IBRAHIM EL-SALAHI

Frieze Sculpture 2021: A vibrant, political and cross-generational return – Wallpaper – Harriet Lloyd-Smith
 
Frieze Sculpture. Meditation Tree
Regents Park, London-
14 September – 31 October 2021
 

 

Frieze Sculpture 2021 (14 September – 31 October) has landed in Regent’s Park, London. 

 

With recent restrictions only increasing the appetite for outdoor art consumption, Frieze Sculpture 2021 is set to draw quite the crowd to Regent’s Park. From 13 – 17 October 2021, the exhibition will overlap with Frieze London, as the fair marks a momentous return to the capital. 

 

This year’s striking sculptural offerings confront themes including architecture, displacement, geopolitical power structures, environmental concerns and endangered futures. Participants are international and intergenerational, including Rasheed Araeen, Daniel Arsham, Anthony Caro, Gisela Colón, José Pedro Croft, Carlos Cruz-Diez, Stoyan Dechev, Ibrahim El-Salahi, Divya Mehra, Annie Morris, Isamu Noguchi, Jorge Otero-Pailos, Solange Pessoa, Vanessa da Silva, Tatiana Wolska, Rose Wylie and Yunizar. 

 

‘SCULPTURAL CONVERSATIONS ACROSS TIME AND GEOGRAPHY’

 

‘Each Frieze Sculpture installation brings such a different picture of sculptural practice and it’s heartening that this year is especially global, including artists who herald from South America, South and North Africa, Indonesia, Pakistan, the USA and Canada, and from across Europe, says Clare Lilley, director of programme at Yorkshire Sculpture Park, who is creating Frieze Sculpture for the ninth year. ‘Although the artists span three generations, I see exciting sculptural conversations across time and geography, and while many sculptures here relate to social and environmental concerns, there is much-heightened colour and dextrous handling of material, resulting in an overall sense that is celebratory.’

 

In an exciting new addition, Serpentine Galleries and Sumayya Vally, founder of architectural practice Counterspace (profiled in Wallpaper’s May 2021 issue) will present Fragment of Serpentine Pavilion for Frieze Sculpture Park, 2021, marking the first time a public institution has participated in Frieze Sculpture. As Lilley concludes: ‘As we learn to live with the pandemic and emerge into public spaces, Frieze Sculpture 2021 allows people to come together in safety and with pleasure and is a tonic for the mind, body and soul.’

16 September 2021
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