The ArtLyst Power 100: 2013 Alternative Art Power List Unveiled

The ArtLyst Power 100 List

London during Frieze Week is the only place to be on the planet if you are a dedicated follower of the visual arts. Every October an international herd of artists, gallerists and art professionals descend on our metropolis to feast on a wide range of art events. From ‘Blue Chip’ Frieze Masters to a pop up in an underground car-park, Frieze week is full of surprises.

Mid October is also the perfect time for us to release Artlyst’s Art PowerLyst, the alternative to ArtReview’s Power 100. Many think that AR’s list is erroneous and tired, with a criteria based on ‘sheer financial clout.’ It is dominated by commercial gallery owners, big-buck artists, and misguided auctioneers.

The ArtLyst editorial staff believe that achievement should not be compromised for the sake of the dollar, so we have created our own alternative list, instead of a Machiavellian Power List that has more in common with the Times ‘Rich List’. This year we have put together a Resourceful PowerLyst that celebrates exactly what it says on the tin – not those with the fiscal muscle to bend the artworld into whatever shape they please, but those with the creative power and ability to influence and augment the British and international art scenes through merit alone.

Out go the Gagosians, the Damien Hirsts and the François Pinaults. In come the organisers of Peckham and Hackney’s finest events, the Director of Artangel, and the heads of art colleges across the country. Yes: lets gratuitously pat ourselves on the back for the third consecutive year: here is the ArtLyst Power 100 Alternative Power List, in alphabetical order plus our curated Top 10 for 2013.

Top Photo: (Left) Chris Dercon, Nicholas Serota (Right) Tino Seghal

1. Tino Seghal: British-German artist of part Indian origin, based in Berlin. Exhibited at Tate Modern for the 2012 Unilever series commission. Won the Golden Lion for best artist at 2013 Venice Biennale and nominated for Turner Prize 2013.

2. Chris Dercon: Director of Tate Modern since 2011 with an enthusiasm for ‘mixing it up’, formerly the director of the Haus der Kunst, Munich.

3. Jeremy Deller : English conceptual, video and installation artist. Winner of the Turner Prize in 2004, represented Britain at 2013 Venice Biennale

4. Hans Ulrich Obrist/ Julia Peyton-Jones: the Serpentine Gallery’s Co-directors of Exhibitions and Programmes.

5. Grayson Perry: artist known for his work in ceramics, and awarded the Turner Prize in 2003,  self-curated show The Tomb of the Unknown Craftsman at the British Museum 2011, received BAFTA in 2013 for his series All in the best possible Taste and will deliver this year’s Reith Lectures for Radio 4

6. Jenni Lomax: Director of Camden Arts Centre, led the major refurbishment of the centre that was completed in 2004.

7. James Lingwood/ Michael Morris: Co-Directors of Artangel since 1991, responsible for building Artangel into a significant international commissioning and producing organisation.

8. Elizabeth Neilson: Director 176 Zabludowicz Collection

9. Elmgreen & Dragset:  leading contemporary artists currently exhibiting a site specific installation at the V&A

10. Hannah Barry: Founder of the Hannah Barry Gallery and one of the leading people responsible for transforming Peckham into an international art centre

Artlyst Power 100 In Alphabetical Order

1. Marina Abramovic: Serbian New York-based artist, and the self-professed ‘grandmother of performance art’, who began her ground-breaking career in the early 1970s.

2. Michael Archer: Programme Director of BA Fine Art at Goldsmiths, University of London, art critic and freelance writer, contributing regularly to the Guardian Culture section on contemporary art from 1960 onwards.

3. Ziba Ardalan: founder and Director/Curator of Parasol Unit Foundation for Contemporary Art, a privately-funded educational charity and a not-for-profit art gallery.

4. Bill Arning: Director of the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, former curator of the List Visual Arts Centre, MIT, and a freelance writer.

5.Karen Ashton: founder and organizer Art Car Boot Fair  (new)

6. *Hannah Barry: Founder of the Hannah Barry Gallery and one of the leading people responsible for transforming Peckham into an international art centre (new)

7. Pryle Behrman: Art Critic, curator and Director of Art Projects at London Art Fair  (new)

8. Gareth Bell-Jones: Curator at Wysing Arts centre, Cambridge, has written articles for Artvehicle and Contemporary Magazine, chaired symposiums at Cafe Oto

9. Peter Blake: English pop artist, who celebrated his 80th birthday last year and continues to be a major force in the art world

10. Iwona Blazwick: Director of Art at the Whitechapel Gallery, former Head of Exhibitions and Displays at Tate Modern, and Chair of Cultural Strategy Group, London.

11.Erica Bolton: PR catalyst and organisational magician. Partner at Bolton & Quinn Ltd.

