Spring Brings Outsider Art Fair to New York for the First Time

  • NEW YORK, New York
  • /
  • March 19, 2014

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Henry Darger, Lagorian Rangers (Calvernian Girl and Boy Scouts), n.d., Watercolor and pencil on paper, 8 x 12 inches (20.3 x 30.5 cm). Andrew Edlin Gallery

For twenty-one years, the Outsider Art Fair has been the world’s foremost annual show of Outsider, Self-Taught, and Folk Art. And for twenty-one years, the Outsider Art Fair took place in winter. In 2014, for the first time, the Fair will take place in the spring, from May 8 – 11 at Chelsea’s Center 548, the former home of the Dia Art Foundation, located at 548 West 22nd Street New York, NY 10011. These dates coincide with the New York edition of Britain’s Frieze Art Fair.

Wide Open Arts is pleased to announce its exhibitors for the 2014 Outsider Art Fair. OAF has always showcased work by artists who have been obscure, neglected, or invisible. Eleven galleries who’ve been with the Fair since the beginning will return, offering a mix of the newly discovered with works by legendary outsiders. For the first time since 1999, Philadelphia’s seminal Fleisher/Ollman Gallery will be present. Other dealers from the original lineup include Ames, American Primitive, Bonheur, Henry Boxer, Carl Hammer, Cavin-Morris, Gilley’s, Marion Harris, Ricco/Maresca, and Luise Ross.For anyone who has been paying attention to what’s going on in the art world the Outsider Art Fair is the must-see event,” says Andrew Edlin CEO of Wide Open Arts.

ALCIDES PEREIRA DOS SANTOS, Varig, 1999. Acrylic on canvas, 34.25 x 75.98 inches (87 x 193 cm). Andrew Edlin Gallery

With a total of 46 exhibitors from around the world, this year’s Fair features artists from countries including the Democratic Republic of the Congo (where Rigobert Nimi makes intricate, science-fiction-inspired sculptures from recycled industrial materials, exhibited by Galerie Degbomey in Paris), China (where Guo Fengyi made mystical drawings shown by Paris gallerist Christian Berst, who championed her work long before they were featured at the 2013 Venice Biennale), and Brazil (where Alcides Pereira dos Santos made his biblically-inspired, boldly geometric paintings of nature and technology, exhibited by Sao Paulo’s Galeria Estação).

 

Yukiko Koide returns with her dynamic artists from Japanese workshops, and for the first time Megumi Ogita Gallery, also from Tokyo, will be displaying the calligraphic drawings of Shoko Kanazawa. And Paris’ Hervé Perdriolle, who played a pivotal role in curating the Cartier Foundation’s groundbreaking Histoires de Voir exhibition in 2012, also makes his New York debut with a booth comprised solely of self-taught artists from India.

A.G. Rizzoli, Alfredo Capobianco and Family Symbolically Sketched Palazzo del Capobianco, 1937, ink on rag paper, 25 x 38, Ames Gallery

 

The 2014 Outsider Art Fair also welcomes new exhibitors like Marlborough Chelsea (soloing the embroidered cut-and-paste works by skateboarder Tony Cox), Hirschl & Adler (with drawings by Edward Deeds, a longtime Missouri state mental hospital patient whose work was rescued from a roadside trash heap) and Zieher Smith (featuring vernacular photographs from their recent acclaimed Photo Brut exhibition).

 

The Outsider Art Fair opens Thursday, May 8. God’s Love We Deliver, the NYC metropolitan area’s leading provider of life-sustaining meals and nutrition counseling for people living with severe illness, will be the evening’s beneficiary. Admission for early access, from 3:00-6:00 p.m., is $100. The general Vernissage benefiting God’s Love We Deliver is from 6:00-9:00, with an admission price of $50.  Daily tickets for the remainder of the show will be $20 and a pass for the full run $50. Hours are Friday, May 9th and Saturday, May 10th from 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. and on Sunday May 11th from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. For more information please contact info@outsiderartfair.com or 212-337-3338 Please visit www.OutsiderArtFair.com

 

 

2014 Exhibitors

 

American Primitive Gallery, New York

Ames Gallery, Berkeley

Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York

Baumann + Muksian, Basel/San Francisco

Carl Hammer Gallery, Chicago

Cavin-Morris Gallery, New York

Chris Byrne, Dallas

Creative Growth Art Center, Oakland

Dean Jensen Gallery, Milwaukee

Fleisher/Ollman Gallery, Philadelphia

Galeria Estação, São Paulo

Galerie Anne de Villepoix, Paris

Galerie Bonheur, St. Louis

Galerie Bourbon Lally, Bourdon, Haiti

Galerie Christian Berst, Paris

Galerie Degbomey, Fleurance, France

Galerie du Marché, Lausanne

Galerie Hervé Perdriolle Art Contemporain Inde(s), Paris

Galerie St. Etienne, New York

Galerie Toxic, Luxembourg

Gallery at HAI, Long Island City

Garde Rail Gallery, Austin

George Jacobs Self-Taught Art, Newport

Giampietro Works of Art, New Haven

Gilley’s Gallery, Baton Rouge

Henry Boxer Gallery, London

Hill Gallery, Birmingham, MI

Hirschl & Adler, New York

Institute 193, Lexington, KY

Judy A. Saslow Gallery, Chicago

Just Folk, Summerland, CA

Karen Lennox Gallery, Chicago

Laura Steward Projects, Santa Fe

Lindsay Gallery, Columbus

Luise Ross Gallery, New York

Marion Harris, New York

Marlborough Chelsea, New York

Megumi Ogita Gallery, Tokyo

Pan American Art Projects, Miami

Pardee Collection, Iowa City

Pure Vision Arts, New York

Ricco/Maresca Gallery, New York

Rizomi Art Brut, Turin

Tanner Hill Gallery, Chattanooga

Yukiko Koide Presents, Tokyo

Zieher Smith, New York

 

 




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