in Frieze New York | 24 MAR 23

Five Emerging Artists Exploring Heritage and Environment at Frieze New York 2023

This year’s Focus section features artists that make connections between land, ancestral memory and cultural  identity, from Mónica Giron’s work to highlight the rapidly changing Patagonian ecosystem, to Jagdeep Raina's narratives of Sikh and Punjabi diasporas

in Frieze New York | 24 MAR 23

Buy Tickets Now

Featuring galleries aged 12 years or younger from across the world, the Focus section at Frieze New York brings together some of today's most exciting emerging artists. This year's highlights include artists that interrogate cultural heritage and environmental change.

Jagdeep Raina, presented by Cooper Cole

Working in textile, drawing, ceramics, and video animation, Jagdeep Raina examines narratives of the Sikh and Punjabi diasporas in North America and the UK. His multi-media practice considers how memory can transcend unstable environments, and illustrates that archives are constantly moving, evolving, and growing. Raina is best known for his hand-made embroideries that integrate representational stories of the Sikh diaspora with traditional Phulkari, a traditional form of weaving on muslin cloth using hand-dyed and organic materials invented in Punjabi villages.

Jagdeep Raina She travels softly through the seven gates as her garden croons for her, 2022 Silk and cotton embroidered tapestry
Jagdeep Raina, She travels softly through the seven gates as her garden croons for her, 2022. Silk and cotton embroidered tapestry. Courtesy of the artist and Cooper Cole

June Clark, presented by Daniel Faria Gallery

Born in Harlem in 1941, Clark emigrated to Canada in the late 1960s due to political turbulence in the United States. In her work she is able to simultaneously depict the America of her childhood imagination and the country's inherent injustices, inequalities and histories of violence. In the series 'Perseverance Suite,' Clark manipulates the tools that she grew up watching people around her use in daily labor. Of the works, Clark has stated “These works come out my realization that I exist because of those who have come before me; those who persisted and persevered. They spur me on, and all of my art is made in constant collaboration with them beside me. Through these pieces I want to make a song. My ancestors can watch and rest.” 

June Clark
June Clark, Untitled from the Perseverance Suite, 2022. Metal, brick dust. Image courtesy of the artist and Daniel Faria Gallery Photo: Dean Tomlinson. McMichael Gallery Collection, Kleinberg, Ontario

Emma Prempeh, presented by Tiwani Contemporary

Prempeh’s recent work explores interior spaces, pictorially colliding with elements of her personal history. For Frieze New York, Prempeh will debut a suite of new paintings, featuring light projections with a soundscape, to create an intimate spatial and sensorial experience. Several of the works on show were painted in Kampala, Uganda, representing an amalgam of all the spaces the artist calls home and linking the artist’s Caribbean upbringing, Ghanaian heritage and recent exploration of Uganda. 

Emma Prempeh
Emma Prempeh, Extemporary Happiness, 2023. Oil, Acrylic and Schlag metal on Canvas. Courtesy of the artist and Tiwani Contemporary

Mónica Giron, presented by Barro

Giron, who is currently presenting a solo show at Museo de Arte Moderno in Buenos Aires, draws inspiration from the stunning Patagonian landscape – and its rapidly transforming human and geopolitical contexts. For Frieze New York, Barro gallery will present Ajuar Para un Conquistador, 1995, a series of knitted clothes – including pullovers, leggings, gloves and scarves – for birds from the Patagonian territory, who are nearing extinction point. The clothes give a presence to the birds but also accentuate their absence. 

Monica Giron
Mónica Giron, AJUAR PARA UN CONQUISTADOR, 1993, Wall installation, variable dimensions. Merino wool and buttons,: pullovers, leggins, gloves and scarfs for birds in Patagonia: Andean flamingo. Courtesy of the artist and Barro



Marcos Siqueira, presented by Mitre Gallery

Siqueira has always lived in the cerrado biome of Minas Gerais, Serra do Cipó, Brazil, where he works with the soil, researching its natural phenomena, and contributing towards environmental preservation practices. He uses the soil's pigments to create his chromatic scale, composed of ochre, green, silver, blue, black, gray, and red tones, in works which explore the region’s distinctive horizon line, vegetation, animals, people, festivities, and labor. 

Marcos Siqueira Untitled, 2023 Pigment on wood
Marcos Siqueira, Untitled, 2023 Pigment on wood. Courtesy of the artist and Mitre Gallery

About Frieze New York

Frieze New York returns to The Shed in Manhattan from May 17 to 21, 2023 and promises to be an unmissable event. With an unparalleled selection of galleries and artists, alongside a critically acclaimed curated program the fair is a highlight of the global art calendar.

Limited full price tickets are now on sale, buy yours now!

Tickets

To keep up to date on all the latest news from Frieze, sign up to the Frieze newsletter at frieze.com, and follow @friezeofficial on Instagram, Twitter and Frieze Official on Facebook.

Main image: Jagdeep Raina, Floral Coat (detail), 2022. Mixed media on paper. 50 x 63 in (127 x 160 cm). Courtesy the Artist and Cooper Cole

SHARE THIS