"Booth B12"
Ghada Amer, Gina Beavers, Sanford Biggers, Pier Paolo Calzolari, Svenja Deininger, Jammie Holmes, Suzanne McClelland, Danielle Mckinney, Sarah Meyohas, Donald Moffett, Celeste Rapone, Frank Stella, Michaela Yearwood-Dan
BOESKY MARIANNE
507 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011

t. 212-680-9889 f. 347-296-3667 e-mail:




Art Basel Miami Beach 2022
Miami Beach Convention Center 1901 Convention Center Drive Miami Beach, FL 33139
+41 58 206 27 06 e-mail:
1 > 3 December, 2022





Booth B12
Marianne Boesky Gallery is pleased to participate in the 2022 edition of Art Basel Miami Beach with a presentation of new works by Ghada Amer, Gina Beavers, Sanford Biggers, Pier Paolo Calzolari, Svenja Deininger, Jammie Holmes, Suzanne McClelland, Danielle Mckinney, Sarah Meyohas, Donald Moffett, Celeste Rapone, Frank Stella, and Michaela Yearwood-Dan. The combination of works chosen for this year's installation reveals the many relational threads across generations, geography, media, and conviction that define the gallery's diverse program.
A seminal figure in post war Italian art, Pier Paolo Calzolari grounds the gallery's presentation with an ambitious new multi-panel piece that captures his long-standing fascination with alchemical materials. While Calzolari plays with earth's natural elements themselves, Sarah Meyohas and Donald Moffett both look to the natural world as a point of departure. A new hologram from Sarah Meyohas's groundbreaking Interference series uses light and etched glass to recreate vibrant color patterns found in plant matter. Donald Moffett's new painting, from his ongoing nature cult series, implicates man's destructive forces on the environment. By mutating the picture plane and palette, Moffett distorts nature's purest plant forms.
The booth's narrative shifts to the human figure in the paintings by Jammie Holmes and Danielle Mckinney, who elevate quotidian moments into nuanced, evocative compositions. Both Celeste Rapone and Gina Beavers also make representational paintings, though these artists embed their narratives in distinctly fractured forms. Rapone's sharp-edged, subtly layered compositions are populated with allusions pulled from art history, pop culture, and autobiographical sources that surround figures, often impossibly contorted into the confines created within the painting. By contrast, the subjects of Beavers' high-relief acrylic paintings take anatomical details to absurd dimension, spilling beyond the margins of the canvases.
Svenja Deininger, Michaela Yearwood-Dan, and Suzanne McClelland explore traditional abstract painting in contrasting ways. Juxtaposing patterns, tones, shapes, and memories from a vast archive of art historical references, Deininger paints abstract compositions that disguise the presence of the artist's hand. Yearwood-Dan applies swirling strokes, vibrant palettes, and thick layers of paint, to cultivate lush scenes based on her observations of society and self. McClelland's paintings grow out of deep research into linguistic and acoustic dimensions, abstracting text into pure visual language, capturing individual personalities as well as cultural and political concerns.
Frank Stella and Ghada Amer, both originally painters, take the exploration of color, material, and form into three dimensions. While Stella is interested in the pure relationships between art and space, Amer invests a highly-political messaging system into all forms of her work. Stella's steel Star with square tubing pushes composition and abstraction beyond the picture plane, while Amer deploys steel to translate the line work of her iconic embroidery paintings and into delicately solid sculptures.
Finally, Sanford Biggers layers his explorations of materiality and space with personal, cultural, and historical references and questions. Working with antique quilts, Biggers' new three-dimensional work fuses the historical and the contemporary, bringing his own perspective into dialogue with the formal and cultural legacies of these deeply meaningful textiles. Individually, each work presented exemplifies the artist's unique practice; together they reveal the complex concepts, materials, belief systems, and ways of making and being in the world that are foundational to the gallery's program.
Marianne Boesky Gallery is pleased to participate in the 2022 edition of Art Basel Miami Beach with a presentation of new works by Ghada Amer, Gina Beavers, Sanford Biggers, Pier Paolo Calzolari, Svenja Deininger, Jammie Holmes, Suzanne McClelland, Danielle Mckinney, Sarah Meyohas, Donald Moffett, Celeste Rapone, Frank Stella, and Michaela Yearwood-Dan. The combination of works chosen for this year's installation reveals the many relational threads across generations, geography, media, and conviction that define the gallery's diverse program.
