Untitled Art, Miami Beach Announces Special Projects and Programming High Lights For Seventh Edition 2018


Untitled Art, Miami Beach Announces Special Projects and Programming Highlights For Seventh Edition in 2018
New York, NY, October 16, 2018 – Untitled Art, Miami Beach announces details of special artist projects and programming highlights for the 2018 edition.
Since its inception, Untitled Art has produced a dynamic range of artist-focused special projects and programming that have included installations, performances, discussions, and interventions that reinforce its dedication to presenting a diverse selection of the most compelling contemporary art.
Special projects are selected by Untitled Art’s Artistic Director Omar Lopez-Chahoud, along with guest curator AGUAS and are presented in collaboration with exhibitors. This year’s special projects explore themes such as collectiveness, displacement,
migration, and precarious presence, transpiring from the artists and artworks presented by exhibitors.






SPECIAL PROJECTS
Presented by guest curator AGUAS – the artist-run curatorial platform – A Group of People Walking Through the Space consists of three sculptural installations gathering artists from Mexico City, Miami, Paris, Brussels and Buenos Aires. Situated within the fair’s layout and on the terrace overlooking the beach, this project deploys time-based works using mundane materials to reflect on aspects of collectiveness, presence and migration. Artists include Martin Belou, Julie Escoffier, Juan Gugger & Néphéli, Valentina Jager, Yeni Mao, Jillian Mayer, Rodrigue Mouchez, and Ben Van den Berghe & Alexey Shlyk.
Integrating text and portraits of a range of figures from music, film and art, to politics, Tomas Vu and Rirkrit Tiravanija’s ongoing project Do We Dream Under the Same Sky? returns to Untitled Art, Miami Beach. This ongoing series of performances and installations deal with the current environmental and political landscape that will include a live t-shirt printing performance. In this new iteration entitled THE REVOLUTION WILL COME IN EVERY DIRECTION, instead of printing with ink, performers will be silk-screening with modified ceramic clay sourced from four highly charged landscapes; Hiroshima, and Nagasaki, Japan, Santurce, Puerto Rico, and Juárez, México. The text will include: “LESS OIL MORE COURAGE,” “TOMORROW IS THE QUESTION,” “THE TYRANNY OF COMMON SENSE HAS REACHED ITS FINAL STAGE,” “THE INFAMOUS PRODUCT OF WESTERN CULTURE,” and others. Woven throughout the work, the theme of defiance presents both a call to action and perhaps an offering of peace. REVOLUTION WILL COME IN EVERY DIRECTION is presented by LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies, Columbia University.
Claudia Peña Salinas manages to synthesize and re-contextualize Mesoamerican knowledge in conjunction with recent art, and in turn, exercises a decolonization theory to art history. Teotihuacan I, presented by CURRO,
Also presented by LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies, Columbia University will be Michael Joo’s Huff Wall for Single Breath Transfer. The work consists of a wall, partially clad in glass, that contains units of perforated cinder block upon which a series of glass sculptures sit. The sculptures are created by the artist breathing into discarded paper and plastic bags that become ceramic molds for clear and colored molten glass. The sculptures’ placement suggests the use of broken glass vessels as obstructions atop property dividing wall, and the bags themselves are the same non-- descript size and material as those used for “huffing”. These objects together with the visually perforated mid-century baffle are presented as a dissected vitrine that stands as an objectification of place.
contemporary structures with ancestral wisdom – Aztec and Teotihuacan mythology.
juxtaposes modernist and
Consisting of a group of hanging objects whose colors gradient between blue-green
and white, glass bottle fragments, plastic caps, and other discarded artifacts are a
contemporary take on the role of materials such as jade that indigenous people used to
worship the deities of water and fertility.
Pep Duran’s Backlot Constructions, presented by RocioSantaCruz, is a site-specific
installation comprised of objects of various nature that creates a personal map. The
artist alters both personal and found objects and stacks them together to give them a
new life and the means to create multiple narratives. The objects, consisting of
materials such as wood, cardboard, ceramics, bronze, and aluminum, are fragments
assembled in order to create a new personal landscape. Duran’s project is supported
with help from
the Institut Ramon Llull.
Miami-based artist Felice Grodin’s Mezzbug is a virtual interactive, digital project that
employs the immersive technology of augmented reality (AR), and is accessible to
visitors using iOS devices. Influenced by geophilosophy, Grodin draws on her training
as an architect to explore the mutable within landscape, architecture, and her urban
surroundings. Grodin’s Mezzbug is presented by the Perez Art Museum (PAMM) and
will interact with the exterior entrance of Untitled Art, Miami Beach’s temporary
pavilion.
Kelley Johnson’s Slow Dance, presented by Upfor, is an immersive installation that will merge two and three dimensions through line and color. The installation will also be the location for the live broadcast of Untitled Art, Podcast, the fair’s innovative take on the traditional model of an art fair “talks” program (formally known as Untitled, Radio). Slow Dance’s mapping of line, color, and repeated geometric patterns will build a visual idea of waves and antennas. Rhythm is created and simultaneously broken up within this architectural space, enabling a kaleidoscope of interactions with Untitled Art, Podcast’s live programming. The full schedule for Untitled Art, Podcast at the fair will be announced shortly.


