TEFAF New York

TEFAF New York

643 Park Avenue New York, NY 10065, USA Thursday, May 5, 2022–Tuesday, May 10, 2022 Preview: Friday, May 6, 2022, 1 p.m.–8 p.m. Booth Historic Room 208


 At TEFAF New York 2022 Dickinson presents Visible and Tangible Form, looking at the far-reaching impact of the Bauhaus school of art and design in  Europe and the Americas, its migration from Europe to the Americas in the  form of offshoot institutions, such as the Chicago New Bauhaus, and the rise  of related movements, most notably Concrete and Neo-Concrete art. The  artists whose work features on this year’s stand shared an interest in simple  geometry, pattern and relief, and a reliance on industrial materials. Most  crucially, all believed in the marriage between functionality and beauty. 

 Hungarian-French artist Victor Vasarely is credited with originating the Op Art  movement, whose visual effects can be seen in BI-HOLD (1958-73). And  fellow Hungarian László Moholy-Nagy, who spent time in The Netherlands,  Britain and France before joining the architects Walter Gropius and Mies van  der Rohe in establishing the New Bauhaus School in Chicago, is represented  at the fair by Komposition (1935). Bauhaus professor Josef Albers explored  colors in his Homage to the Square series and led the painting program at  Vermont’s Black Mountain College, while Jean Crotti translated emotions into  shapes and colors with geometric abstractions such as Orchestration (1924).  

Also typical of Bauhaus and Concrete art is an interest in industrial materials.  Ukraine-born Alexander Archipenko’s Seated Black (c. 1956) is a unique  example of this design in hand-tooled aluminium. Archipenko first conceived  the design in 1936, the year before he was invited by Moholy-Nagy to join the  New Bauhaus School faculty. Further west, Austrian-born Herbert Bayer  established himself in Aspen, Colorado, where he designed a number of  ultra-modern, Bauhaus-inspired structures. The stand also features layered  reliefs in geometric designs by Gottfried Honegger, Jean Gorin, Mary Martin  and others.     

 Concrete art was popularized in Latin America in part thanks to Max Bill, the  Bauhaus-trained Swiss artist, architect and graphic designer, who organized  the movement’s first international exhibition in Basel in 1944 and was  honored with a 1951 retrospective at the São Paulo Museum of Modern Art.  Lygia Clark, Lygia Pape and Hélio Oiticica, along with fellow artists, led a  Brazilian splinter group that emerged from the Latin American Concrete Art  movement, and which became known as Neo-Concrete. All three have work  featured in Visible and Tangible Form. The stand is designed with layered  white relief panels that show off the multicolored geometry of the artworks  exhibited.  

Running concurrently with the fair, Dickinson New York will exhibit a further  selection of works by artists with ties to the international Concrete Art  movement. Brazilian Concrete Art is represented by pieces including Ivan  Serpa’s gouache and collage Portfolio of 5 Concrete Compositions; two  works in tempera on paper by Victor Magariños, and two geometric, kinetic  gouaches by Op Art innovator Luiz Sacilotto. Ilya Bolotowsky brought  elements of Russian Constructivism and Neoplasticism to New York following  a 10-month European visit in 1932, while Japanese-American Tadasky first  learned about Western art and the Bauhaus style through books. And  American Leon Polk Smith, one of the founders of the Hard Edge school,  influenced the subsequent generation with paintings and collages such as  Untitled (1976)