Melbourne Art Fair 2022 Galleries Announced

MELBOURNE ART FAIR ANNOUNCES GALLERY LIST AND PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE SUMMER 2022 EDITION

Australasia’s progressive forum for contemporary art and ideas, Melbourne Art Fair has announced its list of esteemed galleries taking part in the summer 2022 art fair, presenting solo shows and works of scale and significance from new and iconic artists.

From 17 to 20 February 2022, Australasia’s most prestigious art fair will bring together over 50 of the region’s leading galleries, spanning 7,000sqm at the DCM designed Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, alongside a program of conversations, special projects, commissions, and performance, supporting the exhibition and sale of contemporary art.

A dedicated edition of MAF Virtual will run in parallel with the fair, from 17 February – 3 March 2022, embracing a hybrid model with an expanded online program connecting galleries and audiences across the globe.

“Set to be the first Australian art fair since the start of the pandemic, and the first major event of the cultural calendar for 2022, Melbourne Art Fair is excited to once again connect galleries and their artists with collectors and the art loving public, and to resume its important role as a meeting place for the artworld,” says Melbourne Art Foundation CEO and Fair director Maree Di Pasquale.

“We are proud of the Fair’s resilience and digital innovation that was accelerated by the global pandemic, but there is no real substitute for seeing art and people physically. The return of Melbourne Art Fair brings a renewed sense of celebration and optimism in the artworld. Our gallery list encompasses the well-known and the emerging, as well as invited Indigenous-owned art centres, representing the most comprehensive overview of the Australian art market at any art fair,” Maree adds.

Returning galleries include: Anna Schwartz Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), Art Collective WA (Boorloo/Perth), Blackartprojects (Naarm/Melbourne), Chalk Horse (Warrang/Sydney), Daine Singer (Naarm/Melbourne), Darren Knight Gallery (Warrang/Sydney), Despard Gallery (nipaluna/Hobart), Flinders Lane Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), Fox Jensen (Warrang/Sydney, Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland), GAGPROJECTS (Tarnanya/Adelaide), GALLERY 9 (Warrang/Sydney), Jacob Hoerner Galleries (Naarm/Melbourne), James Makin Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), Jan Murphy Gallery (Meanjin/Brisbane), Kalli Rolfe Contemporary Art (Naarm/Melbourne), MARS Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), Martin Browne Contemporary (Warrang/Sydney), Murray White Room (Naarm/Melbourne), Nanda\Hobbs (Warrang/Sydney), Neon Parc (Naarm/Melbourne), Niagara Galleries (Naarm/Melbourne), Nicholas Thompson Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), Olsen Gallery (Warrang/Sydney, New York), Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery (Warrang/Sydney), Sophie Gannon Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), STATION (Naarm/Melbourne, Warrang/Sydney), Sullivan+Strumpf (Warrang/Sydney), Sutton Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), The Commercial (Warrang/Sydney), Tolarno Galleries (Naarm/Melbourne), Vivien Anderson Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), and William Mora Galleries (Naarm/Melbourne).

New galleries partaking in the fair for the first time are 1301SW (Naarm/Melbourne), Chapman & Bailey (Naarm/Melbourne), Justin Miller Art (Warrang/Sydney), MOORE CONTEMPORARY (Boorloo/Perth), The Egg & Dart (Dharawal Country/Thirroul), and Yavuz Gallery (Warrang/Sydney, Singapore).

Also making their debut in 2022 are 10 young galleries established after 2016, demonstrating the Fair’s commitment to creating a platform that supports the next generation of artistic practice. Galleries include: Antidote Projects (Warrang/Sydney), COMA (Warrang/Sydney), DISCORDIA (Naarm/Melbourne), Finkelstein Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), Gallery Sally Dan-Cuthbert (Warrang/Sydney), LON Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne), Michael Bugelli Gallery (nipaluna/Hobart), N.Smith Gallery (Warrang/Sydney), ReadingRoom (Naarm/Melbourne), and The Renshaws’ (Meanjin/Brisbane).

Additionally, the Fair welcomes five Indigenous-owned Art Centres, supported through the Melbourne Art Fair Indigenous Art Centre program (IACP) – an initiative that supports the participation of Art Centres at a fair of regional significance. IACP is funded by the Australian Government through the Indigenous Visual Arts Industry Support (IVAIS) and Restart Investment to Sustain and Expand (RISE) programs. Melbourne Art Fair has partnered with Agency Projects to deliver the program, and welcomes to the fair Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre (Yirrkala), Jilamara Arts & Crafts Association (Milikapiti), Warlayirti Artists (Balgo), Waringarri Aboriginal Art (Kununurra) and Milingimbi Art (Milingimbi).