A seminal figure in post war Italian art, Pier Paolo Calzolari grounds the gallery's presentation with an ambitious new multi-panel piece that captures his long-standing fascination with alchemical materials. While Calzolari plays with earth's natural elements themselves, Sarah Meyohas and Donald Moffett both look to the natural world as a point of departure. A new hologram from Sarah Meyohas's groundbreaking Interference series uses light and etched glass to recreate vibrant color patterns found in plant matter. Donald Moffett's new painting, from his ongoing nature cult series, implicates man's destructive forces on the environment. By mutating the picture plane and palette, Moffett distorts nature's purest plant forms.
The booth's narrative shifts to the human figure in the paintings by Jammie Holmes and Danielle Mckinney, who elevate quotidian moments into nuanced, evocative compositions. Both Celeste Rapone and Gina Beavers also make representational paintings, though these artists embed their narratives in distinctly fractured forms. Rapone's sharp-edged, subtly layered compositions are populated with allusions pulled from art history, pop culture, and autobiographical sources that surround figures, often impossibly contorted into the confines created within the painting. By contrast, the subjects of Beavers' high-relief acrylic paintings take anatomical details to absurd dimension, spilling beyond the margins of the canvases.
Svenja Deininger, Michaela Yearwood-Dan, and Suzanne McClelland explore traditional abstract painting in contrasting ways. Juxtaposing patterns, tones, shapes, and memories from a vast archive of art historical references, Deininger paints abstract compositions that disguise the presence of the artist's hand. Yearwood-Dan applies swirling strokes, vibrant palettes, and thick layers of paint, to cultivate lush scenes based on her observations of society and self. McClelland's paintings grow out of deep research into linguistic and acoustic dimensions, abstracting text into pure visual language, capturing individual personalities as well as cultural and political concerns.
Frank Stella and Ghada Amer, both originally painters, take the exploration of color, material, and form into three dimensions. While Stella is interested in the pure relationships between art and space, Amer invests a highly-political messaging system into all forms of her work. Stella's steel Star with square tubing pushes composition and abstraction beyond the picture plane, while Amer deploys steel to translate the line work of her iconic embroidery paintings and into delicately solid sculptures.
Finally, Sanford Biggers layers his explorations of materiality and space with personal, cultural, and historical references and questions. Working with antique quilts, Biggers' new three-dimensional work fuses the historical and the contemporary, bringing his own perspective into dialogue with the formal and cultural legacies of these deeply meaningful textiles. Individually, each work presented exemplifies the artist's unique practice; together they reveal the complex concepts, materials, belief systems, and ways of making and being in the world that are foundational to the gallery's program.
![]() | Ghada Amer | ![]() |
![]() | Gina Beavers | ![]() |
![]() | Sanford Biggers | ![]() |
![]() | Pier Paolo Calzolari | ![]() |
![]() | Svenja Deininger | ![]() |
![]() | Jammie Holmes | ![]() |
![]() | Suzanne McClelland | ![]() |
![]() | Danielle Mckinney | ![]() |
![]() | Sarah Meyohas | ![]() |
![]() | Donald Moffett | ![]() |
![]() | Celeste Rapone | ![]() |
![]() | Frank Stella | ![]() |
![]() | Michaela Yearwood-Dan | ![]() |
Private Days (by invitation only)
Tuesday, November 29, 2022, 11am to 7pm, First Choice VIP cardholders
Tuesday, November 29, 2022, 4pm to 7pm, Preview VIP cardholders
Wednesday, November 30, 2022, 11am to 7pm, First Choice and Preview VIP cardholders
Vernissage (by invitation only)
Wednesday, November 30, 2022, 4pm to 7pm
Tuesday, November 29, 2022, 11am to 7pm, First Choice VIP cardholders
Tuesday, November 29, 2022, 4pm to 7pm, Preview VIP cardholders
Wednesday, November 30, 2022, 11am to 7pm, First Choice and Preview VIP cardholders
Vernissage (by invitation only)
Wednesday, November 30, 2022, 4pm to 7pm
mpefm
USA fair art press release
Public days:
Thursday, December 1, 2022, 11am to 7pm
Friday, December 2, 2022, 11am to 7pm
Saturday, December 3, 2022, 11am to 6pm
TICKET OPTIONS*
Tickets may be purchased online here. Tickets can also be purchased at the box office in the West Lobby of the Miami Beach Convention Center, beginning December 5, 2022.
First Access Ticket USD 90
Day Ticket USD 70
Reduced Day Ticket USD 55
For students and seniors.
Premium Card USD 600
Premium+ Card USD 2200
Art Basel & Design Miami Combination Ticket USD 98
Thursday, December 1, 2022, 11am to 7pm
Friday, December 2, 2022, 11am to 7pm
Saturday, December 3, 2022, 11am to 6pm
TICKET OPTIONS*
Tickets may be purchased online here. Tickets can also be purchased at the box office in the West Lobby of the Miami Beach Convention Center, beginning December 5, 2022.
First Access Ticket USD 90
Day Ticket USD 70
Reduced Day Ticket USD 55
For students and seniors.
Premium Card USD 600
Premium+ Card USD 2200
Art Basel & Design Miami Combination Ticket USD 98
QR of this press release
in your phone, tablet
