
Finding favour were artists with concurrent institutional shows, notably at this year’s Venice Biennale. At Goodman Gallery, Yinka Shonibare’s astronaut sculpture (2024, £250,000), Kudzanai Chiurai’s imposing “Black Vanguard Comunique 4” (2024, $150,000), Kapwani Kiwanga’s “Orb” (2023, €65,000) and Pélagie Gbaguidi’s “Incandescence” (2023, €45,000) were among their Venice artist sales, while Pérez Art Museum Miami bought Claire Gavronsky’s “Parting Words” (2024, $40,000).
“Everyone is feeling unsettled, so knowing that artists are in Venice or other institutional exhibitions gives a bit of confidence [to buyers],” says gallery owner-director Liza Essers. The Basel fair, she says, “is critical to us”, adding: “We may not have the big numbers, but here you see people from museums and foundations that you don’t get anywhere else. It gives hope that there’s life out there.”
Related Press
See AllAfrican art finds a global stage in Johannesburg, featuring Goodman Gallery
Art Basel05 Sep 2025Yinka Shonibare: ‘The argument that things are safer at the British Museum is a little bit shaky now’
The Standard03 Apr 2024Grada Kilomba and Kapwani Kiwanga Featured in Top Ten Shows Around the World in 2023 by FRIEZE
Frieze29 Dec 2023Kapwani Kiwanga Interviewed by the New York Times for Her Show at the New Museum, New York
29 Jul 2022Review in ArtForum of Kapwani Kiwanga at Goodman Gallery, London
ArtForum07 Oct 2021Liza Essers writes in Artnet: Collapsing Art Market Will Hurt Underrepresented Artists the Most. Here’s How to Ensure Their Voices Are Not Lost
11 May 2020