Melbourne Art Fair returns with compelling presentations across an Artistic Program defined in 2022 by the theme of Djeembana/Place. Djeembana, a word of the Boon Wurrung, is a place for community; a meeting point for the exchange of stories, rituals and knowledge.

PROJECT ROOMS
PROJECT ROOMS is a non-commercial platform for experimentation, welcoming Gertrude Contemporary (Naarm/Melbourne) and LAST Collective (Naarm/Melbourne) with the presentation of artists that push the boundaries of artistic practice with performance and multi-media works.

BEYOND
Making its debut in 2022, BEYOND harnesses the monumental exhibition spaces within MCEC to present six large-scale installations and spatial interventions that respond to the theme djeembana/place. BEYOND is curated by independent curator and writer, Emily Cormack.

LIVE
Presented by Glenfiddich, LIVE is an onsite/offsite performance and sound art program captivating the imagination of the artworld and art loving public. Aligned with Glenfiddich’s maverick DNA, the inaugural program celebrates trailblazers, featuring Australia’s most boundary-pushing artists with critically significant performances both at the Fair and across the city.

VIDEO
Dedicated to the presentation of moving-image art from new and iconic international contemporary artists, VIDEO is curated by Nina Miall, Curator International Art, QAGOMA. The Fair welcomes for the first time participation from international galleries unable to physically exhibit within the main show sector, enabling dealers from across the globe to maintain a connection with Australasia’s active and growing collector-base during the ongoing pandemic.

CONVERSATIONS
Conversations is a platform for critical discourse and the sharing of ideas, bringing together cultural communities and thinkers from across the creative spectrum. The aim: to address the future of art and its relationship to interdisciplinary practices and the contemporary world through a series of talks and panels featuring artists, gallerists, curators, collectors, architects, critics, and cultural luminaries. Conversations will be developed by a Curatorium led by Melissa Bianca Amore, art critic, curator, contemporary philosopher, and Co-Founding Director of Re-Sited based in New York and Melbourne.

MELBOURNE ART FOUNDATION COMMISSION
The Melbourne Art Foundation 2022 Commission in partnership with ACMI (Naarm/Melbourne), and supported by Artwork Transport and Panasonic, has been awarded to Kaylene Whiskey, an important Australian contemporary artist on the rise represented by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery (Warrang/Sydney). Whiskey’s strong connection to Indulkana, her hometown, and her Yankunytjatjara heritage will be the foundation of the new single channel video work, responding to the Fair’s 2022 thematic of ‘djeembana/place’. The video work will be unveiled at the Fair, before moving to its permanent home in the ACMI collection.

Melbourne Art Fair Full Artistic Program with exhibiting artists will be announced January 2022.

Tickets go on sale Tuesday 5 October at 9:00am, with First Release ticket prices available until 2 November.

Melbourne Art Fair is owned and produced by the Melbourne Art Foundation, a systemically significant non-profit Australian arts organisation that leads the way in building audiences and markets for the work of Australia’s living artists. The Fair is supported by government partners Creative Victoria and the Australia Council for the Arts under the Visual Arts and Craft Strategy.

In 2022, Melbourne Art Fair partners with BetaCarbon to break new ground in carbon emission reduction for the artworld. Motivated by the global climate emergency, Melbourne Art Fair has committed to the offset of at least 300 tonnes of carbon, equivalent to the carbon captured by 18,000 trees in 10 years. Coupled with the Fair’s move to MCEC, a leading sustainable event destination, and an investment in reusable exhibition walling and LED lights, Melbourne Art Fair is now proudly Australasia’s most sustainable art fair.

For more information and to purchase tickets, please visit www.melbourneartfair.com.au/tickets

Melbourne Art Fair event details

Thursday 17 February
VIP Preview 2pm-5pm
Vernissage 5pm-9:30pm

Friday 18 February
VIP access 10am – 12pm
General admission 12pm-9pm

Saturday 19 February
General admission 10am-6pm

Sunday 20 February
General admission 10am-5pm

 

Visit the 2022 Gallery List

 

Image: Jacobus Capone, Echo & Abyss, 2018. Courtesy the artist and MOORE CONTEMPORARY, Boorloo/Perth.