“The struggle in Ukraine feels a lot nearer to us right here than additional west,” says Markus Huber, managing director of the Vienna Modern truthful, held 11 to 14 September within the Austrian capital and now in its eleventh 12 months. As prior to now, the truthful focuses on Japanese Europe, with galleries from Poland, Ukraine, Slovakia, Slovenia, Lithuania, Latvia, Hungary, Croatia and from Austria itself among the many 97 exhibitors from 24 international locations.
“I left Ukraine after the struggle began, three years in the past, and now dwell and work in Vienna,” says the artist Kateryna Lysovenko, who gained the truthful’s Münze Österreich Prize for her large-scale, brightly-hued figurative work. She is represented by TBA gallery from Warsaw, based only one 12 months in the past. It was considered one of ten galleries in an space dubbed Zone1, dedicated to rising artists who’re both Austrian or who work there, curated by Aliaksei Barysionak. “Sure, this can be a very problematic time for the area,” he says. “However I wish to give a voice and an area to artists who’re from this zone.” Certainly, all of the galleries from Central and Japanese Europe expressed their dismay on the disaster on the jap borders of their area, however appeared decided to proceed to advertise their artists. “If Ukraine falls, Russia gained’t cease. We mustn’t quit, as a result of in any other case Putin will simply proceed on to Berlin!” stated Lysovenko.
As for gross sales, expectations weren’t excessive. Earlier than the beginning of the truthful, Markus Huber had warned exhibitors that companies in Austria had been seeing vital downturns, which could properly impression on them as properly. “The scene is de facto shaky,” he admitted. By the second day some galleries had offered no works in any respect, and people who had offered tended to be at very low worth factors.
Ani Molnár Gallery of Budapest reported 4 gross sales on the primary day, together with a geometrical portray by Tamás Konok for €14,500. Sofija Milenoković of the Serbian Rima Gallery offered 4 works by Nina Ivanović, fabricated from painted wire primarily based on panorama images, at costs between €800 and €2,000; the most important work, priced at €7,000, had not discovered a purchaser on the second day.
Vienna Modern additionally has a bit for extra historic works, Context, and inevitably one sales space was dedicated to Hermann Nitsch, the chief of the Vienna Actionist college, whose guts-and-gore, “6-day play” had its final iteration this 12 months. 4 works, sometimes in splashed scarlet and gray, had been priced between €65,000 and €250,000: none had offered by the top of the second day.
Among the many non-eastern European exhibitors was Jerome O Drisceoil, proprietor of Dublin’s Inexperienced on Purple Gallery, displaying Alan Butler’s Procedural Landscapes for Android ( Yosemite Nationwide Park v. 1 (2023), a generative digital work in an version of three, was priced at €9,000 and Damien Flood’s portray Everlasting Backyard (2024). “Most cubicles listed below are going through Japanese Europe, I’m right here to get them to have a look at Eire too,” says O Drisceoil cheerfully, regardless of having chalked up no gross sales. He provides that he had extra success on the similar truthful prior to now.
“Vienna is a bridge between western and jap Europe,” Huber says: “Central and Japanese Europe will stay our fundamental focus. If you assume that 85% of vacationers come right here for tradition, it can be crucial that we must always have a powerful truthful within the area,” he concludes.