Collectors and curators in Chicago this week will after all spend the higher a part of at the least sooner or later plying the aisles of Expo Chicago contained in the huge pageant corridor at Navy Pier, however many may also trek to a small storefront area seven miles south within the McKinley Park neighbourhood and stroll a pair miles north to a vibrant house in a historic Gold Coast constructing. The 2 satellite tv for pc festivals in these very distinct, intimate settings supply alternatives to have conversations in a much less high-pressure industrial context and achieve an appreciation for the communities of artists and sellers on the core of the Chicagoan artwork scene’s vitality.
The sixth version of Barely Honest (till 19 April) options 32 exhibitors taking on 20in-square stands in McKinley Park, with an particularly sturdy displaying by native galleries and artists. Whereas the idea of getting galleries curate tiny cubbies is disarmingly charming, the shows themselves are fairly rigorous, with a mixture of artist-run, rising and extra blue-chip galleries responding creatively to the format.
“We wish to be sure that the truthful is all the time institutional in its seriousness, but additionally beneficiant in spirit,” says Roland Miller, the truthful’s director of operations and a co-director of the Chicago artwork area Julius Caesar.
The Worldwide Waters stand at Barely Honest, that includes works by Patrick Carlin Mohundro Courtesy Barely Honest
Patrick Carlin Mohundro, who’s taking part as each an artist (he has a solo stand with Worldwide Waters from New York) and a curator-dealer (his area PAD has a solo stand by Alex Schmidt), concurs: “Everyone seems to be satisfied to attend by the seriousness—the artists, the sellers and the collectors.”
Each the shows he’s concerned with bear this out. His solo stand of stained glass squares and assemblages, priced from $150 to $1,500, marry a historic craft course of with the formal languages of Minimalist sculpture. The complete stand includes a considerably steep incline supposed to evoke Worldwide Waters’ precise loading dock-like area in Brooklyn. The PAD stand, in the meantime, options panels painted by Schmidt for its three partitions, plus two small freestanding work, all evocative of a deconstructed structure. The complete set up is obtainable for $8,000, or particular person elements are priced on request.

The PAD stand at Barely Honest options works by Alex Schmidt Courtesy Barely Honest
“We organise the truthful so that each single sales space is working at a unique scale from the one earlier than,” Miller explains. So, whereas the PAD and Worldwide Waters stands resemble, broadly talking, miniature galleries, New York’s Jack Barrett Gallery is treating its area extra like a tabletop, showcasing playful, pastel-hued ceramic sculptures by Amy Brener (priced from $200 to $1,200). Others intentionally juxtapose differently-scaled objects, just like the roving Good Bare Gallery, whose stand options a number of diminutive work and smooth sculptures (by Mary Tooley Parker, Rachel Borenstein and Ryan Richey) paired with three hyperrealist, normal-scale sculptures by Langdon Graves (a poppy, a cigarette butt and a wall-mounted moth).
“I don’t curate my cubicles at Barely Honest all that in a different way from most different festivals,” says Jaqueline Cedar, the gallery’s founder. “I did attempt to set up the sales space in a means that creates a way of phantasm, but additionally humour.” Works on the stand are priced between $20 and $2,000. And in the event that they promote out, one benefit of a miniature truthful is that it makes bringing additional stock a lot less complicated—Cedar has a number of further items available, packed in tiny crates. “I like having my very own little ‘again room’ of additional works in my bag,” she says.
A number of members stated certainly one of Barely Honest’s strengths is that its scale and the worth of participation give sellers and artists permission to experiment. Mohundro says: “The format means individuals really feel they’ll take dangers.” Miller provides: “Proper now there’s a way of permission within the artwork market to strive various things, to experiment with codecs, in a means that there wasn’t ten and even 5 years in the past.”
One such experiment is the model new truthful Neighbors (till 12 April), which options 15 exhibitors (9 of them Chicago-based) in a home, stand-free setting, with works put in on mantles, within the toilet, in kitchen cupboards and elsewhere. The truthful was based by the Mexican American collector Mirka Serrato and is staged in her former house (she now lives in Dallas); it was curated by the London-based artist and gallerist Jonny Tanna (whose gallery, Harlesden Excessive Avenue, is certainly one of two taking part London areas, together with Gathering).

Set up view of works by John Garcia, introduced by Tureen, at Neighbors Picture Courtesy of Neighbors. Photograph by Carlos García
“I traveled the truthful circuit for a yr taking a look at what was working and what wasn’t,” Serrato says. “This got here from a private have to strive one thing completely different, but additionally to supply galleries an reasonably priced, different in a context that may play to their strengths.”
Many exhibitors have embraced the ornate home setting’s distinctive options. The Dallas-based gallery Tureen, for example, is displaying works by the artist John Garcia in what was as soon as the bed room, together with a site-specific textual content portray on a mirror put in above a mantlepiece. The artist additionally created customized plinths—painted to match the wallpaper—that maintain many-limbed ceramic candelabra sculptures.
“After I met Mikra, she advised me about Neighbors and I had a venture in thoughts with John that I knew would swimsuit the area very well,” says Cody Fitzsimmons, Tureen’s co-founder. Garcia’s works are priced between $2,800 and $5,600.

Set up view of works by Caitlyn Min-Ji Au, introduced by Shanghai Semenary, at Neighbors Picture Courtesy of Neighbors. Photograph by Carlos García
Subsequent-door, within the toilet, the Chicago-based gallery Shanghai Seminary likewise made the a lot of the area’s constraints with its presentation of works by the native artist Caitlyn Min-Ji Au. Many of the room is occupied by a boxy, three-part sculpture that comprises water tanks, drippers and sculptural dioramas which are animated by dripping water.
“I had recognized about this work for some time, nevertheless it’s by no means been proven earlier than,” says Qiuchen Wu, the gallery’s founder. “After I noticed this toilet, I believed: lastly, the proper setting for this piece!” He likened Min-Ji Au’s principal sculpture to analogue video artwork, as viewers observe the sluggish, delicate motion contained in the sculpture by way of small rectangular and round apertures. The principle work isn’t on the market, however Wu says it may very well be the idea for a fee for an collector. Two different items—one put in on the ceiling of the bathe stall, the opposite a fountain made out of an upside-down Chinese language vase—are priced from $2,800 to $5,600.

Set up view of works by Juan Arango Palacios, Haylie Jimenez and Sydnie Jimenez, introduced by Feia, at Neighbors Picture Courtesy of Neighbors. Photograph by Carlos García
Within the kitchen, the Los Angeles-based gallery Feia is displaying works by three Chicago-based artists working in ceramic: the dual sisters Haylie Jimenez and Syndie Jimenez, and Juan Arango Palacios, who’s at the moment incomes his MFA on the College of Chicago. Many works are introduced in a playful, quasi-domestic method, together with ceramic vessels and free-standing figures within the kitchen cupboards, drawings by Arango Palacios on the fridge and a big winged determine by Sydnie Jimenez, Curtain Hair Guardian (2025), put in on the stovetop. Works are priced from $200 to $8,000.
“Having an area like this provides you a proper constraint,” says Thomas Martinez Pilnik, Feia’s co-founder. “I’ve recognized all three artists for years, so after we had been invited to do the truthful I stated, ‘Provided that the artists have an interest.’ As quickly as I advised them about it, they had been on board, and the response has been great.” Pilnik provides: “A professor of Juan’s got here throughout the truthful’s first few hours and acquired certainly one of his drawings—as a sign of assist outdoors the classroom, that was so real and shifting.”
Barely Honest, till 19 April, McKinley Park, ChicagoNeighbors, till 12 April, Gold Coast, Chicago








