support of The Tulsa Artist Fellowship
  • 4–4:30pm Performance: Lieven De Boeck, “Parade, what’s going on?” (2023 ongoing). Supported by Gallery Meessen De Clercq and Ringling College of Art and Design
  • 4:30–5:15pm Exhibitor Panel: Curating in the Digital Age – Steven Sacks of bitforms in conversation with exhibiting artist Manfred Mohr
  • 5:30–6:15pm Panel: How To Shatter a Ceiling – A Talk on Gender Equality in the Art World. Presented by Her Clique

Thursday 7 Dec

  • 9–11am Baker’s Brunch at Bakehouse Art Complex: Open Studio + Cafecito
  • 9:30am–4:30pm de la Cruz Collection: “House in Motion / New Perspectives”
  • 11:45am–12:30pm Panel: The Market for Female Artists. Hosted by Sotheby’s Institute
  • 12:45–1:30pm Panel: The Impact of Technology. Hosted by the Sotheby’s Institute
  • 1:45–2:30pm Panel: Changes to Collecting Models. Hosted by the Sotheby’s Institute
  • 3–3:45pm Panel: Meet the Curators of Desert X 2025. Presented by Desert X
  • 4:15–5pm Exhibitor Panel: Sculptor Sharif Bey in conversation with Rachel Delphia, curator at Carnegie Museum of Art. Presented by albertz benda
  • 5–5:30pm Performance: Erick Antonio Benitez, “Software for People v2” (2023). Presented by Selenas Mountain and supported by Y.ES Contemporary
  • 5:30–6:15pm Exhibitor Panel: Making and Claiming Space. Presented by Jonathan Carver Moore

Friday 8 Dec

  • 9:30am–4:30pm de la Cruz Collection: “House in Motion / New Perspectives”
  • 12–12:45pm Panel: Forging New Paths in an Evolving Art World. Presented and moderated by Untitled Art Young Ambassador Maria Vogel
  • 2–2:45pm Panel: Digital Empowerment & Art Gallery Innovation. Presented by Atlantic Arthouse
  • 3:30–4:15pm Exhibitor Panel: Galerías de América Latina y El Caribe participando en Nest en conversación con Marcela Guerrero (conducted in Spanish)
  • 5–5:30pm Performance: GeoVanna Gonzalez, “PLAY, LAY, AYE: ACT 6” (2023). Presented by Commissioner
  • 5:30–6:15pm Exhibitor Panel: ‘.co.za’ presented by EBONY/CURATED
  • 6–7pm Performance: David Correa, “The Machining of the Fool” (2023). Presented by Negrón Pizarro

Saturday 9 Dec

  • 9:30am–4:30p mde la Cruz Collection: “House in Motion / New Perspectives”
  • 12–12:45pm Exhibitor Panel: Galerías colombianas en Untitled Art, Miami Beach 2023 en conversación con Henrique Faria (conducted in Spanish)
  • 2:30–3:15pm Panel: Performance Architecture – Taking Up Space. Presented by Commissioner
  • 5–5:45pm Panel: This Too, is a Map. Presented by [NAME] Publications
  • 6–6:30pm Performance: Nicki Duval and Robbie Trocchia, “bout” (2023). Presented by Locust Projects

Sunday 10 Dec

  • 10–11am Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum-FIU: Breakfast in the Park
  • 12–12:45pm Exhibitor Panel: Alternative gallery platforms to the brick-and-mortar space
  • 1:30–2:15pm Panel: Between Architecture and the Body – Inclusive Futurism in Art. Presented by YoungArts

Special ProjectsPerformances

SP1
Gerd Leufert
NENIAS
 (1969/2023)
Site-specific installation
Vinyl
Dimensions variable
Edition of 5 + AP each
Presented by Henrique Faria, B11

Leufert used the name “Nenias” to identify a series of figures he started to develop as a theme in the early sixties. The conventional meaning of the term comes from music, where it refers to certain very old songs or lamentations which belonged to funerary rites.