12. Trisha Brown: Postmodernist Artist, dancer and choreographer, inducted into the National Museum of Dance C.V. Whitney Hall of Fame in 2000, and awarded the National Medal for Arts in 2002.

13. Jonathan Burton: Director of London Art Fair  (new)

14. Kate Bush: Head of Barbican Art Galleries, made multiple TV appearances on the subject of Art, and even been mentioned in a Harry Hill sketch.

15. Romain Chenais: French London-based art critic and independent curator, curated the first major retrospective of British filmmaker John Smith at the Royal College of Art.

16.  Billy Childish: prolific painter, poet, printer and musician. One of the driving forces behind the L-13 Gallery as well as co-founder of the Art Hate Archives. (new)

17. David Chipperfield: Modernist architect, with two buildings shortlisted for the 2007 RIBA Stirling Prize, and winning with the Museum of Modern Literature, Marbach.

18. Matthew Collings: began his career on Artscribe, before producing and presenting The Late Show for BBC, and is still involved with broadcasting on productions such as School of Saatchi and

19.Susan Collins: Slade Professor at the Slade School of Fine Art since 2010,  (new the 2010 BBC documentary ‘Renaissance Revolution’. He also lectures at the City and Guilds London School of Art.

20. Sacha Craddock: art critic and curator, Programme Director of Max Wigram gallery, curator of the Bloomberg Space, tutor at the RCA, Chair of New Contemporaries, and sat on the 2009 Turner Prize judging panel.

21. Michael Craig-Martin: Emeritus Professor of Fine Art at Goldsmiths London, previously a tutor at Goldsmiths where he fostered the talent of many of the YBAs.

22. David Crawforth & Naomi Siderfin: founders, Directors, Curators, and artists at Beaconsfield, a gallery with a vision to ‘provide a critical space for creative enquiry’, that occupies ‘a niche between the institution, the commercial and the ‘alternative’’.

23. Martin Creed: artists and musician, Turner Prize winner 2001, numerous exhibitions and projects in 2013.  Look out for his retrospective exhibition at the Hayward Gallery in 2014

24. Penelope Curtis: Director of Tate Britain with a scholarly background in British art, especially 20th-century sculpture, she was also the first exhibitions curator at Tate Liverpool when it opened in 1988. She was a judge of the Turner prize 2012.

25. Alan Davey: Chief Executive of the Arts Council, has worked in the Department of National Heritage, and as head of the Arts Division and Director of Arts and Culture in the Department of Culture, Media and Sport.

26.*Jeremy Deller : English conceptual, video and installation artist. Winner of the Turner Prize in 2004, represented Britain at 2013 Venice Biennale

27. Melissa Denes: The Guardian’s arts editor, she also writes for the New Statesman.

28. *Chris Dercon: Director of Tate Modern since 2011 with an enthusiasm for ‘mixing it up’,

29. Emily Druiff: Director of Peckham Space, one of London’s newest purpose-built public galleries, dedicated to commissioning artworks made in partnership with community groups.

30. *Elmgreen & Dragset:  leading contemporary artists currently exhibiting a site specific installation at the V&A

31.  Kate Fowle:  Chief Curator of Garage Centre for Contemporary Culture, Moscow (new)

32. James Franco: American artist, actor, and writer who balances his work as an artist with a mainstream acting career.

33. Katherine Fritsch: for her large blue cockerel Hahn/Cock currently to be seen on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square

34. Jason Gaiger: Head of the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, also a Fellow of St. Edmund Hall Oxford, previously worked as Director of Research of Art History in the Open University, and Recently published ‘Aesthetics and Painting’.

35. Ryan Gander: London-based artist, creator of the Locked Room Scenario in Shoreditch, awarded the 2010 Zurich Art prize, accompanied by an exhibition at the Haus Konstruktiv, Zurich, and winner of the 2003 Prix de Rome.

36.  David Gryn: Director Artprojx, curated moving image projects  (new)

37. Andreas Gursky: German visual artist who is known for his large scale architecture and landscape photographs

38. Zaha Hadid: architect responsible for the 2012 London Olympics Aquatics Centre, and has won the RIBA Stirling Prize twice, winning this year for the Evelyn Grace Academy, Brixton. Designed Serpentine Sackler Gallery which opened in 2013.

39.  Margaret Harrison: Feminist artist and winner of 2013 Northern Art Prize  (new)

40. Thomas Heatherwick: English designer known for his innovative use of materials, also designed the London 2012 Olympic cauldron and the ‘Borismaster’ bus launched in 2013.

