Saturday, February 21, 2009


Colin Chinnery, newly appointed director of the ShContemporary art fair, thinks he can get New York dealers to sign up for the September event. I am not so sure, given that the fair did terribly last year and the overall fair-phobic atmosphere that has set in with the economic slowdown. We had lunch and discussed his plans--to be covered in detail in an upcoming piece in artinfo.com--and I was tickled by his enthusiasm and idealism. In China, even an art fair serves noncommercial goals, in this case, setting the ground work for more first rate contemporary art to get shown in this country where museums fall down on the job and galleries cannot take the risk. My question--why would foreign galleries take the risk, since there isn't yet a collector base here for foreign artists. Last year, the fair had any number of dealers from the US and Europe sitting around, trying to attract attention for artists that are well known in their hometowns but not at all understood in China. Most said they wouldn't repeat the mistake. But Colin is exceedingly bright and energetic, so if anyone can attract fair participants he should, with his way of making the whole thing sound more like a biennial than a market place.

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