Published on ocula.com
17 May 2014


The second edition of Art Basel kicked off Wednesday with a VIP preview that saw no shortage of collectors streaming through the doors. It felt like a Swiss banking conference in the VIP lounge as Julius Bär and UBS representatives and financiers milled around waiting for the doors to open for the preview at noon.
Come 12pm, the VIP lounge emptied as collectors scuttled to snap up art works. “Well, this fair isn’t for seeing, it’s for buying. Other fairs are for seeing,” remarked one Art Basel representative.
Although the fair was held at the same venue as last year, the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre, this time around it was so slickly done that several visitors commented that it felt like a luxurious art shopping mall.
Notable collectors including Uli and Rita Sigg, Budi Tek, and Max and Monique Burger, stalked the aisles of the fair as well as British architect David Adjaye, and artists including Takashi Murakami, who was keeping it low key sans entourage as he visited the booths at the afternoon preview. Chinese artist Zeng Fangzhi was attending to an audience of admirers in front of his painting at Acquavella Gallery, while Japanese artist Kohei Nawa was spotted at Tokyo’s SCAI The Bathhouse, posing beside his glass bead coyote.




Many art galleries this year brought out their big guns. New York gallerist Christophe Van der Weghe presented a collection of blue chip works including Keith Haring, Jean Michel Basquiat and Picasso, while Hammer Galleries presented a collection of modernist and impressionist works including paintings by Renoir, Picasso and Chagall. Annely Juda Fine Art from London presented a series of David Hockney paintings that no doubt created a flurry of activity on Instagram. Tornabuoni Art from Paris exhibited works from Lucio Fontana (loved them), Alighiero Boetti and Agostino Bonalumi, and Princess Michael of Kent was holding court at Zurich Galerie Gmurzynska, with yet another Botero exhibition this year.
There was plenty of work from Asian artists too, reaffirming Art Basel’s commitment to Asian art. Hanart TZ had a fantastic display of works by Chinese artist Gu Wenda at its booth as well as featuring a hair flag installation, ‘United Nations: Man And Space’, as part of the Encounters section. While Beijing’s Long March Space presented works from Xu Zhen, Liu Wei and Wang Jianwei, and Berlin’s Arndt gallery put together a selection of Indonesian and Filipino artists including Arin Dwihartanto Sunaryo and Rodel Tapaya.



Art fairs can be more taxing on patience and relationships than a Berlin swingers club, particularly when you can’t get what you want. What’s that? You wanted this painting? Any painting? Sorry, all spoken for. “Art dealers don’t have friends. They only have clients,” one collector huffed as he marched out of the booth of a London gallery after failing to secure the object of his desire.
And what would an art fair be without the rumour mill in full grind? Whispers of another Art Basel set to open in Moscow seem to be just that, although talk of a Design Miami fair in Hong Kong abounds as does chatter that the founders of Art Hong Kong will create another satellite art fair in Hong Kong, adding to the evolving art landscape of Hong Kong.
The vernissage after-party seemed to be all about the Absolut Art Bar. Hong Kong artist Nadim Abbas created ‘Apocalypse Postponed’, an apocalyptic bunker complete with sandbags and zombie mixologists where guests sipped red vodka cocktails from bloodbags. Queues snaked around the block with some party-goers waiting up to an hour in the humidity and heat outside to be let in to the already packed space for a night of music and entertainment organised by the Bearded Lady team.
Inside guests were met with a saucy burlesque death dance by local performer Julie Shah, a dark and moody rock set by Hong Kong duo The Belfies (self promoting hussy I am), and Singaporean artist Ming Wong put on a Blade Runner-meets-manga inspired gender-bending performance complete with corset and ample accessories.
While others were sensibly making a reasonably early night of it, we legged it to a Japanese whisky bar, a couple of architects and art world impresarios in tow, and then for a regrettably late night-cap at Kee club where the party was still in full swing. Resultant looks of hangover despondency were etched on numerous gallerists faces the next morning. Two more days of this and not even the Moldovan underworld will have a use for my liver.





Check out more pic(k)s of Art Basel HK 2014 below.














And then this happened on Friday… Chai Wan Mei madness with Ryan McNamara and dancers as they perfumed ‘SCORE’, a series of 20 dance routines in 20 minutes by 20 dancers, in a carpark packed full of sweaty and drunk art world people (unlimited vodka courtesy of Absolut and mixed with love by the Chai Wan Mei team). Thanks to Yana and Stephen Peel for commissioning the work and bringing Ryan out to Hong Kong for his first Asia performance, and to the Chai Wan creative community for joining forces to bring us and unforgettable night of dancing, music and lots of cocktails!


One response to “Art Basel HK Vernissage: The Lowdown”
[…] Kong’s Art Basel earlier this May, art patron Yana Peel commissioned a dance performance piece by Ryan McNamara; Berlin based multi-media artist Carsten Nicolai lit up a Hong Kong skyscraper in an interactive […]