How One Art Fair Is Getting Argentinian Artists Into Museum Collections Around the World – artnet News

Posted: June 5, 2017 at 8:00 am

More than 10 major museums, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and Madrids ReinaSofa, took home art from this years ArteBA fairand its all thanks to a little-known museum acquisitions program that is perhaps the most ambitious of its kind.

The program, supported by donations from Argentinian businesses and individual supporters, offers up to $10,000 each to participating museums to acquire work from the Buenos Aires art fair. This year, the Dallas Museum of Art bought a drawing by the Buenos Aires-based artist Horacio Zabala, while the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University chose a work by David Lamelas.

The ArteBA fair, whose 26th edition took place last weekend, has been making a push since 2013 to promote the countrys artists abroad through the initiative, with no smaller a goal than securing Argentine artists status in art history. Though ArteBAs program is not the only one of its kind, it does have an uncommonly extensive roster of participating museumsand an uncommonly deep bench of supporters, rather than the more typical backing of a single foundation.

The program coincides with a concerted effort by museums throughout the Western world to bolster their holdings of art from outside of Europe and North America. At ArteBA in 2015, New Yorks Guggenheim Museum acquired Asamble (Assemble), a 2015 performance work by Amalia Pica (born in 1978 in Neuqun). The piece has since been staged in London and in New York.

Amalia Pica, Asamble (2015). Courtesy Guggenheim Museum.

AlthoughArgentina has given birth to major 20th-century artists like Len Ferrari, Lucio Fontana, and Liliana Porter, efforts to get the countrys contemporary artists on curators and collectors radars are necessary because of its history of relative isolation. Buenos Aires is a long way from many of the worlds art capitals, and its economy has suffered due to rampant inflation and oppressive political regimes.

National and local politicians in recent years have risen to the challenge, partly by providing financial support for Argentinian galleries to participate in international art fairs. They are also investing additional money in bringing the international art world to Argentina. Last year, the government of Buenos Aires teamed up with the massive Art Basel fair to become the inaugural site of theArt Basel Cities initiative.

This year, the Dallas Museum of Art used the fairs acquisitions program to fill in a gap in its holdings. Anna Katherine Brodbeck, the museums assistant curator of contemporary art, picked out a drawing by Horacio Zabala (born in Buenos Aires in 1943 and still living in the city), on offer from Henrique Faria Gallery of New York and Buenos Aires.

Zabala came of age during the beginning of the so-called dirty wars with the installment of a military government, Brodbeck said. He was dealing with government censorship and oppression in a conceptual vein.

Davis Lamelas, Bueno Aires No Existe / Buenos Aires NExiste Pas (2011). Courtesy ArteBA.

Carla Acevedo Yates, assistant curator at the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University, in East Lansing, chose a work by David Lamelas, Buenos Aires no Existe, Buenos Aires Nexiste Pas(2011), also from Henrique Faria.

The title of the work quotes the first line of a letter written by Marcel Duchamp to his brother while the artist was spending time in the city. The acquisition comes at an opportune moment: Yates is organizing an exhibition of Lamelass work at the Broad Art Museum next June. Our museum is just five years old, Acevedo Yates said, so were just building our strategy to collect contemporary art.

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How One Art Fair Is Getting Argentinian Artists Into Museum Collections Around the World - artnet News

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