PROGRAMMING
Programming for the seventh edition of Untitled Art, Miami Beach is organized by Programming Director, Amanda Schmitt. Working with this year’s non-profit and cultural collaborators, and exhibitors, programming continues to address ideas of migration and collectiveness, as well as societal pressures and workplace ethics.
Presented in partnership with ArtCenter/SouthFlorida and curated by Larry Ossei- Mensah, Liziana Cruz’s We the News is a mobile newsstand that carries snacks and
beverages from Caribbean and African countries, as well as artist designed “zines” that re-tell the stories of New York-based Black immigrants and first-generation Black Americans. We the News aims to amplify these unique stories via a physical newsstand sharing immigrants’ stories in a way that is reflective and representative of their complexity and humanity.
The Miami Girls Foundation presents a project and durational performance consisting of a collection of red aprons that read: NEVER NOT WORKING. Created by the foundation’s founder, Ekaterina Juskowski, the apron stands
Additionally, the Foundation has invited 94 individuals from the Miami community to commit 30 minutes of labor during the fair as part of a durational performance that will take place in Lummus Park, at the entrance of the Untitled Art fair pavilion. The individuals will volunteer their labor by hanging white sheets on a clothes lines, a symbolic gesture to bring attention to undocumented and/or underpaid laborers throughout the Miami Area.
Lifelong Affirmations During Childhood Acts of Faggotry (L.A.D.C.A.F), by Sheldon Scott is an activation of gender performance, correction ceremonies, transactional identity, and value propositions. Informed by performances made by the artist as a child, this performance conjures the mythic space of gender, conformity, through spoken-word, choreography, and direct audience engagements. Lifelong Affirmations During Childhood Acts of Faggotry (L.A.D.C.A.F) is presented by CONNERSMITH. and will take place at their booth (A15) Tuesday, Dec. 4th - 3-6pm, Thursday, Dec. 6th - 12- 3pm and Saturday, Dec. 8 - 12-3pm.
Solidarity and invites spectators to assess their privilege by evaluating the concept of
“Never Not Working” in the context of workplace exploitation through wage theft, pay
States as part of the B1 domestic service workers visa program.
as a symbol of Feminist
equity issues, and, in particular, the trafficking of individuals brought to the United
Miami Girls Foundation will be stocked with the red #NeverNotWorking aprons as well
as attendants wearing the aprons and explaining the initiative. The act of wearing the
The booth for the
apron is in itself the performance.
Changing Room is an installation and performance presented by the Miami Area
organization, Girls’ Club, featuring dancer and choreographer Jenny Larsson in
collaboration with visual artists Lucinda Linderman, Michelle Weinberg and Natalie
Zlamalova. The project addresses the pressures on women to attract and/or repel
based on their appearance, as well as the uninhibited, unregulated self vs. the
promoted, branded public self. In the booth, artworks and garments by the three artists
will be animated by Larsson in a “changing room”. Spectators will be able to observe
her movement via a live feed from the room's security camera. When she emerges, she
will move throughout the space of the fair, dressing, and undressing in each of the
outfits,
Performances will take place
ending with a finale outside on the beach.
Tuesday, Dec. 4, 6:30pm; Thursday, Dec. 6, 5:30pm; and Saturday, Dec. 8, 5:30pm. Each performance will begin at the Girls Club booth (B21) and will end on the beach at the closing of the fair.

