The solo-artist fair's seventh edition. Across widened aisles and within more spacious booths, over 90 galleries from 5 continents mount a dynamic survey of emerging and innovative contemporary art positions, spotlighting artists from 30 nations.
VOLTA NY returns downtown to its SoHo sanctuary in the solo-artist fair's seventh edition in New York, from March 6 - 9, 2014. Across widened aisles and
within more spacious booths in the Mercer Street loft, over 90 galleries from 5 continents mount a
dynamic survey of emerging and innovative contemporary art positions, spotlighting artists from 30
nations.
Young talent arrives with formidable force in this year's edition, with highlights
including: Paweł Śliwiński (Beers Contemporary, London), who echoes Neue Sachlichkeit/New
Objectivity in his deeply psychological paintings; Hyon Gyon's lush, melted-fabric compositions of
traditional Korean shamanistic imagery (Shin Gallery, New York), following her participation in the
Tokyo Wonder Wall 10th Anniversary at Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo; monumental
photography by Mohau Modisakeng (BRUNDYN+, Cape Town), featured in the inaugural Biennale
International d'Art Contemporain, Fort-de-France (Martinique); and a site-specific installation by New
York-based Armenian painter Anna Navasardian (Galerie Andreas Binder, Munich). Their presence
is balanced by seasoned cultural purveyors, including Hungarian-Syrian artist Róza El-
Hassan (INDA Gallery, Budapest), who represented Hungary in the 1997 Venice Biennale and
enjoyed a major retrospective In-Between at Kunstmuseum Basel in 2012, in addition to her ongoing
project Syrian Voices with activist Shadi Al Shhadeh; veteran color theorist Siri Berg (Hionas
Gallery, New York), whose 1986 seminal show Black & White 1976-1981 at the American Swedish
Historical Museum (Philadelphia) was recently restaged at the gallery; and "auto-portraitist" Hans
Witschi (Galerie Römerapotheke, Zurich), whose three-decades-plus exhibition history includes
Kunsthalle Palazzo (Liestal) and the Swiss Institute (New York), plus an exhaustive 2012 artist
monograph.
A diverse array of artists this year incorporate printmaking and creative use of paper in their
respective works, such as: renowned "urban archaeologist" Willie Cole (beta pictoris gallery/Maus
Contemporary, Birmingham, AL), whose emotive upcycled assemblages and steam-iron printmaking
are subject of his two-year nationally-touring career survey Complex Conversations: Willie Cole
Sculptures and Wall Works; recent Columbia University MFA graduate Jin Joo Chae (Julie Meneret
Contemporary Art, New York), whose politically charged printmaking was featured in News/Prints:
Printmaking & the Newspaper at IPCNY; Ala Ebtekar (Charlie James Gallery, Los Angeles), alumni
of Tim Rollins and K.O.S., whose West Coast/Persian cultural mashup is in The Beginning of Thinking
is Geometric at Maraya Art Centre (Sharjah) and part one of the three-part Proximities series at the
Asian Art Museum (San Francisco); and Katsutoshi Yuasa (YUKI-SIS, Tokyo), who combines
traditional ukiyo-e woodcut printing with digital photography and participated in the International Print
Biennale 2011 (Newcastle Upon Tyne).
VOLTA NY
Over 50 returning exhibitors reaffirm VOLTA NY as a platform for salient contemporary art voices.
Notable galleries for 2014 include: Kevin Kavanagh (Dublin), presenting a storytelling series
by Sonia Shiel, current ISCP NY artist-in-residence and recipient of Ireland's 2014 Arts Council
Project Award; Laura Bulian Gallery (Milan), highlighting career Conceptualist Vyacheslav Akhunov,
whose cultural investigations were featured in dOCUMENTA (13) and the 2013 Venice Biennale's
Central Asian Pavilion; contemporary Bahamanian art hub Popopstudios (Nassau), spotlighting
"everyday" assemblages and mixed-media works by founder John Cox; Frederieke Taylor
Gallery (New York), revealing environmental concerns of downtown stalwart Christy Rupp, whose
seminal public art projects factored into the 2012 exhibition Come Closer: Art Around the Bowery,
1969-1989 at the New Museum; Galerie Heike Strelow (Frankfurt am Main), combining sociopolitical
commentary and black humor via Florian Heinke, who curated System of Diplomatic Chaos at
Kunstverein Wiesbaden last year; and CONNERSMITH. (Washington DC), featuring two new series in
gouache and collage on contemporary social and racial politics by Zoë Charlton, who participated
in The Bearden Project at the Studio Museum in Harlem, plus Wilmer Wilson IV's durational
performance From My Paper Bag Colored Heart and related works in photography and sculpture.
A total of five subway lines provide easy access to VOLTA NY: six blocks east from Spring Street
Station (C/E Trains); three blocks west from Spring Street Station (6 Train); or two blocks south from
Prince Street Station (N/R Trains). Plus, a regular shuttle bus service will run to and from The Armory
Show and VOLTA NY, from Thursday, March 6, through Sunday, March 9, during fair hours.
AVERNA sponsors VOLTA NY's debut vernissage this year, serving the Italian spirit brand's
signature cocktails on Thursday, March 6, from 6 to 9 pm.
In addition, visitors can purchase a combination ticket for both VOLTA NY (regular $15) and our
sister fair The Armory Show (regular $30) online for a discounted price of only $40. VIP attendees
enjoy shared VIP access with VOLTA NY and The Armory Show. This year's edition coincides with
the opening of the 2014 Whitney Biennial.
VOLTA NY gratefully acknowledges its 2014 Official Partner Hotel, Mondrian SoHo.
VOLTA was founded in Basel in 2005 by dealers Kavi Gupta (Chicago), Ulrich Voges (Frankfurt),
and Friedrich Loock (Berlin). The tenth edition in Basel, VOLTA10, will coincide with Basel Art Week
and will be held from June 16-21, 2014.
Media contact:
Brian Fee press@voltashow.com
Press preview: Thursday, March 6, 2–5 pm
Public vernissage: Thursday 6–9pm
82Mercer
Between Spring and Broome Streets New York, NY 10012
Hours:
Friday–Saturday 10am–8pm
Sunday 10am–5pm
ADMISSION:
General Admission $15
Students $10
Groups (10+) $10
VOLTA NY + The Armory Show
Dual Pass $40