Twin Picks: Frieze London

08.10.2024 | Art | BY:

This year feels like an extra huge bumper Frieze Week. Every single gallery,
institution and numerous project spaces are opening shows to coincide. Aside from the obvious visit to Frieze, Frieze Masters and the freebie option Frieze Sculpture Park in Regents Park, here are eight things to check out courtesy of our arts editor Francesca Gavin:

Onyeka Igwe, a so called archive, 2020, HD Video still, c. the artist & Arcadia Missa, London

Frieze Film X ICA
The ICA have teamed up with Frieze for a second year of artist film screenings projected in a continuous loop. There are some incredible people in their year but keep a special eye open for Sung Tieu, Onyeka Igwe and Jacolby Satterwhite. And if you cant make it the films are also free to view on line for the duration. (The Guemhyung Jeong performances at the ICA on October 8 and 9 will also be unmissable.)
Oct 8 – 13, ica.art

Sung Tieu, One Thousand Times (Gehrenseestrasse), 2023
Super 8 transferred to HD video, colour, sound, 8 min 51 sec. Courtesy the artist and Emalin, London; Sfeir-Semler, Hamburg / Beirut; Trautwein Herleth, Berlin. © Sung Tieu

Seb Patane at Maureen Paley
This is the most welcome return pairing of the year. Seb Patane made his name on Maureen Paley’s roster with incredible drawing work, sound performances and graphic installations that touched on photographic history, the memory of war and the echoes of time. ‘In the Sharp Gust of Love’ is Patane’s return to the gallery in Paley’s Studio M offshoot. If you’re East, go see.
Until Nov 9 Seb Patane at Maureen Paley, Studio M, Rochelle School
maureenpaley.com

Seb Patane, There is always one real love in every man’s life, 2022
Ballpoint pen, pressed flowers, acrylic, collage and enamel on printed paper, 28.2×20.3cm
© Seb Patane, courtesy Maureen Paley, London. Photo: Stephen James

Magdalene Odundo at Thomas Dane
This is cult favourite Odundo’s first London exhibition in over two decades. Inspired by diasporic ceramic and vessel sculpting techniques, her pieces are unforgettable (and have fans including Jonathan Anderson and Nadege Vanhee). The pieces on show here are described as fusing British studio pottery, ancient ceramics, ceremonial vessels from Kenya and Nigeria, and modernist sculpture.  
PV October 8 6-8pm
Exhibition runs until Dec 14

Magdalene Odundo, Untitled, 2023, Ceramics, terracota, 60 x 32 x 32 cm
© Magdalene A.N. Odundo. Courtesy the artist and Thomas
Dane Gallery. Photo: David Westwood.

Mire Lee at Tate Modern
In case you thought a Mike Kelley retrospective wasn’t enough, the Turbine Hall is being given a dose of Berlin-style cool from Mire Lee. The young artist who is showing in the UK for the first time is known from abject and absorbing sculptures that drip, twitch and shudder. (Schinkel Pavilion paired her with great success with HR Giger). Imagining her neo-gothic liquid techno oddness supersized is VERY exciting.
Oct 9-Mar 16
Tate Modern, tate.org.uk

Mire Lee, Landscape with Many Holes: Skins on Yeongdo Sea, 2022.
© Busan Biennale Organizing Committee. Photo: Sang-tae Kim.

1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair
Somerset House’s regular is always a thankful respite from the market machine of Frieze itself. This is a the fair where you will discover artists – Lina Iris Viktor and Anya Paintsil for example both had their breakthroughs here. Looking at artists in the broadest sense from the African diaspora, keep a special on their special projects from people like Nigeria Art Society UK.
11-13 October, Somerset House, Strand, WC2
1-54.com

Zanele Muholi, Khayalami, 2023, Baryta print, variable dimensions. Edition of 8 + 2 Aps. Courtesy of Galerie Carole Kvasnevski

Yayoi Kusama at Victoria Miro
You can’t help but love a bit of Kusama. If the lines for Tate have been to painful, quickly book to go see her latest works at Victoria Miro. There is a new Infinity Mirror Room with a tech edge that looks delicious as well as a series of intimate new paintings entitled Every Day I Pray for Love. Sounds like a good thought for today.
Until Nov 2, Victoria Miro, 16 Wharf Road, London N1

Bloomsbury and Farringdon
The explosion of emerging and fresh galleries in the Bloomsbury and Farringdon area is so good they even printed their own postcard sized map. If you want a taste of emerging London now, go to Hot Wheels Athens, Union Pacific, Brunette Coleman, A Squire, Phillida Reid, South Parade, and book a place to view the solo show by British painter Lewis Hammond at the incredible The Perimeter and finish at the hottest space in town, Ginny on Frederick.
theperimeter.co.uk

Minor Attractions
The is the second year for the parallel fair Minor Attractions founded by the burst of energy that is Jonny Tanna (Harlesden High Street) and Jacob Barnes. Focusing on non-profits and emerging galleries, this year it takes place in Fitzrovia’s Mandrake Hotel and is a place to see some killer spaces like Tblisi’s Artbeat and Salford’s Division of Labour (plus some late night programming for those looking for something after.)
Oct 8-13

Special mentions (because its insane not to highlight some of the amazing shows out there!): Lauren Halsey, and Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst, at the Serpentine, Haegue Yang at Hayward and the Chronoplasticity show curated by Lars Bang Larssen at Raven Row, Nicola L and Jack O’Brien at Camden Arts Centre, Olivia Erlanger at Soft Opening, and Stanislava Kovalcikova at Emalin.

Images: © Leon Chew, The Call, Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst with sub, Serpentine, 2024

Text by Francesca Gavin

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