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On the Armory Present, First-Time Artists Steal the Highlight

ArtsOn the Armory Present, First-Time Artists Steal the Highlight

Calling Alexa Kumiko Hatanaka’s solo presentation on the Armory Present a “booth” feels one way or the other fallacious, like a discount of the all-encompassing sanctum that she and Toronto gallery Patel Brown assembled for the Manhattan artwork truthful. Suspended gently from wood rods are billowing linocut and gyotaku prints on handmade Japanese washi paper in deep indigos and earth tones. In conversations with attendees on the truthful’s opening day, Hatanaka shared that she has bipolar dysfunction, and that her landscapes are knowledgeable partly by her analysis into evolutionary theories for the situation as a type of climactic adaptation.

Hatanaka, a primary timer on the Armory Present, stated she was moved and gratified by guests’ responses. “It’s still quite stigmatized to talk about bipolar, even though there’s more conversation about mental health,” she advised me. “I think telling my story has been kind of disarming to people, allowed them to be vulnerable.”

For all of the whispers in regards to the market downturn, gallery closures, and artwork truthful shake-ups, a crisp air of first-day-of-school pleasure reduce via the drab halls of the Javits Heart in the course of the Armory Present’s VIP preview on Thursday, September 4. Typically accompanying the gallerists fielding collectors’ inquiries had been the artists themselves, lots of them displaying for the primary time on the modern-day incarnation of the historic exhibition the place Marcel Duchamp shocked American audiences along with his dizzying 1912 “Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2.”

View of Patel Brown’s Armory sales space with Rumination (2025) by Alexa Kumiko Hatanaka

“It is a classic, world-famous fair, and it is the ambition of every artist to show there, particularly if you come from Europe … or the edge of Europe, in my case,” stated Irish artist Alice Maher, whose drawing “The Glorious Maid (of the Charnel House)” (2016) is displayed in a nook at David Nolan Gallery’s sales space of 100 drawings from 1944 to the current. Maher may “hardly believe,” she stated, that her work is hanging within the firm of such figures as Hannah Wilke, Dorothea Rockburne, Etel Adnan, and Ellsworth Kelly. 

Diagonally throughout from Patel Brown’s sales space is New York’s personal Swivel Gallery, the place ceramic works by Alejandro García Contreras stopped attendees of their tracks. The Guadalajara-based artist, one other newcomer to the Armory, stated that although his follow dates again to 2002, he’s glad this second didn’t come sooner. “In some ways it was complex and discouraging,” García Contreras advised me in Spanish, reflecting on his early years, “but it helped me build up the patience not to do something stupid.”

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Alejandro García Contreras at his sales space with Swivel Gallery

Although his sculptures at the moment are hyper-detailed, Boschian constructions dripping in symbolism, the artist’s earliest inspiration got here from motion figures — particularly the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles — which, as a toddler, he didn’t a lot play with as examine to determine how they had been made. 

“That’s where the origin of my obsession with the sculptural object comes from,” García Contreras stated. “Sometimes I think, ‘Wow, when I was a kid, it was my dream to make action figures. And now I’m making collectibles for adults. I’ve made it.’”

There’s at all times recent blood on the Armory, partly due to the participation of first-time galleries. The large 4 (Gagosian, Hauser, Zwirner, Tempo) haven’t confirmed on the truthful in years, choosing Frieze (which additionally owns the Armory Present) and the varied Artwork Basels. However notably absent in the principle part this yr are different main gamers, similar to Lehmann Maupin, Galerie Lelong (which skipped 2024 too), Almine Rech, and Kasmin (at the moment transitioning into a brand new gallery began by two companions). Youthful galleries — a few of which advised Hyperallergic that they bought a last-minute name from Armory Present organizers this yr providing them a sales space — are desirous to step up, and the Presents part, notably devoted to rising areas not more than 10 years outdated, is barely bigger than in previous editions. 

P1002889Storm Ascher of Superpositions Gallery, with works by Ryan Cosbert and Marcus Leslie Singleton

“This is one of those things that always felt like a prestigious dream,” stated Storm Ascher, who opened her gallery Superpositions seven years in the past in a vogue pop-up area in downtown LA that was nonetheless cluttered with clothes. “I sold a Haleigh Nickerson piece for, like, $1,500, and broke even on my rent,” Asher recalled. “And now we have Nickerson showing at Frieze LA next year. It feels like a full circle moment.” The gallery’s program facilities artists from the African diaspora, and its two-person sales space options Ryan Cosbert and Marcus Leslie Singleton. The latter’s “Yellow Field in the Catskills” (2025) is drenched in a luminous hue (“butter yellow, the color of the summer,” stated Ascher, quoting the artist); it’s laborious to not really feel unfettered pleasure radiating from the canvas, even when the works are underpinned by intimate moments of pause and introspection.

