Art Basel Miami Beach

Art Basel Miami Beach

Miami Beach Convention Center 1901 Convention Center Drive Miami BeachMiami Beach, FL 33139, USA Tuesday, November 29, 2022–Saturday, December 3, 2022

Annely Juda Fine Art is delighted to participate in Art Basel Miami Beach with a collection of major works by represented artists alongside important, historical works.

composition no. 141 by friedrich vordemberge-gildewart

Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart

Composition No. 141, 1942–1943

Price on Request

cloth sculpture by katsuhiro yamaguchi

Katsuhiro Yamaguchi

Cloth Sculpture, 1962

Price on Request

trial object in acrylic plastic by katsuhiro yamaguchi

Katsuhiro Yamaguchi

Trial object in acrylic plastic, ca. 1960

Price on Request

untitled (cloth sculpture) by katsuhiro yamaguchi

Katsuhiro Yamaguchi

Untitled (cloth sculpture), 1960

Price on Request

Our booth focuses on prime examples of works by represented gallery artists including Anthony Caro, David Hockney, David Nash, Leon Kossoff, Nigel Hall, Suzanne Treister, Katsuhiro Yamaguchi and a recent painting by Elizabeth Magill.  We will also show important works by twentieth-century avant-garde artists such as Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart (1899-1962), Alexander Rodchenko (1891 – 1956) and László Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946). Having recently taken on the Estate of British Constructionist artist Anthony Hill (1930 – 2020), we are delighted to present a series of his constructions dating between 1956-1965.   


As part of Kabinett, we will present Raku Kichizaemon XV Japanese tea bowls alongside works on paper by Kasimir Malevich, from our 2022 London exhibition. The Raku family has lived and worked on the same plot of land in Kyoto since 1586 and Jikinyu succeeded to the family headship as Raku Kichizaemon XV in 1981. His tea bowls are characterised by bold sculptural trimming and the creative use of the yakinuki firing method. These bowls are from his White Rock series and are in direct response to Malevich’s work: "As regards Malevich, my interest in him became all the greater in 2015 (…) It was his Black Square of 1915 owned by the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow. Its pure blackness has long affected me and has rooted itself deeply into my consciousness."