Vulture Magazine The Michaelmas Issue 2013 | Page 6

F FRIEZE rieze, the world’s largest art fair of its kind, was held for the eleventh time at Regent’s Park. Each year more than 60,000 artists, critics, tourists, curators and collectors pass through the doors. This year the fair showcased artwork from more than 30 countries and from a unique combination of established names and younger, less experienced galleries. My visit to the Fair culminated in an interest in the sheer diversity of art on offer. Some of the most memorable works included the offerings of American pop artist Jeff Koons, who produced 5 pieces for this year’s Frieze. My personal favourites included a giant sculpture of a hanging kitten and a huge blue aluminium heart that reminded me of a giant kitsch chocolate: a similar piece recently sold for $33 million. The fair is technically a sale, but a very small proportion of the people at Frieze are actually looking to buy the artworks (the cheapest of which is around £1000). The pieces vary not just in medium but in tone: from Rob Pruitt’s comical traffic cone faces, some of which have hair, glasses or beards, to Tania Bruguera’s copy of the ‘Arbeit macht frei’ sign from Auschwitz, which lies in pieces in a corner. These two pieces are remarkably close to each other and the juxtaposition is striking and verging on the absurd.