These essential forms, adapted now in a new space and for a new spectator, recall their first large-scale installation at Caracas’ Museo de Bellas Artes in 1985. In the then newly formed series of Nenias from 1969, Leufert configured these refined and symmetrical totemic structures from the encounter between the notions of art and design. Here he fused together ancestral cosmogonies with contemporary figures able to transcend the diverse currents of anthropological and indigenist thought. Simultaneously geometric and organic, the Nenias emerge as atemporal and original representations situated in the cultural space of the collective imaginary.


SP2
Manfred Mohr
Early Plotter Drawings
 (circa 1970)
Plotter drawings on paper
Presented by bitforms, B52

Manfred Mohr utilizes algorithms to engage rational aesthetics, inviting logic to produce visual outcomes. This special project highlights a selection of the artist’s earliest computer-generated plotter drawings (circa 1970) and showcases his first implementation of the hypercube through the seminal video work, Cubic Limit (1973-74). While Mohr’s career continues to evolve and invite new variables, this special project distinguishes his pioneering use of algorithms decades before it became a tool of contemporary art.

Mohr wrote his first algorithm using the programming language Fortran IV in 1969. He plotted the resulting computer-generated data by hand, an exhausting and unsustainable process of intricate drafting. Systems capable of drawing the results of algorithms were not easily accessible at this time. In 1970, Mohr gained unique access to the computer center at the Météorologie Nationale in Paris where he used a high-resolution Benson plotter and CDC 6400 computer. There he realized all his programs and plotter drawings until he moved full time to New York in 1983, where he established his own computer center, including a high-resolution vector pen plotter. The resultant diversity of his artwork confirmed the urgency and aesthetic significance of his algorithms. Over fifty years later, the connections Mohr establishes between aesthetics and instruction continue to stimulate dialogue within the contemporary art world.


SP3
Vera Chaves Barcellos
Epidermic Scapes 
(1977-2022)
Inkjet print on cotton paper
Presented by Zielinsky, B15

Epidermic Scapes (1977-2022) is a work by Vera Chaves Barcellos (1938, Porto Alegre, Brazil) which consists of a series of images of the artist’s skin, and of other people, enlarged to such an extent that their indexical function is lost as they begin to take on a more abstract appearance. The artist created each image by applying black ink to various parts of her body, over which she then rubbed a piece of tracing paper, effectively creating a negative, which she then enlarged. Her intention was to expand the images to such an extent that they could be displayed on the floor or wall in a monumental way and as if they were terrestrial landscapes. This work recently became part of the Museo Reina Sofía collection.

From the beginning of her career, Vera Chaves Barcellos has been interested in the reuse of pre-existing images taken from the media to develop works using video, photography, engraving, installation and artists’ books. The artist’s research takes as its starting point the relationship between the body and time: performing characters and narratives from the past and the future, focusing on stories that were left out of historiography, documenting and collecting archive materials from local events or from personal memory.


SP4
Henrik Godsk
Carousel 1884
, 2023
Oil on canvas installed on lit steel frame
Presented by Vigo, B1

Godsk is of seventh-generation traveling heritage, having grown up among the world of the fun fair in Denmark. His practice reflects his pride in his upbringing and cultural identity. Across his works, fusing folkloric and high art, he utilizes the portraits and creatures that form his subjects as vessels for his exploration of color and form. Carousel 1884, which is a modernist reworking of a family heirloom, functions as a gesamtkunstwerk; a fair within a fair that is also emblematic of the artist’s own sentiments of nostalgia about his heritage.

The formal components of the artwork are inseparable from the artist’s time spent as a child painting the panels and façades during renovations of the rides. At 12, he began to design and paint them himself; at 15, he came across books about Picasso and Modigliani, the latter’s elongated necks and distorted, flattened proportions heavily influencing Godsk’s current œuvre. The controlled brushwork, geometric lines, flat surfaces, and tight compositions of the artist’s cubistic portraits act as a conduit for his personal exploration of classically modernist forms. The androgynous and striking shapes of the artist’s portraits are directly reminiscent of the accentuated designs of these fairground rides, and Carousel 1884 further emulates this through a mimicking of the circa 3.5-metre height required by carousels to draw a crowd.