The seventh edition of Untitled Art, Miami Beach will take place December 5 - 9, 2018 on the beach at Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach.
For more information, please contact Jeffrey Walkowiak, Director of Communications, jwalkowiak@untitledartfairs.com or +1 646 405 6942.
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About Untitled Art
Untitled Art is an international, curated art fair founded in 2012 that focuses on balance and integrity across all disciplines of contemporary art. Untitled Art innovates the standard fair model by selecting a curatorial team to identify, and curate a selection of galleries, artist-run exhibition spaces, and non-profit institutions and organizations, in discussion with a site-specific, architecturally designed venue. The next editions of Untitled Art will take place on the beach at Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach, FL, December 5 – 9, 2018, and at the Palace of Fine Arts, 3601 Lyon Street in San Francisco, CA, January 18 – 20, 2019.

About Omar López-Chahoud
Omar López-Chahoud has been the Artistic Director and Curator of Untitled Art, Miami Beach since its founding in 2012. As an independent curator, López-Chahoud has curated and co-curated numerous exhibitions in the United States and internationally. He curated the Nicaraguan Biennial in March 2014 and has participated in curatorial panel discussions at Artists' Space, Art in General, MoMA PS1, and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City. He is currently a member of the Bronx Museum Acquisitions Committee and Prospect New Orleans Artistic Director’s Council. López-Chahoud earned MFAs from Yale University School of Art, and the Royal Academy of Art in London.

About Amanda Schmitt
Amanda Schmitt is Untitled Art's Director of Programming and Development. With extensive curatorial and gallery experience, she has held director positions as several galleries in New York City, most recently working with Marlborough Chelsea to develop the exhibition program for their Lower East Side gallery. Schmitt has organized over 40 artist performances, screenings and exhibitions at galleries and alternative exhibition spaces around the world including The Club (Tokyo), Finnish National Theatre (Helsinki), GRIN (Providence), SIGNAL (Brooklyn, NY), Marlborough Chelsea (New York, NY), The Suburban (Chicago, IL), A Thin Place (Berlin), among others, most recently developing and launching Untitled, Radio, Untitled’s live radio broadcast which will continue in Miami Beach and at Untitled, San Francisco, as well as Untitled, Cinema in San Francisco. She is currently a MOBIUS Curatorial Fellow.

About AGUAS
Mexico-based artists Ling Sepulveda, Julie Escoffier and Javier Peñalosa, and Brussels-based artists Aline Bouvy,
Martin Belou and Ben Van den Berghe, amongst others. For more information please visit: www.aguasssssss.com
Follow us on social media Instagram: @untitledartfair Twitter: @UNTITLEDmiami Facebook: @UNTITLEDartfair Snapchat: @untitled-art #untitledartfair #untitledartmiamibeach2018
Founded in 2017 with the intent to create a cultural and artistic bridge between artist
communities in Europe and Latin America, the first iteration of AGUAS brought together
Rodrigue Mouchez (curator), Clémence Seilles (set design), Alaric Garnier (graphic
design), Julia Barrios de la Morra (coordination), and
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For more information please visit:
www.untitledartfairs.com
General Information: December 4
Press and VIP Preview 1pm – 8pm

December 5 – 9
Open to the public
Open Wed–Sat: 11am – 7pm Open Sun: 11am – 5pm

Admission:
General Admission: $35
Discounted Admission (Seniors and Students): $25 Miami Beach residents: $25
Groups of 15 or more: $25 per person
Children under 12: FREE

Images:
Rirkrit Tiravanija and Tomas Vu
THE REVOLUTION WILL COME IN EVERY DIRECTION
2018
Silk screen on newspaper
Courtesy of the artists and LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies, Columbia University

Michael Joo
Single Breath Transfer (Ute)
Mold-blown glass
17" x 8.25" x 8.75"
Courtesy of the artist and
Leroy Neiman Center for Print Studies
Sheldon Scott
Untitled (lifetime affirmations during childhood acts of faggotry) 2018
graphite and risograph
20 x 15 inches
Courtesy of the artist and CONNERSMITH.

page6image10712
Claudia Peña Salinas
Acapulco Blue
2016
Brass, found tiles, dyed cotton string
228 x 96.5 in
Courtesy of the artist and CURRO 

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