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Artist Elisabeth Perrault on the Armory Present, the place she’s displaying a ceramic work with Carvalho Gallery

Throughout the disorienting Armory Present map, almost each sightline reveals work by artists who’ve by no means earlier than exhibited right here — a reminder that gala’s, with all their pitfalls, can nonetheless function a stage for brand spanking new voices. Montréal-based ceramic and textile artist Elisabeth Perrault first attended the truthful in 2023 as a customer, letting herself get misplaced within the endlessly dizzying rows of cubicles. This yr, her large set up “Ces géants qui se nourrissent de soleil (Sunflowers)” (2024) is the head-turning centerpiece of Carvalho Gallery’s presentation. Within the nonprofit part, the Storefront for Artwork and Structure boasts an array of whimsical sculptures of fruits, crops, and different natural components by the late artist Ming Fay: a rounded pear, a larger-than-life oyster, a pepper. Jessica Kwok, the group’s affiliate curator, is “99% sure” that Fay has by no means been included on the Armory earlier than — an irony contemplating the sculptor’s legacy in New York Metropolis’s public artwork circuit. Busy commuters wanting down at their screens may whiz previous his glass mosaics on the Delancey-Essex Road subway station free of charge, whereas truthful guests who shelled out for tickets cease to marvel at his mastery of froth, ceramic, and papier-mâché.

Over at Praxis Gallery, which has areas in New York and Buenos Aires, it’s laborious to seize a photograph of 4 of the six artists within the sales space — all displaying for the primary time on the truthful — in between playful exchanges, bursts of laughter, and interruptions from curious collectors. Amongst them is Josefina Concha, a Chilean artist whose color-soaked, machine-sewn textile items evoke pure varieties, from fungal shapes to the concentric circles of tree trunks.

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Left to proper: artists Darlene Charneco, Josefina Concha E., Elisa Lutteral, and Tamika Rivera with Director Carolina Constantino on the sales space of Praxis Gallery

Towards all odds, the vitality is palpable. “I walked in and thought, ‘It feels like 10 years ago,’” supplier Leo Koenig advised me. “And I mean that as a compliment.”

The wide-eyed enthusiasm, the fantastic style of the primary sale, the lingering gaze of a curator … maybe it’s all too trite, a part of the art-world-industrial advanced that retains the wheels turning whereas obfuscating its darker undertones and nagging inequalities. However what if we may distill that thrill into one thing new, channel the spark into a substitute for the market monopoly of the blue-chip?

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Elbert Joseph Perez along with his work “The Swimmers” (2025) at Chozick Household Artwork Gallery’s sales space

On the Armory, some exhibitors characterize the business’s altering tides, which have cautiously embraced collaborative fashions. Chozick Household Artwork Gallery, as an example, based simply final yr by Rachel Uffner alumna Rebekah Chozick, shares its Decrease Manhattan area with JDJ and Deanna Evans Tasks, alternating on month-to-month exhibitions. The gallery is making its debut on the truthful, as are the 2 painters in its sales space: Elbert Joseph Perez and Christopher Paz-Rivera (co-founder of the Puerto Rican gallery Embajada, which has been on the Armory earlier than as an exhibitor. Head spinning but?).

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Works by Elbert Joseph Perez and Christopher Paz-Rivera introduced by Chozick Household Artwork Gallery

Standing by his portray “The Swimmers,” depicting a rubber duck nonchalantly drifting previous the pair of fingers thrashing above the floor of the oil-slicked water, Perez stated he goals to seize the universality of human experiences and the necessity to empathize with others. The artist, who has a finger in a splint from his job as a mechanic and who shared that his first solo present was organized by his therapist, is candid and forthcoming about what it’s wish to be a first-timer on the truthful, admitting that he feels an “incongruence” between his skilled presence and his actual identification.

“I think if you were to tell my younger self that I’d be here, it wouldn’t compute at all,” he stated. “Everyone is really cool or really beautiful, or wandering around with something going on, but I have a feeling that we’re all in a state of anxiety. We’re all really weird, and we’re all putting on a performance.”

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