SP5
April Bey, Petra Cortright, Christine Sun Kim, Hana Ward
Limited Edition Prints (2023)
Presented by For Freedoms

For Freedoms is an artist-led organization that centers art as a catalyst for creative civic engagement, discourse and direct action. We work closely with artists and organizations to expand what participation in democracy looks like. In service to this mission, For Freedoms is excited to present a series of limited edition prints by April Bey, Petra Cortright, Christine Sun Kim, and Hana Ward. Each of these artists has collaborated with For Freedoms on past public campaigns to make a positive impact on the communities we share. Shop the collection at shop.forfreedoms.com.


SP6
Kelley Johnson
Fleeting Fragments of Time 15/45
 (2023)
Chrome powder-coated steel and glass

Kelley Johnson Studio will present a functional sculpture within this year’s Untitled Art Podcast Lounge. In conjunction with the awarded Rado Production Prize sculpture in the fair’s interstitial space, Fleeting Fragments of Time 15/45 (2023), features an interplay of light over the chrome surfaces, so that participants’ interactions will continuously reshape the work’s interpretation.


SP7
Luis Ortiz Monasterio
Luis Ortiz Monasterio X Marea 
(2022)
Concrete, volcanic rock, painted plaster, and cement
Presented by Ediciones Marea

Marea has collaborated with the Pedro Reyes Studio for the elaboration of five selected works from the repertoire of Luis Ortiz Monasterio in a meticulous reconstruction work assisted by the artist’s family. Luis Ortiz Monasterio (1906-1990) was a sculptor and teacher, and founder of the so-called Mexican School of Sculpture.

With a career spanning more than sixty years, Ortiz Monasterio is one of the main figures of Mexican sculpture in the 20th century. His work transited from nationalism to the emerging avant-garde, with both American (Toltec and Aztec) and global influences. Among his most recognized works are Monumento a la madre (1949), Fuente monumental de Nezahualcóyotl (1955-1956) and Plaza Cívica de la Unidad Independencia (1960). This project, consisting of an exceptional collection of limited edition pieces will mark the first-ever presentation of these works by Ortiz Monasterio’s outside of Mexico.


SP8
Karian Amaya
Open Sky, Mirage 
(2023)
Copper, sea water, and salt
Presented by YI GALLERY, A41

Open Sky, Mirage (2023) is an ongoing exploration by Karian Amaya into the transformations of matter and its effects when placed in varying geographical contexts. Inspired by the aesthetics of exploitation and extraction of natural resources, this presentation seeks to encapsulate the passage of time, serving as both a record and memory of a place. As the minerals in the copper pools change and evaporate, they create distinct pools, each capturing a unique visual representation of time.


SP9
Awilda Sterling-Duprey
Blindfolded
 (2020 and ongoing)
Performance and mixed media on vinyl
Presented by El Kilómetro, A35

Awilda Sterling-Duprey´s Blindfolded dance drawings are a series of works that began in 2020, where the artist blindfolds herself to make abstract marks on papers mounted on walls in response to salsa and/or jazz improvisation. Fusing Afro-Caribbean dance, music, drawing, and performance, Sterling-Duprey translates the music through her body into dance movements on the paper´s surface with sharp actions and a sense of playfulness. The currents of sound are drawn by expressing dance and improvising tonal and chromatic scales from the salsa and jazz.

Contact:

Jeffrey Lawson
Founder

Omar López-Chahoud
Artistic Director

Clara Andrade Pereira
Director of Development and Curatorial Affairs

Anicka Vrána-Godwin
Exhibitor Services and Communications

Katrina Robelo
VIP Relations

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