11 London Gallery Shows to See During an Unusual Frieze Week, From Laure Prouvost’s Surreal Health Checkpost to Danh Vo’s Plant Sculptures

It’s October, and that means it’s Frieze Week in London. As usual, galleries around the city are showcasing the best of their rosters, despite the very unusual circumstances of 2020.

Back in July, it was announced that the physical Frieze fairs would be cancelled. By now, it seems almost unimaginable that holding a large event inside an unventilated white tent ever seemed like a good idea. But while the concourse in Regent’s Park was a convenient place to bump into the who’s who of the art world, London’s vibrant art scene always really happened outside of the circus tent anyway.

This week, booze-fueled festivities such as gallery openings and swanky dinners are out; face masks are in. And with many galleries requiring visitors to book slots for exhibitions in advance, art lovers will have to be strategic about their approach.

Here are our picks for what to make room for in the schedule.

Laure Prouvost: Re-dit-en-un-in-learning CENTER” at Lisson Gallery
October 6–November 7, 2020

Laure Prouvost’s , (2019-2020) © Laure Prouvost, courtesy Lisson Gallery.

The French artist will transform the gallery into a “mock-pedagogical, health-focused institutional setting,” inviting viewers to learn and un-learn a new lexicon and visual language created by Prouvost.

“Rashid Johnson: Waves” at Hauser & Wirth
October 6–December 23

Rashid Johnson, (2020). Photo by Martin Parsekian.

New paintings and ceramic tile mosaics by the American artist will fill both of the mega-gallery’s London spaces. The work responds to anxiety and escapism, themes that recur in Johnson’s oeuvre but are also very relevant to the socio-political climate of 2020.

“Helen Cammock: I Decided I Want to Walk”
Through October 17

Installation view, Helen Cammock, “I Decided I Want to Walk,” Kate MacGarry, 2020, courtesy the artist and Kate MacGarry, London. Photo by Angus Mill.

The Turner Prize-winner’s debut exhibition at the gallery includes Cammock’s most recent film, Drawing on the work of poets and philosophers from Audre Lorde to Jonathan Crary, the film ruminates on the politics of idleness and who gets to be lazy in a time when the spiraling demands for hyper-productivity are being pulled into question.

“Tavares Strachan: In Plain Sight” at Marian Goodman Gallery
Through October 24

Tavares Strachan, detail of (2020). Photo by Lewis Ronald.

For his first major UK solo exhibition, Strachan has created an unforgettable immersive experience. Backdropped and enhanced by new and existing painting and sculptural work, the captivating 45-minute journey involves a theatrical and operatic performance inspired by the artist’s research into marginalized historical figures such as the African American explorer Matthew Henson, the first person to reach the North Pole.

Oliver Beer: Oma” at Thaddaeus Ropac, Ely House
Through October 24, 2020

Installation view, Oliver Beer, “Oma,” Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, London. © Oliver Beer. Courtesy Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, London • Paris • Salzburg. Photo: Eva Herzog

This deeply personal exhibition looks at the influence and knowledge passed between generations in families. Beer, who often mines his own family history in his work, delves into the story of his grandmother, who began composing music late in her life.

Gillian Wearing: Lockdown” at Maureen Paley
Through October 25

Gillian Wearing, (2020). Courtesy of the artist and Maureen Paley.

In a series of self-portraits created during lockdown, Wearing perfectly captures moments of malaise and melancholy, quietude, contemplation, and occasionally, contentment. Another timely addition to her oeuvre is the sculpture , a title alluding to the theoretical masks we don to fashion identities as well as the literal face shields keeping us safe.

“Anne Tallentire: As happens” at Hollybush Gardens
Through October 31

Anne Tallentire, (2020). Installation view, “As happens,” Hollybush Gardens, London, 2020. Photo by Andy Keate.

In this show of new work, Tallentire continues her ongoing interrogation of the invisible social systems that create conditions of precariousness and contingency.

Danh Vo: Chicxulub” at White Cube, Bermondsey
Through November 2, 2020

Danh Vo “Chicxulub,” White Cube Bermondsey. © the artist. Photo © White Cube (Theo Christelis).

Vo has brought nature inside the gallery. Trees and plants reference the setting where the artist made this body of work, his studio and farm in East Germany. In this large show, Vo continues his examination of Catholicism, global branding, and flora.  

Sung Tieu: What is your |x|?” at Emalin
Through November 7, 2020

Installation view, Sung Tieu, What is your |x|?, Emalin, London. © Sung Tieu. Courtesy of the artist and Emalin, London Photography: Plastiques

For her first solo exhibition with Emalin, the Berlin-based artist has built a gallery inside the gallery, resembling a cross between a prison, a bank vault, and a site of a dream. The works, all on sheets of cut stainless steel, speak to Tieu’s research into psychologies and their potential for manipulation.

Nathaniel Mary Quinn” at Gagosian
Through November 21

Nathaniel Mary Quinn, (2020). © Nathaniel Mary Quinn, courtesy of Gagosian.

Quinn’s first solo show at Gagosian’s London outpost presents the artist’s shape-shifting portraits rendered in luscious charcoal, gouache, and oil paint. The compositions, which appear collaged, are informed by flashes of the artist’s own memories and encounters.

Dana Schutz: Shadow of a Cloud Moving Slowly” at Thomas Dane
Through December 19

Installation view, “Dana Schutz: Shadow of a Cloud Moving Slowly” at Thomas Dane Gallery.

For her inaugural solo show in London with gallery veteran Thomas Dane, Schutz’s new paintings and sculptures are populated with bedraggled, goblin-like characters who fill the space with their contorted physicality and obvious psychological turmoil.


Source: Exhibition - news.artnet.com


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