VOLTA VOICES

AMANDA COULSON


Amanda Coulson, Director of The National Art Gallery of the Bahamas

Amanda Coulson, Director of The National Art Gallery of the Bahamas

Kamiar Maleki: Amanda, you are the Director of The National Art Gallery of the Bahamas, what is the current project you and your team are working on after re-opening the museum? Have you and your team taken on new measures to attract new visitors during COVID, have you gone online?

Amanda Coulson: We re-opened on July 6th so we have been focused on managing flow to ensure appropriate protocols and everybody’s safety. Having very porous borders with the US, we now experiencing a massive surge, so we have to be extra careful. While we were on lockdown, from March through June, we implemented a strong outreach program with online resources, which you can see on our COVID-19 resource page https://nagb.org.bs/covid19-resources and this includes lesson plans, Bahamian artist coloring sheets, virtual tours (of our and other museums), staff picks, and favorite highlights from my weekly national radio show “NAGB’s Blank Canvas” (which you can livestream with the Guardian Radio 96.9 FM app), in which I chat with local artists, but also international guests, such as art critic Seph Rodney or curator Larry Ossei-Mensah. We also had a Virtual summer program, which is still available on our YouTube channel, and we delivered 35 packages of art supplies to needy families, so that their children could still participate. On Instagram (@nagb242) we initiated a series called “Tea Talks,” in which Bahamian artists speak about their practice and influences. In a funny “small world” moment a local painter called Drew Weech (@drew.weech) cited an 80-year old British painter called Michael Simpson as his inspiration and—guess what?—we exhibited Michael with David Risely Gallery in VOLTA NY 2008.  So, I was able to connect Drew and Michael, which was a really touching moment during lockdown, as they were both feeling very isolated and it was really magical. We will definitely continue the online outreach aggressively and will—as a rule—now make all of our exhibitions virtually accessible, which is beneficial for our family islands (The Bahamas is an archipelagic nation, with 700 islands and cays)—but we also feel people are burnt out digitally, so we are preparing an outdoor art show for the fall and winter, comprising murals and painted billboards—on our campus and throughout the city—the reanimating of our sculpture garden and programming in our outdoor 200-seat amphitheater, Fiona’s Theatre. While we rely heavily on tourism, right now our beaches are closed, so Bahamians are looking for things to do outside the house!

KM: Now going back to 2005, when you and three galleries founded VOLTA in Basel. What was your motivation to start a new fair in Basel?

AC: My husband, Uli Voges, who is now the Curator at the Central Bank of The Bahamas, had a gallery in Frankfurt—Voges + Partner—and together with friends and colleagues, Kavi Gupta from Chicago and Friedrich Loock from Berlin, saw a niche in the market for mid-career galleries representing emerging artists. There was a gap between LISTE, which was then branded as “the young art fair,” with a limit of the gallery being no more than 5-years old and artists being under 40, and Art Basel, which was very blue-chip and, outside of a quite small Statements section, back then did not really make much space for new galleries to their program. The LISTE model was clever but youth is no indicator of talent; Uli, for example, was showing Adrian Piper and Marilyn Minter around that time, and she only became famous in her 50s; or at VOLTA NY we showed the estate of Anna Oppermann, who was born in 1940 and had been an installation artist long before it was hip (in the 70s and 80s) and, as a woman, went almost unrecognized in her lifetime, so she was still ‘emerging.’ So we all felt strongly that there was a niche and it was certainly proven! The first show had 45 galleries, then second 75; the next year, Liste changed their rules to allow for “graduates” and Art Basel introduced the “Premiere” section in 2006, which precisely targeted that profile of galleries, scooping them from LISTE and from VOLTA. Several first-year and second-year VOLTA galleries—Milliken from Stockholm, Roesler from Sao Paolo, A Gentil Carioca from Rio, Nicola Krupp from Basel, were in Art Basel Premiere buy the 2007-8 . . . and then came Feature, which also took VOLTA graduates, like Stevenson Gallery from Cape Town. So I think VOLTA really very clearly revealed that these galleries were “worthy” of a greater platform. 

From left to right: Friedrich Loock (founder), Rik Reinking (curator), Amanda Coulson (founder), Ulrich Voges (founder), Breckenridge Kling (collector), and Kavi Gupta (founder).

From left to right: Friedrich Loock (founder), Rik Reinking (curator), Amanda Coulson (founder), Ulrich Voges (founder), Breckenridge Kling (collector), and Kavi Gupta (founder).

KM: And tell us a bit about the concept of the inaugural edition of VOLTA New York back in 2008.

AC: For the NY show, we felt it was very important to do something a little different. In Basel, there had been a clear need for this type of fair, as there had really only been the two extremes of LISTE (youth) and Art Basel (mature/blue chip), whereas New York already has PULSE, Scope, Fountain and several other satellites, some of which were stronger than others. VOLTA had just been purchased by a larger parent company that also bought The Armory Show so we were suddenly “partnered” with this other event and we wanted to ensure we would, indeed, be the second show in NYC not the sixth, and also not simply catch the leftovers, which obviously would not result in a very compelling show. The Armory was a very different animal back then as well—just as Basel had been—there was no modern section, and it was for living contemporary artists; it then had a similar profile to Frieze Art Fair today, but what they did not have was an “emerging” section. So, we proposed that VOLTA NY would function as their emerging section, and we adopted the solo format only, so as to differentiate ourselves from PULSE or other satellites that were less curated. I co-directed with art critic and curator Christian Viveros-Fauné and this allowed us to really make “an exhibition” with almost no walls, a very open space, a concept that was later repeated by Independent when those galleries splintered from The Armory. This was 6 months before the financial crash, so finances were very different. People could take much larger booths, be more experimental and we had galleries doing The Armory with older artists and VOLTA with newer ones from their stable; it was very joyous, very exciting, with a really excellent group of artists and galleries.