41. James Hughes-Hallett: Chairman of the Courtauld Institute of Art.

42. Achim Borchardt Hume: Returns to Tate Modern as Head of Exhibitions. Previously Chief Curator at the Whitechapel Art Gallery

43. Heather Hubbs: Director of NADA art fairs  (new)

44.  Roger Hiorns: artist, 2009 Turner Prize nominee, His work Seizure currently on show at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park and Unititled series is at The Hepworth Wakefield.  (new)

45. Thomas Krens: former Director of the Guggenheim Foundation, New York, currently Senior Advisor for International Affairs, overseeing the completion of Guggenheim Abu Dhabi.

46. Yayoi Kusama: Japanese artist who had a major lifetime culmination of her work shown at Tate Modern.

47. Michael Landy: YBA most famous for the work Break Down (2001), elected a member of the Royal Academy of Arts in 2008, current Rootstein Hopkins Associate artist in residence at the National Gallery

48. Joseph La Placa: CEO All Visual Arts curator of Metamorphosis, Vanitas and The Viewing Room.

49: Nicola Lees: Curator of Frieze Foundation (new)

50. John Leighton: Director General of National Galleries of Scotland, taught Art History at Edinburgh University before moving into curating at the National Gallery, acquired the Artist’s Rooms collection for National Galleries of Scotland, and was awarded an honorary degree for services to the arts from Edinburgh University in 2009.

51. *James Lingwood/ Michael Morris: Co-Directors of Artangel since 1991, responsible for building Artangel into a significant international commissioning and producing organisation.

52. *Jenni Lomax: Director of Camden Arts Centre, led the major refurbishment of the centre that was completed in 2004.

53. Declan Long: Irish art critic, curator and lecturer. He teaches at the faculty of visual culture at the National College of Art and Design in Dublin[1] and regularly appears on Lyric FM, discussing and reviewing contemporary art.

54. Sarah Lucas: part of the Young British Artist movement that emerged in the 1990s. The subject of a current major retrospective at the Whitechapel Gallery

55. Christine Macel: Chief Curator of the Musee National d’art Moderne- Centre Pompidou, currently developing the exhibition ‘Dance your life’ which will open in November 2011, she also writes for FlashArt and Artforum.

56. Anna Maloney: Director of Hackney WickED festival (new)

57. Christian Marclay: Swiss-American visual artist and composer, most recently exhibited at the 2011 Venice Biennale where he won the Golden Lion for his piece The Clock.

58. Rebecca May-Marston: Director of Hoxton’s Limoncello gallery, and One of the Independent’s 10 gallery owners who ‘are changing – and challenging – the British art scene’.

59. Ben Moore: Artist/Curator of Art Below (new)  a London based public art enterprise, founded in 2006 using billboard space in underground stations to display artworks in London and overseas.

60. Simon Morrissey: independent curator and writer on contemporary art, who regularly talks publicly about contemporary art and curating, as well as frequently acting as a visiting tutor on a number of leading Fine Art courses at UK universities.

61. Gregor Muir: Executive Director of the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London.

62. Banksy clever street artist and art guerrilla. Nominated this year for setting up a stand in New York and selling ‘Spray Art’ for £40 a pop. Real value £20,000-£100,000 He sold 6 paintings for $420.

63. Andrew Nairne: Director of Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, Chair of the Visual Arts and Galleries Association (VAGA), and former Director of  Modern Art Oxford.

64. *Elizabeth Neilson: Director 176 Zabludowicz Collection

65. *Hans Ulrich Obrist/ Julia Peyton-Jones: the Serpentine Gallery’s Co-directors of Exhibitions and Programmes.

66. Kirsty Ogg: curator at the Whitechapel Gallery and of the London Open, and Lecturer in Curating at Goldsmiths, University of London.

67. Yoko Ono: Japanese painter, and performance based,Director of Meltdown festival 2013

68. Sandra Penketh Director of Art Galleries National Museums Liverpool

69. Nicholas Penny, FSA a British art historian. Since Spring 2008 he has been director of the National Gallery in London.

70. *Grayson Perry: artist known for his work in ceramics, and awarded the Turner Prize in 2003,  self-curated show The Tomb of the Unknown Craftsman at the British Museum 2011, received BAFTA in 2013 for his series All in the best possible Taste and will deliver this year’s Reith Lectures for Radio 4

71. Michael Petry:  multi-media artist, writer and curator. Director of MOCA London, co-founder of the Museum of Installation,   (new)

72. Heather Phillipson: video and installation artist, 2013 exhibitions at Zabludowicz collection, BALTIC centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead

73. Victoria Pomery: Director of Turner Contemporary since 2002, previously the Senior Curator at Tate Liverpool, has worked at the Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, Australia, and was part of the selection panel for the 2007 Ebbsfleet Landmark Project.

