Art Basel announces exhibitor list for 2021 in-person Basel edition, with 273 leading galleries
Art Basel in Basel 2019 © Art Basel.
BASEL
.-Art Basel announced the list of exhibitors taking part in the 2021 edition of the fair in Basel. 273 leading galleries from across the globe will present the highest quality of works across all media, from rare and historical masterpieces to new works by todays emerging artistic voices. A strong line-up of galleries from around Europe will be joined by new and returning exhibitors from across the world, including Asia, North and South America, the Middle East, and Africa.
24 galleries are participating for the first time, including: Ben Brown Fine Arts, with exhibition spaces in Hong Kong, London, and Palm Beach; Bodega, Bridget Donahue, Company Gallery, Garth Greenan Gallery, Kasmin, Lyles & King, Mignoni, Queer Thoughts, and Venus Over Manhattan from New York; Cardi Gallery, with exhibition spaces in Milan and London; Emalin and Union
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Betty (Gazda-Smith) beloved wife, mother and grandmother.
After a life-long hard fought battle with autoimmune diseases and their complications, Betty passed away on May 2, 2021 at her Sanibel condo. Preceded in death by her parents Joseph and Rose Gazda. Survived by husband Jerry Smith, son Matthew Smith (Maggie), daughter Rachel Mullin (Jonathan), grandchildren Cole Mullin, Kieran Mullin, Rosalie Smith, Leona Mullin, brother Thomas Gazda and sisters Dianne Gazda and Christine Kramer (Christopher), and many nieces and nephews.
Born in Minneapolis in 1957 and raised in St Anthony Village, Minnesota. She started her career in medicine at the early age of 16 working in the research labs at the University of MN. Betty graduated valedictorian Totino Grace High School in 1975. She worked multiple jobs while taking a full course load and put herself through college graduating summa cum laude from the University of Minnesota in 1979 with a Bachelor’s of Science in Biology with minors in
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This week, Frieze makes its return to New York. Scuttled last year due to the coronavirus pandemic, the five-day event will be the city’s first in-person, single-venue art fair since the Armory Show last spring (and Frieze’s first showing since Frieze L.A. in February 2020).
Much about Frieze New York will be familiar to regulars, from the wide-ranging group of participating galleries to the engaging program of discussions, screenings, and other activations planned; but perhaps more still will be slightly modified to suit our current moment. (For one thing, this year’s visitors will not commute to Randall’s Island.)
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‘Everyone has had a very different experience of the last year,’ says Rebecca Ann Siegel, director of Americas and content at Frieze. Galleries have struggled – some more so than others. But after a year in which every gallery has had to become something of an island, there is something symbolic about the shift of Frieze New York (5–9 May) from its usual home on Randall’s Island on the east side of Manhattan to the Shed, Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s vast cultural centre at Hudson Yards, eight miles south-west. ‘We’re really excited about coming together at the Shed,’ Siegel says.
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