
Sydney Contemporary Returns
Australia’s largest and most diverse contemporary art fair returns with a robust new program.
Back for its eighth edition, Sydney Contemporary brings together 85 leading-edge galleries from across Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Tokyo for a four-day art festival at Carriageworks from September 5. Fair Director Zoe Paulsen has assembled a diverse array of galleries, talks, installations and performances, to stage one of the most ambitious Sydney Contemporary programs to date.
Highlights include an in-conversation with The Ladies Lounge artist Kirsha Kaechele, ten large-scale installations, Talk Contemporary and a live performance piece to honour 100 days of the recently passed Oceania artist, Sēini ‘SistaNative’ Taumoepeau.

Always one of the most celebrated events on Australia’s cultural calendar, Sydney Contemporary has cemented itself as a must-attend art event and the perfect place for collectors to discover modern and contemporary art.
The Fair is also home to restaurants, cafés and bars, making it an all-encompassing art and dining experience.

This year there will also be Kid Contemporary with activities and workshops for under-12s, Installation Contemporary curated by Senior Curator at Artspace Talia Linz, and Performance Contemporary, curated by Director of Friends with Strangers Sam Watson-Wood.
Exciting stands to visit include the new-to-Sydney-via Berlin Cassandra Bird Gallery from Kellett Street, Potts Point; Gow Langsford from Auckland who will show two new bodies of work by sculptors Virginia Leonard and Mattio Bosco, and the influential Utopia Gallery, which has its inaugural stand in the ‘works on paper’ sector of Sydney Contemporary.
“Utopia Art Sydney has always recognised works on paper as important elements of our artists’ practice,” said gallery founder Christopher Hodges from his gallery in Alexandria.

“We are highlighting a major multi-panel work on paper by Emily Kame Kngwarreye, (with a price north of $450,000) to celebrate the upcoming solo exhibition of her work at the Tate Modern Gallery in London, which will be the first solo exhibition there of any Australian artist,” said Christopher Hodges.
Meanwhile, Stephen Todd, Design Director of the Powerhouse Museum and Design Editor of the Australian Financial Review, has developed his section of the talks program with a focus on art, design and interiors. His panel discussions will bring together tastemakers from architecture and interior design for sessions that include How to Curate An Eye Catching Interior with Blainey North at 1.30 pm on Saturday 7 September and a discussion on design’s new frontier with entrepreneurial surfer, board shaper and designer Hayden Cox at 3.00 pm on Friday 6 September.
Micheal Do, Curator of Contemporary Art at Sydney Opera House, is also criss-crossing the art spectrum to mash up speakers on hybrid fashion, theatre and lifestyle panels for Talk Contemporary.
We eagerly anticipate Do’s session on the art of collecting alongside, with special guests choreographer and artistic director of the Australian Ballet David Hallberg and photographer-turned-architect Billy Maynard to discuss some of their favourite finds.
“Each panel is designed as a revelation, a means to understand the most relevant ideas and energies shaping local and global cultures,” said Do at the launch for Sydney Contemporary.

The fair will also play host to a Champagne Pommery lounge, a Campari bar and the big opening party event, Art Night, which is ticketed and starts at 5.30pm on Thursday 5 September.
The invitation-only Collector Preview will be held on Wednesday, September 4 with Sydney Contemporary officially open to the public from September 5-8 2024 at Carriageworks, 245 Wilson Street, Eveleigh NSW.
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