KM: You founded and led the fair for 15 years and as we both know, putting a fair together can be very stressful. But we are all in it for the fun too. What was the funniest moment you had during your time at VOLTA?

AC: Oh my gosh, there are too many to tell! The annual IKEA trip was always hilarious . . . in the early years when it was truly a community, our exhibitors would help us build the fair furniture (for free beers) into the night and that always got quite raucous; Ragnar Kjartasson’s performance piece with a guy in his underwear playing electric guitar in an outhouse for the full week; my very young daughter (I found out I was pregnant with our second on the first day of the first VOLTA!) coming over the walkie-talkie while I was giving a live TV interview and lambasting me for not feeding her so that all of Switzerland could hear; getting all the VOLTA team to go swimming in the Rhine (with several members going in their all-together!); the year it rained so much some of us got swollen feet from walking in 3 inches of water all day; the speedboat connection between LISTE and VOLTA, also in the pouring rain (you just had to laugh); the time we left the crates outside and a mini-hurricane came through; the year the World Cup final was in Basel at the same time and dancing at the Kunsthalle with football fans in full regalia (face-point-crazy hats) and the art crowd; the ping-pong party we had in NYC with artists against dealers; blowing up artist Chris Johansson’s huge balloons and having them almost fly away; trying to get massive mirrors into a gymnasium for a performance by curator Jerôme Sans’s band Liquid Architecture; the time the New York Post’s gossip column Page Six accused us of having coke (the drug) available on the fair floor and having a sculpture by Fernando Mastrangelo, presented by the gallery Rhys/Mendes now Mendes Wood from Brazil, confiscated by the DEA… I can go on and on…

 
Voltahalle in Basel.

Voltahalle in Basel.

Voltahalle in Basel at night.

Voltahalle in Basel at night.

 

KM: We both have been collecting art over the past couple of years, which advice would you give to the next generation of collectors that are making their first steps into the art world, especially in these current times?

AC: I always give the same advice, which is buy with your stomach and not your ears. Yes, it's good to do research, but listening to chatter and what other people are saying and then buying because you think it's going to be “hot” or because someone with a bigger collection than you likes it, is not a good reason, in general. If you are buying to flip, maybe, but I am speaking to collectors who would like to build an eclectic collection that is meaningful to them and that they intend to live with. Buy something that resonates with you and speaks to your own areas of interest. IG is a great place to get started if you can't travel to fairs or see things in person, but I do strongly recommend going to galleries or fairs, if you can, since size, scale, texture, and often, quality, can only really be discerned in person. I would also say don't let price be too scary and make it a self-fulfilling prophecy that you can't afford to collect. First of all you CAN find great original works for a little money. I bought a Raymond Pettibon from David Zwirner when I was 27 and had $500; sadly, I lost that in divorce number 1 (I actually saw it ended up for a time on a mutual friend's wall! That was awkward…), but if you are looking early you can get amazing things before the artist get priced out of your range and that's why satellite fairs are excellent places to start. VOLTA showed Theaster Gates, Zilvinas Kempinas, Ragnar Kjartasson, Felix Gmelin, Mohau Modisakeng, Maria Nepumoceno and many, many more, were all at VOLTA long before they got as famous as they are now. People love to talk down about satellites, but that's nonsense. It's mathematically impossible that everything at any fair is either excellent or garbage. I've seen fewer brilliant works at blue-chip fairs and I've seen amazing works at many satellites, so it's all about how much work you're prepared to do to look and to learn and to develop your own eye. Prints can also be a very good place to start and sometimes I've initiated relationships with artists or galleries that way that leads to a deeper relationship and, lastly, if you love something that's out of your current range, there are new businesses like Art Money that are making micro-loans to new collectors and it makes buying slightly more expensive things entirely possible!

 

VOLTA at Markthalle Basel.

VOLTA at Markthalle Basel.

KM: Are you excited with the latest addition of our fair in Miami to the portfolio?

AC: It’s funny because so many people thought for the longest time that there was a VOLTA in Miami already… they just assumed since we had NY and Basel… so it's a very natural progression. Miami caters to a different audience than NY and Basel, so it also makes sense as a way to broaden the scope for galleries and artists to meet diverse collectors. Who generally doesn't want to be in Miami in the winter?! It would be really wonderful to see VOLTA reach out to Caribbean galleries and art spaces, as they are often left out of the conversation due to distance, but Miami is generally our regional hub, so it's an easy place for us all to get to compared even to New York. In Europe maybe all roads lead to Rome but in the Caribbean, all flights take you through Miami, the airport is like a conference center for regional curators and artists… It’s a little the same as for Latin-America and this could really be a potential way to make the VOLTA Miami have its own profile that identifies it not only from other satellites in Miami but also to its other editions globally.

KM: Any tips for me as the new director to watch out for?

AC: Just always expect the unexpected. When we are into the second day of install and there has not been a disaster, I am extremely nervous. Everyone is saying, "What are you worried about? Everything’s going fine!” but every production will have its hiccups—always, you can count on it, it's inevitable—so I would rather those hiccups happen before we open to the public, so they can be resolved first. We’ve had it all: snow when sunshine was projected, crates too big to get through the door, exhibitors with the wrong visa, artworks stuck in customs on opening day and, of course, the most famous of all: losing your venue 10 days before your fair opens. I think all of the previous “disasters’ prepared us for that major one in March 2019 and all that experience allowed us to do what is necessary every time: keep your cool, project confidence, and make sure you lead with poise. Also, lot of people loved VOLTA because of the personal touch, so stay connected to your team, your collectors and your galleries; you all share the same passion, so it's pretty easy to remain engaged! And, most of all, have fun!