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Frieze Week London 2024

Frieze Sculpture 2024: An Expanded Field

With performances and a new Official Digital Guide from Bloomberg Connects, the annual show of 3D works is branching out

BY Vaishna Surjid in Frieze London , Frieze Week Magazine | 08 OCT 24

Frieze Sculpture is on the cusp of its teenage years. Now 12 years old, the playful, rebellious outdoor exhibition returns to The Regent’s Park to showcase 22 artists from across five continents. As usual, Frieze Sculpture this year comprises a careful juxtaposition of old and new, historical and contemporary; artists include Anna Boghiguian, Leonora Carrington, Theaster Gates, Frances Goodman and Yoshitomo Nara.

For the first time, Frieze Sculpture is supported by Bloomberg Connects. As Official Digital Guide, the Bloomberg Connects app allows a global audience to engage with the display. Unique content on the app includes an exclusive audio tour with curator Fatoş Üstek and introductions from all participating artists as well as an interactive map and video content with exhibiting artists, including İnci Eviner, Fani Parali and Kirstine Roepstorff.

Bloomberg Connects app at Frieze Sculpture 2024 with Libby Heaney, 'Ent- (non-earthly delights)' (2024)
Bloomberg Connects app at Frieze Sculpture 2024 with Libby Heaney, Ent- (non-earthly delights), 2024. Photograph: Linda Nylind

Following on from last year’s ‘expanded notion of sculpture’, for 2024 Üstek has selected artists whose practices bleed across media and genres, expanding into sound, light and augmented reality. This year’s exhibition sees new commissions, works in diverse materials (including performance) and a weekly programme of events. Some artists, like Libby Heaney, are exhibiting their first public sculptures. Heaney’s Ent- (non- earthly delights) (2024) is inspired by her background in quantum computing and comprises two AR experiences; it builds on a previous iteration of the project in which the artist used self-written quantum code to animate her paintings and creatures, inspired by Hieronymus Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights (1503–15).

As the artist describes in her commentary on the Bloomberg Connects app, the sculpture imagines the ‘new, Frankenstein lifeforms’ that quantum computing might create; the use of the gold in the sculpture refers to ‘the materiality’ of quantum computing. With a theme of ‘play’, Üstek has selected artists whose work can be ‘playful’ but also plays with sculpture as concept and material. Albano Hernández, for example, has painted on to the grass a life-size silhouette of one of the sweet-gum trees in The Regent’s Park, creating a permanent shadow. The natural environment of the park itself is a collaborator in the artwork. Performance, too, stretches the scope of sculpture, with the park becoming a stage.

Interdisciplinary artist FOS will be performing a sculptural work called Permission to Fall, while Parali’s AONYX and DREPAN (2020), two great steel armatures, will be activated by performers Sophie Brain and Rachel Porter. This spiritual piece sees the ghostly performers ‘sing’ to each other in a heady mix of prose and brutish growls and howls, lipsyncing to pre-recorded sound. As Parali explains, ‘the performers then become like channels, like mediums for these voices’. The guttural sounds transcend the present moment, lingering beyond the boundaries of performance and park.

Frieze Sculpture 2024 Fani Parali
Fani Parali, AONYX and DREPAN, 2020, Cooke Latham Gallery. Frieze Sculpture 2024.Photo by Linda Nylind. Courtesy of Linda Nylind/ Frieze

Üstek also hopes that the artworks will play with one another. Carrington’s bronze sculptures of mythical figures El Bailarín (2011) and Woody De Othello’s colourful glazed works of everyday objects are not an obvious pairing, and yet the energy of fantasy and surrealism pulses between them. Other highlights include Hans Josephsohn’s Untitled (2005) – a reclining sculpted female figure evoking prehistory, as if fresh from an archaeologist’s dig. However, upon closer inspection, the dynamism and way in which Josephsohn moved between figuration and abstraction become apparent. The artist used plaster, a material easy to rework and patch up, his unusual strokes forming gashes, ridges and bulges, before eventually being cast in brass.

Other artists particularly interested in the body include Zanele Muholi. The South African artist’s self-portrait Bambatha I (2023) sees them constricted by a brassy, golden snake-like tubing slithering around their body, leaving just face and hands free. The work references gender-based violence as well as the artist’s personal struggles with uterine fibroids and gender dysphoria. These intimate, personal experiences are amplified in this very public setting.

Zanele Muholi's bronze sculpture, 'Bambatha I', at Frieze Sculpture 2024
Zanele Muholi, Bambatha I, 2023. Courtesy: the artist, Hayden Phipps/Southern Guild and Southern Guild; photograph: Linda Nylind.

Such instances of sculpture connecting the public sphere with personal experience echoes the mission of Bloomberg Connects, which aims to bring the collections of lofty cultural spaces – from major museums to libraries and botanic gardens – into the hands of individual users across the globe. In the same way, Frieze Sculpture invites us beyond the white walls of the gallery or fair and, in so doing, raises possibilities for exciting, experimental work that contrasts and collaborates with its outdoor surroundings.

This article first appeared in Frieze Week, London 2024 under the title ‘An Expanded Field’.

Official Digital Guide

Bloomberg Connects is the Official Digital Guide to Frieze Sculpture. The Bloomberg Connects app offers exclusive content including audio guides by Fatos Üstek, Curator of Frieze Sculpture, and the exhibiting artists. To access the Official Digital Guide, search for Bloomberg Connects on Apple Store and Google Play.

Frieze Sculpture is in The Regent’s Park, 18 September – 27 October 2024. Free to all, no booking required.

Further Information

Frieze London and Frieze Masters, 9 – 13 October 2024, The Regent’s Park.

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Main image: Libby Heaney, Ent- (non-earthly delights), 2024. Photograph: Linda Nylind

Vaishna Surjid is a writer and curator based in London.

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