subject: Frieze Art Fair Frieze Week Sideshows: Frame And Sluice By Rachel Corbett [print this page] In 2009, Frieze Art Fair masterminds Amanda Sharp and Matthew Slotover launched Frame, a special section for galleries less than six
years old. The move, along with the straitened economy, spelled the end for the smaller, artist-led Zoo Art Fair, a satellite event
located just on the other side of Regents Park from Frieze. About a third of Zoo exhibitors defected to its eminently upscale big
brother.
Nevertheless, some Frame exhibitors are less than happy. The 26 Frame galleries, each displaying a single artist, were relegated to a
back corner in the vast Frieze Art Fair tent complex, which boasts more than 170 exhibitors in all. The remote location caused doubt
among some Frame dealers that their potential sales might not offset the crating, transportation and accommodation costs.
Id like to know how much people are actually selling here, said one Frame dealer who asked to remain anonymous. It's especially
difficult to capture the attention of the weary, overwhelmed visitors who do make it to corner of the fair which houses the Frame
booths. Were like a sideshow, the dealer said.
Then again, the biggest, boldest pieces are sometimes the hardest to sell. Paul Johnsons life-sized temple sculpture made of yellow
papier-mch at the booth of Londons Ancient & Modern gallery got good reviews, but failed to find a buyer during the run of the
fair.
Zoo was less market-driven and generally more fun, and is now looked back on with some fondness. Possibly the best candidate to
succeed Zoo, then, is the new Sluice Art Fair, Oct. 15-16, 2011, organized by critic and curator Ben Street and artist Karl England
in a space in Mayfair. Theyre trying for a relaxed, unpretentious, unpushy atmosphere, Street said.
Like the Independent art fair launched in New York in 2010, Sluice presented 14 exhibitors across two open loft spaces, without
individual booths. The offerings ranged from a 3D video of iconic images from the 1950s-1970s to maquettes of large-scale
installations and a Bruce Nauman-inspired squash game streamed lived at the fair from an artists studio.
Sluice attracted mostly nonprofits, like Shift Gallery and studio1.1, and artist-run galleries. Thats why Street and England
struggled with even calling it a fair -- a decision thats not gone without some criticism, Street said. Some exhibitors werent
selling works at all, while others posted prices conspicuously, which Street said surprised him a little at first.
Catherine Bagg of A Plan Projects said she made some sales but that wasnt the point. It was less of a financial risk to be
involved, so the pressure to sell was not as great, she said. We approached it primarily as an exhibiting opportunity with a high
footfall. About 1,200 visitors attended the two-day event.
But galleries are increasingly expected to have a presence on the international market these days and Sluices exhibitors came from
England almost exclusively. At Frieze, Mehtap ztrk of the Istanbul-based gallery Rampa said they had exhibited at Art HK and the
Venice Biennale in the past but wanted to expand further into the European market -- so they came to Frame. And it was worth it, she
said. By Saturday, the gallery had sold the first edition of a video by Nilbar Gres and several photographs.
For me its totally worth it because I just put my paintings in a taxi and drove them over here, said Rob Tufnell, who was showing
a series of small abstract paintings by Joel Croxson for around 3,000- 4,000. Plus 5,000 for this much space is a pretty good