Wet Paint: Celebs Storm Art Basel Miami Beach, the KAWS Whisperer Revealed, & More Juicy Art-World Gossip
Every Thursday afternoon, Artnet News brings you Wet Paint,
a gossip column of original scoops reported and written by Nate
Freeman. If you have a tip, email Nate
at nfreeman@artnet.com.
BASEL ADORES DIOR
There’s always a slew of high-fashion collaborations happening
during Art Basel Miami Beach, but rarely do they
threaten to upstage the fair itself. This year,
Dior teamed up with Mera and Don
Rubell to stage its pre-fall 2020 show in a warehouse
owned by the collecting couple, and timed it to the opening of the
Rubell Museum, the sprawling Annabelle
Selldorf-designed complex that houses their world-class
trove of more than 7,000 works. And together, the French fashion
house and the mega-collectors pulled off a spectacle that served as
a coming-out party for the Allapattah neighborhood, which is set to
become a new arts destination in Miami—especially once a new
Rubell-owned hotel opens, supposedly as early as next year.

A model outside the Dior show. Photo:
Nate Freeman.
On Tuesday, after hundreds of attendees poured into the building
with a runway snaking its way through the floor, it was a miasma of
celebrities and art-world figures. Pace president Marc
Glimcher was sitting a few seats down from Kim
Kardashian, Thaddaeus Ropac rubbed
shoulders with David Beckham, Kamel
Mennour jostled next to Travis Scott, and
Swizz Beatz plopped down next to Pusha
T.
Those in attendance had to endure a riotous hour-long delay
inside the warehouse, with more famous faces entering the arena,
and handlers struggling to get them to take their seats.
Ricky Martin was mobbed by cameras, Hans
Ulrich Obrist weaved past Kate
Moss, and a very late Bella Hadid
took her front-row seat—a few down from Daniel
Arsham—just before the show began.
After all the hubbub, the show itself was a brisk 10 minutes of
sporty looks, a collaboration between Dior designer Kim
Jones and the streetwear godhead Shawn
Stussy. And afterward, the celebs were all invited to tour
the Rubells’ hall of masterpieces—though judging by the long line
of town cars in line to leave the event, most just went off to
another party on one of Miami’s busiest nights of the year.
POUR THE DOM

Lenny Kravitz, the living legend
himself. Photo: Nate Freeman.
The Faena Miami Beach Hotel has been one of the
swankier spots to host an event since it opened on Collins Avenue
in 2016. And Faena House, across the street,
counts billionaire collector Kenneth Griffin as a
resident—and Larry Gagosian as a former resident,
as he sold his pad there in 2017. But it’s way harder to score an
invite to the private home of Alan Faena—the
mega-developer who always, always has on a white fedora for some
reason—on the mansion-dotted Pine Tree Drive.
A lucky few got a glimpse on Wednesday, when Dom
Perignon hosted an affair with rocker Lenny
Kravitz dubbed “The Last Supper,” featuring endless
bottles of the pricy bubbly. The scene was an intimate evening
compared to the city’s more noisy proceedings, with Sean
Penn walking around the grounds smoking a cigar, former
Paddle8 frontman Alexander Gilkes palling around
with architect David Adjaye, and artist
Chloe Wise and Rosario Dawson
chatting with Paris Hilton. But perhaps Faena had
an ulterior motive when he invited the well-heeled over to his
private place: a tipster said he’s put the property on the market,
with the listing price currently at $16.5 million.
WIZARD OF KAWS
They call him the KAWS whisperer. According to
sources, the man who has been pulling off the biggest KAWS deals is
dealer Todd Kramer, a partner at the
Ross+Kramer gallery in New York. He’s been
following the artist since well before his market exploded in the
last two years, having tracked his transition from street artist to
an auction darling who regularly achieves eight-figure prices. And
he’s been behind several KAWS-related transactions, including a
recent sale by a member of a fairly well-known mid-aughts rock
band, who recently offloaded a work for around $3 million. And
there are more in the offing. Plus, Kramer has a history of selling
work by another street artist, Invader, who some
think could have a KAWS-esque breakout. Last month, an Invader work
at the Sotheby’s Contemporary Art Day Sale
estimated to sell for $150,000 ended up going for $1.2 million.
AUCTION FOR BELIEBERS
It’s a new era for the online auction platform
Paddle8, as CEO Izabela Depczyk
is departing and the new CEO, former Tumblr head of partnerships
Valentine Uhovski, is looking to make his mark.
And part of the master plan seems to be… Justin
Bieber. The global pop sensation has curated a sale of 17
works alongside his wife, Hailey Bieber, that
will benefit LIFT LA and Inner City
Arts, with works by artists such as Virgil
Abloh being offered to the highest bidder until December
13. But there is no KAWS in the show—notable
considering that a number of Beliebers
claimed that the “Sorry” singer was the person bidding on the
record-breaking work, THE KAWS ALBUM (2005), which sold at
Sotheby’s in Hong Kong in April for $14.8 million, but he has
denied that is the case.
BONUS IS BOGUS
The wildest rumor that was going around Miami appears to be
debunked. By mid-day Wednesday, during the Art Basel VIP preview,
word came down the transom that one of the most hotly pursued young
artists was getting snapped up by Hauser & Wirth,
the Swiss mega-gallery that’s assembled perhaps the most stacked
artist roster in the game. The artist in question was Avery
Singer, who last had a show at Gavin Brown’s
Enterprise in 2018, but has been the subject of feverish
speculation as to who would poach her, with
Hauser, Gagosian,
and David Zwirner all in the mix at one
point. But the juiciest part of the rumor was the price tag.
Several people were saying that there was a million-dollar “singing
bonus” that was given to her to accept. But by Thursday, reps for
Hauser were emphatically denying the existence of any kind of
bonus, and said that with regard to any new artists, they had
nothing to announce.
WE HEAR…
Anton Kern is opening a space in Tribeca…
that Xavier Hufkens is completely rebuilding
his headquarters in Brussels, knocking down one of the galleries to
build out a six-story juggernaut… that the Miami police filed
a complaint about an installation by the artists Antonia
Wright and Ruben Millares, installed at
Untitled, because it featured an American flag
hung upside down… that the hit-making producer, musician, and DJ
known as Diplo is here in Miami to spin records at
some parties but is also trying to buy work by Alex Da
Corte… that Inigo Philbrick is hiding out
from the authorities not in Brazil as previously thought, but in
Thailand….
SPOTTED
*** Britney Spears celebrating her
birthday among Baselers by going ice skating in the basement of the
Miami Beach EDITION Hotel Monday *** Iggy
Pop performing at the Gucci x
Snapchat event that served as premiere of new
short film by Harmony Korine *** Culinary god
Daniel Boulud chatting up Iwan
Wirth in front of the large Nicolas
Party painting at the booth *** Bright Lights Big
City novelist Jay McInerney at the Ropac
booth, admiring the George Baselitz paintings ***
Brian Bellott being celebrated for his solo booth
with Moran Moran at a dinner at Forte dei
Marmi *** ICA Miami chief curator
Alex Gartenfeld toasting Damien
Ortega at a dinner at the EDITION …
Supreme founder James Jebbia
being called for a table at Joe’s Stone Crab
Monday night … David Zwirner leading his team of
directors straight from his party at Soho Beach
House Wednesday to the notorious South Beach gay bar
Twist, and staying until the wee hours.
PARTING SHOT

The post Wet Paint: Celebs Storm Art Basel Miami Beach, the
KAWS Whisperer Revealed, & More Juicy Art-World Gossip appeared
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