74:  Alan Powers: teacher, researcher, writer. Former chair of 20th century society (2007-12) and organizer of the campaign to save public art around UK. (new)

75. Elizabeth Price: video artist and winner of the 2012 Turner Prize

76. Laure Provost: filmmaker and 2013 Turner Prize nominee, Her piece Wantee was included in the Tate’s Schwitters in Britain exhibition.  (new)

77. Pussy Riot: Russian guerilla art movement, three members were imprisoned last year based on their involvement in an “anti-Putin” ‘art performance’ piece.

78. Gerhard Richter: German visual artist who specializes in abstract photorealism.

79. David Roberts: Prolific art collector in the UK, in 2008 started the ‘David Roberts Art Foundation’ to help emerging artists and young curators.

80. Ralph Rugoff: Director of the Hayward Gallery, previously Director of the Wattis Institute, best known for his curated work Just Pathetic (1990).

81. *Tino Seghal: British-German artist of partly Indian origin, based in Berlin. Exhibited at Tate Modern for the 2012 Unilever series commission. Won Golden Lion for best artist at 2013 Venice Biennale and nominated for Turner Prize 2013.

82. Nicholas Serota: Director of the Tate (1988-present) and the driving force behind the opening of the Tate Modern. Has participated on the board of The Architecture Foundation and chaired the Turner Prize jury.

83. Amanda Sharp/Matthew Slotover: founders of Frieze magazine and the Frieze Art Fair in London and New York

84. David Shrigley: British Artist known for his work in humorous cartoon style, contributes a weekly cartoon to the Guardian’s weekend paper, and has exhibited internationally including solo shows in New York, Gateshead, Barcelona and Mainz. Nominated for 2013 Turner Prize.

85. Taryn Simon: American art photographer, with a major feature show at the Tate Modern in 2011.

86. Bob and Roberta Smith: contemporary British artist operating under pseudonym, famous for painting slogan-bearing signage in support of various activist campaigns.

87. Donald Smith: CHELSEA Space Director, with the ambition to create ‘a research development centre for invited art and design professionals, providing a gallery space, library research facilities, and a platform to develop personal projects that may otherwise remain unrealised’.

88. Polly Staple: Director of London’s Chisenhale Gallery, contributing editor to Frieze, on jury panel for Max Mara Art Prize for Women  2009- 2011, and one of the Guardian’s 2010 ‘women to watch’.

89. Katherine Stout: Head of Programmes at ICA, formerly Head of Contemporary art at Tate Modern.  (new)

90. Callum Sutton; CEO Sutton PR – 2013 clients included Glasgow International Festival of Visual Art, Art Fund Prize for museums and galleries,

91. Paul Warwick Thompson: Rector of the Royal College of Art, served as Director of the Smithsonian’s National Design Museum in New York until 2009, trustee of the Victoria and Albert Museum, and a Member of the Wellcome Collection Advisory Committee at the Wellcome Trust.

92: Jeremy Till: Head of Central St Martins Art School since 2012 (new)

93. John Tusa: British arts administrator, currently the Chairman of the University of the Arts London, presented BBC 2’s Newsnight from 1980-1986, from 1995-2007 was managing director of the Barbican Arts Centre, London, and is Honorary Chairman of theartsdesk.com.

94. Christoph Vogtherr: Director of the Wallace Collection from October 2011, previously the Curator of pre-1800 pictures at the Wallace Collection.

95. Mark Wallinger: sculptor and installation artist, double Turner Prize nominee, won the Prize in 2007 for the work State Britain. Notable work includes the sculpture on the Fourth Plinth of Trafalgar Square Ecce Homo (1999). Created Labyrinth for 150th anniversary of the London Underground in 2013.

96. Ai Weiwei: Chinese contemporary artist and political activist, awarded Das Glas der Vernuft Kassel citizen award in 2010, and serving as an Artistic consultant for the 2008 Olympics Bejing National Stadium.

97. Matt Williams: Curator of exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and co-editor of the annual publication Novel, which focuses on artists’ writing and poetry.

98.Godfrey Worsdale: Director of the BALTIC centre for contemporary art, Gateshead, responsible for hosting the Turner Prize 2011, Vice Chairman of the UK’s Visual Art and Galleries Association, and selector for the 2011 Threadneedle Prize for Painting and Sculpture.

99. Lynette Yiadom-Boakye: Exhibited Extracts and Verses at Chisenhale Gallery, nominated for 2013 Turner Prize (new)

100. Anita and Poju Zabludowicz: founded the Zabludowicz Collection in 2007, a space for exhibitions, commissions and residencies, as well as establishing the Zabludowicz Collection ‘Curatorial Open’ and ‘Testing Ground’ programmes to promote contemporary art education. She is also a key sponsor of the upcoming Sunday Art Fair.

* = Top Ten entry

Compiled by Artlyst © 2013

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