"Booth B10"
Jonathan Lyndon Chase, Sarah Lucas, Kati Heck, Uri Aran, Jonathan Lyndon Chase, Alex Da Corte, Urs Fischer, Georgia Gardner Gray, Kati Heck, Lucia Laguna, Jim Lambie, Victoria Morton, Martine Syms, Jordan Wolfson

SADIE COLES HQ
1 Davies Street, London W1K 3DB U.K.
T +44 20 7493 8611 e-mail:
Multiple location : London(3)




Frieze Art Fair
Santa Monica Airport 3021 Airport Ave, Santa Monica, CA 90405, USA

+1 212 463 7488 e-mail:
February 16 > 19, 2023

Booth B10
At Frieze Los Angeles 2023, Sadie Coles HQ will participate with a group of works by gallery artists at Booth B10.
This year’s booth will include a new panel by Jordan Wolfson, Untitled, 2023, the latest in a recent series that expands Wolfson’s multifarious and unfiltered approach to image making.
Depicting at its centre a young boy in gothic mime costume, the panel layers enigmatic images and symbols that bear reference to the artist’s own biography, as well as AI generated imagery, photos from the internet and religious iconography that evoke myriad ambiguous and double-edged associations. Upcoming in December 2023, the National Gallery of Australia will host the world premiere of Body Sculpture, Jordan Wolfson’s highly anticipated new animatronic sculpture to be unveiled as part of the first solo presentation of Wolfson’s work in Australia (find out more).
A new painting by Jonathan Lyndon Chase, cosmic night love, 2022, depicts lovers entangled in embrace. Transposed on a monumental scale, the pair evoke a celestial landscape covered in roses – a recurring symbol in Chase’s work for non-heteronormativity and transness – that double in form as pleasure points: orifices, lips, nipples. Chase’s current exhibition Now I'm home, lips that know my name, is on view at the Kingly Street gallery; encompassing an explorative, domestic installation that embraces the Black Queer experience of love, sexuality, subjectivity and identity (find out more).
Sarah Lucas’s soft sculpture OOPS!, 2019, is a recent incarnation in her longstanding Bunny series (first conceived in 1997), whose biomorphic forms embody female nudes in various attitudes of confrontation and vulnerability; and armoured with flamboyant high heeled shoes. The presentation of which coincides with the opening week of BIG WOMEN, an ambitious group exhibition curated by Lucas, featuring the work of over twenty women artists at Firstsite museum in Colchester (find out more).
Georgia Gardner Gray’s Minors, 2023, is a new painting in which she distils her ongoing exploration of the everyday to probe systems of belief and socially accepted norms. In Minors, she depicts four adolescents at the school railings, two in a confrontation and two passively looking on, a visual metaphor of the persistent anxieties, fears and apathy that endure in the present day. On the occasion of Frieze Week in Los Angeles, Gardner Gray will present Travellers, an offsite exhibition of new paintings at the Gaylord Apartments project space in Koreatown. Open by appointment. (Plan your visit.)
Kati Heck also presents a new painting Der Dietrich, 2023. As with many of her paintings, the work is both a skilfully articulated portrait of a real-life individual, a friend of the artist, and an amalgam of historical allusions and fictional riffs. Devoid of identifying surroundings, the seated figure is an enigmatic symbol of allegory – shown in a state of abstract thought, accompanied by floating flowers and a pastoral figure. Heck is currently the subject of a major new survey exhibition at the Hall Art Foundation, at Kunstmuseum Schloss Derneburg – on view until 02 April 2023 (find out more)
The booth will feature works by artists including Uri Aran, Jonathan Lyndon Chase, Alex Da Corte, Urs Fischer, Georgia Gardner Gray, Kati Heck, Lucia Laguna, Jim Lambie, Sarah Lucas, Victoria Morton, Martine Syms and Jordan Wolfson.